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2006-2007 SCHOOL ACCOUNTABILITY REPORT ALBUQUERQUE PUBLIC SCHOOLS RESEARCH, DEVELOPMENT AND ACCOUNTABILITY DEPARTMENT

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Page 1: 2006-2007 SCHOOL ACCOUNTABILITY REPORT ALBUQUERQUE PUBLIC SCHOOLS RESEARCH, DEVELOPMENT AND ACCOUNTABILITY DEPARTMENT

2006-2007 SCHOOL ACCOUNTABILITY REPORT

ALBUQUERQUE PUBLIC SCHOOLS

RESEARCH, DEVELOPMENT AND

ACCOUNTABILITY DEPARTMENT

Page 2: 2006-2007 SCHOOL ACCOUNTABILITY REPORT ALBUQUERQUE PUBLIC SCHOOLS RESEARCH, DEVELOPMENT AND ACCOUNTABILITY DEPARTMENT

2006-2007 Summary

46 of 128 APS schools made Adequate Yearly Progress (AYP)

1 High school 1 Middle School 41 Elementary Schools 3 Alternative Schools 12 schools met AYP after not meeting AYP last

year

Page 3: 2006-2007 SCHOOL ACCOUNTABILITY REPORT ALBUQUERQUE PUBLIC SCHOOLS RESEARCH, DEVELOPMENT AND ACCOUNTABILITY DEPARTMENT

Accountability Ratings

What is Adequate Yearly Progress? (AYP)

How is AYP calculated?

What is ‘Safe Harbor’?

What is included in the determination of meeting AYP?

What is an Annual Measurable Objective (AMO) or AYP Goal?

Page 4: 2006-2007 SCHOOL ACCOUNTABILITY REPORT ALBUQUERQUE PUBLIC SCHOOLS RESEARCH, DEVELOPMENT AND ACCOUNTABILITY DEPARTMENT

School Accountability Report

Page 5: 2006-2007 SCHOOL ACCOUNTABILITY REPORT ALBUQUERQUE PUBLIC SCHOOLS RESEARCH, DEVELOPMENT AND ACCOUNTABILITY DEPARTMENT

What is used to determine accountability ratings for 2006-07?

Percent of students proficient 3rd-9th & 11th grades (and who were enrolled for a full academic year [FAY])

-SBA Language Arts [English and Spanish except 11th]

-SBA Math [English & Spanish except 11th grade]

- Alternate Assessment for Students with Disabilities 95% Participation rate for all tests, each group 92% Attendance for elem. and mid schools 90% Graduation Rate for high schools

Page 6: 2006-2007 SCHOOL ACCOUNTABILITY REPORT ALBUQUERQUE PUBLIC SCHOOLS RESEARCH, DEVELOPMENT AND ACCOUNTABILITY DEPARTMENT

How do I calculate percent proficient?

Based on Full Academic Year (FAY)

SBA Language Arts + Spanish Language Arts + Alternate Assessment

Divided by

Number of FAYStudents tested

Repeat this process for each disaggregated group at each school and for each content area

Page 7: 2006-2007 SCHOOL ACCOUNTABILITY REPORT ALBUQUERQUE PUBLIC SCHOOLS RESEARCH, DEVELOPMENT AND ACCOUNTABILITY DEPARTMENT

How are the results used to determine AYP?

The percent proficient in each group at your school is compared to the Annual Measurable Objective (AMO) for Reading and Math.

The AMO is set by the Public Education Dept. for each content area and increases annually.

The AMO is the goal that every disaggregated group must achieve in order to meet AYP.

Page 8: 2006-2007 SCHOOL ACCOUNTABILITY REPORT ALBUQUERQUE PUBLIC SCHOOLS RESEARCH, DEVELOPMENT AND ACCOUNTABILITY DEPARTMENT
Page 9: 2006-2007 SCHOOL ACCOUNTABILITY REPORT ALBUQUERQUE PUBLIC SCHOOLS RESEARCH, DEVELOPMENT AND ACCOUNTABILITY DEPARTMENT
Page 10: 2006-2007 SCHOOL ACCOUNTABILITY REPORT ALBUQUERQUE PUBLIC SCHOOLS RESEARCH, DEVELOPMENT AND ACCOUNTABILITY DEPARTMENT
Page 11: 2006-2007 SCHOOL ACCOUNTABILITY REPORT ALBUQUERQUE PUBLIC SCHOOLS RESEARCH, DEVELOPMENT AND ACCOUNTABILITY DEPARTMENT

What are Disaggregated Groups?

All students at the school in tested grades Students in each ethnic group -Caucasian -Asian

-African American -American Indian

-Hispanic

Students with Disabilities (SWD) Students Economically Disadvantaged (FRPM) Students who are English Language Learners (ELL)

Page 12: 2006-2007 SCHOOL ACCOUNTABILITY REPORT ALBUQUERQUE PUBLIC SCHOOLS RESEARCH, DEVELOPMENT AND ACCOUNTABILITY DEPARTMENT

What if a student is in several groups?

Students are counted in every group of which they are a member.

Every student counts in “ALL”. Every student counts in an “Ethnic” group. Then, the student counts in any of the other three

groups that apply. One student could be counted five times.

Page 13: 2006-2007 SCHOOL ACCOUNTABILITY REPORT ALBUQUERQUE PUBLIC SCHOOLS RESEARCH, DEVELOPMENT AND ACCOUNTABILITY DEPARTMENT

Group Size Thresholds

Only those groups with 25 or more students are required to meet the Academic AMO.

Only those groups with 40 or more students are required to meet Participation target of 95%.

Every group of ten or more is reported so that you may make data-driven instructional decisions for all students.

Page 14: 2006-2007 SCHOOL ACCOUNTABILITY REPORT ALBUQUERQUE PUBLIC SCHOOLS RESEARCH, DEVELOPMENT AND ACCOUNTABILITY DEPARTMENT

Is the AMO the same for Reading and Math?

No. Starting points were set for each content area for grade groupings on the 2003 test and increase each year to 100% by 2014. Mid School example:

2004-05 Reading AMO = 34.14 Math AMO = 10.58

2005-06 Reading AMO = 38.00 Math AMO = 15.00

2006-07 Reading AMO = 42.00 Math AMO = 20.00

200708 Reading AMO = 53.00 Math AMO = 35.00

Page 15: 2006-2007 SCHOOL ACCOUNTABILITY REPORT ALBUQUERQUE PUBLIC SCHOOLS RESEARCH, DEVELOPMENT AND ACCOUNTABILITY DEPARTMENT

Is the AMO the same for all schools?

Yes. The AMO is the same for all schools of similar configurations (e.g. K-5, 6-8, 9-12).

The AMO is adjusted based on the number of students tested in the group. This is the confidence interval.

The larger the group of students tested, the closer the goal will be set to the AMO.

The smaller the group of students tested, the larger the adjustment made to the AMO.

Page 16: 2006-2007 SCHOOL ACCOUNTABILITY REPORT ALBUQUERQUE PUBLIC SCHOOLS RESEARCH, DEVELOPMENT AND ACCOUNTABILITY DEPARTMENT

Why is there an adjustment?

The adjustment is calculated to increase the confidence in the rating that is assigned to the school.

The confidence interval is similar to the plus or minus reported with survey data (e.g. 33% said yes with a margin of + - 3%).

Confidence intervals increase the likelihood that the rating is accurate.

Page 17: 2006-2007 SCHOOL ACCOUNTABILITY REPORT ALBUQUERQUE PUBLIC SCHOOLS RESEARCH, DEVELOPMENT AND ACCOUNTABILITY DEPARTMENT

What does this Confidence Interval look like?

0

10

20

30

40

50

60

Number of students tested

% P

rofic

ient

Confidence Interval

For 115 students

(SAMPLE)

AMO

Page 18: 2006-2007 SCHOOL ACCOUNTABILITY REPORT ALBUQUERQUE PUBLIC SCHOOLS RESEARCH, DEVELOPMENT AND ACCOUNTABILITY DEPARTMENT

What does ‘Safe Harbor’ mean?

Safe Harbor analysis may be used to determine if a subgroup has made substantial improvement, despite not having met the AMO.

If a school or a subgroup demonstrates a 10% reduction in the percentage of non proficient students, and all other indicators are met then AYP criteria are considered as being met for that group.

For the 2006-07 school year, one APS school made AYP based on ‘Safe Harbor’

Page 19: 2006-2007 SCHOOL ACCOUNTABILITY REPORT ALBUQUERQUE PUBLIC SCHOOLS RESEARCH, DEVELOPMENT AND ACCOUNTABILITY DEPARTMENT

How do I find my AYP status?

The PED website has a listing of all New Mexico schools and their AYP designation at ped.state.nm.us

Individual School Reports are also available at the PED website.

APS Research, Development and Accountability has the AYP Reports on the RDA site at rda.aps.edu

Page 20: 2006-2007 SCHOOL ACCOUNTABILITY REPORT ALBUQUERQUE PUBLIC SCHOOLS RESEARCH, DEVELOPMENT AND ACCOUNTABILITY DEPARTMENT

Individual School Reports

Each section of the School Accountability Report holds important information.

Directions for reading each section follow this slide. The Accountability Report informs NCLB, not your

instructional program.

Page 21: 2006-2007 SCHOOL ACCOUNTABILITY REPORT ALBUQUERQUE PUBLIC SCHOOLS RESEARCH, DEVELOPMENT AND ACCOUNTABILITY DEPARTMENT

State Ratings

Rating Designation Consequence

Meets AYP None None

AYP not met yr1 None EPSS focus

AYP not met yr2 SI-1 School choice

AYP not met yr3 SI-2 and SES

AYP not met yr4 CA and governance/ curriculum mods

AYP not met yr5 Restructuring-1 and develop alt gov plan

AYP not met yr6 Restructuring-2 and implement alt gov plan

Page 22: 2006-2007 SCHOOL ACCOUNTABILITY REPORT ALBUQUERQUE PUBLIC SCHOOLS RESEARCH, DEVELOPMENT AND ACCOUNTABILITY DEPARTMENT
Page 23: 2006-2007 SCHOOL ACCOUNTABILITY REPORT ALBUQUERQUE PUBLIC SCHOOLS RESEARCH, DEVELOPMENT AND ACCOUNTABILITY DEPARTMENT
Page 24: 2006-2007 SCHOOL ACCOUNTABILITY REPORT ALBUQUERQUE PUBLIC SCHOOLS RESEARCH, DEVELOPMENT AND ACCOUNTABILITY DEPARTMENT
Page 25: 2006-2007 SCHOOL ACCOUNTABILITY REPORT ALBUQUERQUE PUBLIC SCHOOLS RESEARCH, DEVELOPMENT AND ACCOUNTABILITY DEPARTMENT

Thomas Genne, Accountability Manager848-8729 [email protected]

Amy Legant, Accountability Coordinator848-8737 [email protected]

Connie Ashmun, Accountability Coordinator848-8723 [email protected]