1 / 21

Alternatives to Suspension Committee

Alternatives to Suspension Committee. Thursday, March 13, 2014 3:00-4:00 pm. Unified District Vision: High Intellectual Performance Through Equity. Our Mission

van
Download Presentation

Alternatives to Suspension Committee

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Alternatives to Suspension Committee Thursday, March 13, 2014 3:00-4:00 pm

  2. Unified District Vision: High Intellectual Performance Through Equity Our Mission The mission of Robbinsdale Area Schools is to inspire and educate all learners to develop their unique potential and positively contribute to their community. Unified District Vision Robbinsdale Area Schools is committed to ensuring every student graduates career and college ready. We believe each student has limitless possibilities and we strive to ignite the potential in every student. We expect high intellectual performance from all our students. We are committed to ensuring an equitable and respectful educational experience for every student, family and staff member, focusing on strengths related to: • Race •Gender • Culture •Sexual Orientation •Ethnicity •Age •Home or First Language •Ability •National Origin •Religion •Socioeconomic Status • Physical Appearance The Unified District Vision consists of four key goals: • Implement policies and practices that open pathways to academic excellence for all students • Utilize culturally relevant teaching and personalized learning for all students • Engage family and community members as partners • Engage and empower students by amplifying student voice Goals and Measurements of Success

  3. ISAIAH Clip – KARE 11 Call to end school suspensions amid minority punishments – KARE 11

  4. Corrective Action Plans May 2012 – MDE informed the District that we had met the numerical threshold for significant disproportionality for 3 consecutive years in the area of Black students with IEPs with more than 10 days of suspension and expulsion • Based on data from 2008-09, 2009-10, and 2010-11 • District was required to use 15% of federal special education funding for Coordinated Early Intervention Services (CEIS) Plan for use of funding for 2012-2013 • Facilitate further implementation of PBIS in the 4 secondary programs • Funded a district-wide PBIS Coordinator and a Tier 2 Behavior Interventionist at each secondary school • Each student receiving support from the Tier 2 Interventionist was reported through MARSS as documentation of the plan May 2013 – District notified that we had met the threshold again • District decided to continue allocating CEIS funds to maintain the 5 positions for 2013-14 • 2013-2014 Action Plan

  5. Week of Action on School Pushout 2011 YouTube video

  6. 2008-present Suspension & BEHAVIOR data

  7. Out-of-School Suspension * Missing data

  8. Out-of-School Suspension: Elementary & Secondary * Missing data

  9. Out-of-School Suspension:Number of Days of Suspension * Missing data

  10. Out-of-School Suspension:Violent vs. Nonviolent Offenses Violent offenses: arson, assault, fighting, physical aggression, terroristic threats, threats, weapons Nonviolent offenses: defiance/disrespect, disruption, inappropriate language, inappropriate physical contact, technology violation, fires/false alarms, forgery/theft, gang affiliation/display, harassment/bullying, inappropriate PDA, inappropriate location, inappropriate sexual behavior, lying/cheating, property damage, sexual misconduct, skipping, truancy, alcohol/drugs/tobacco

  11. In-School Suspension * Missing data

  12. In-School Suspension: Elementary & Secondary

  13. In-School Suspension:Number of Days of Suspension * Missing data

  14. In-School Suspension:Violent vs. Nonviolent Offenses Violent offenses: arson, assault, fighting, physical aggression, terroristic threats, threats, weapons Nonviolent offenses: defiance/disrespect, disruption, inappropriate language, inappropriate physical contact, technology violation, fires/false alarms, forgery/theft, gang affiliation/display, harassment/bullying, inappropriate PDA, inappropriate location, inappropriate sexual behavior, lying/cheating, property damage, sexual misconduct, skipping, truancy, alcohol/drugs/tobacco

  15. Administrative Review Data, 2013-14

  16. Administrative Review Data, 2013-14

  17. Administrative Drop/Transfer Data, 2013-14

  18. 1st Semester NC DataSecondary

  19. Urgency of Now

  20. Small Group Discussions Please discuss with your group: • In your building, • what are the clear expectations for learning and how do you ensure that every student knows them? • what are the clear expectations for behavior and how do you ensure that every student knows them? • what are you currently doing to reduce suspensions?

  21. Exit Questions • Are you familiar with your building’s Tier 1 and Tier 2 academic and behavior interventions? How is the system being monitored for fidelity? • What are systems that you believe should be in place in every school to reduce suspensions? • Do you think an alternative to suspension site would help reduce suspensions? What would it look like? • What information would you like us to provide as part of this committee (i.e. restorative justice, what other schools and sites are doing to reduce suspensions)?

More Related