ACCREDITATION FOR GROWTH School Improvement Through Improving Student Performance AGENDA The Value of Accreditation What Is AFG? Rationale for Choosing AFG Components of AFG Key Components Measurable Student Performance Objectives Action Plans Middle States Association Region includes: New York New Jersey Pennsylvania Delaware Maryland D.C. Parts of the Caribbean American-style schools and colleges in Africa Europe Middle East Sub-continent of Asia Why Accreditation? Accreditation encourages and facilitates educational growth and improvement… Accreditation provides a means for public accountability… Accreditation fosters stakeholder involvement and commitment… Accreditation builds positive public relations… What is AFG? AFG is a unique accreditation process that uses strategic planning as a vehicle for growth and improvement in student performance and in the institution’s capacity to effect that growth. What is Strategic Planning? Strategic planning is the means by which an organization continually recreates itself for extraordinary purposes. Implicit in this definition is the concentration of all efforts, resources, activities, and energies toward a single goal. William J. Cooke, Jr., The Cambridge Group What is Strategic Planning? The locus of control is inside the organization because planning is based on the organization’s vision of a preferred future. Assumes that a human organization has the ability to exercise control over external factors and create the future. Why AFG? Focus Traditional: retrospective, input or means Strategic Planning: future orientation, results Stakeholder involvement Traditional: primarily school staff Strategic Planning: broad cross section of stakeholders Why AFG? Structure Traditional: Staff-driven committees One year self-evaluation Strategic Planning: Single Planning Team develops and manages improvement plan and accreditation activities Planning Team remains active throughout term of accreditation Why AFG? Review Traditional: Onsite visit every ten years Five-Year review report and short visit Strategic Planning: Onsite visit every seven years Annual Review carried out onsite by Planning Team A mid-point, one-day onsite visit by a member of the original Validation Team (2 ½ years following visit) Why AFG? Drive Traditional: based on past accomplishments deductive process that reviews Middle States’ externally developed standards emphasis on programs and practices minimum attention to results Why AFG? Drive Strategic Planning: based on future expectations and desired results focus on student performance based on a school’s vision for itself validates internal vision and actual results AFG Parameters and Commitments A focus on student performance and growth A culture of accountability in student performance A planning ethic [Plan - Do - Plan - Do - Plan - Do . . .] Commitment to continuous improvement Involvement of representative constituents Standards Component of AFG Standards include: Philosophy/Mission/Beliefs/Objectives Governance and Leadership Organizational Design and Staff Educational Programs Learning Media Services and Technology Student Services Standards Component of AFG Standards – continued Student Life and Student Activities Facilities Health and Safety Finances Assessment of Student Learning Planning Reporting Survey Results Description of the survey process Results of the surveys May disaggregate each group surveyed to look for trends Description of significant findings, strengths, and weaknesses Comments returned with surveys Process Component of AFG Context of the Institution Planning Team Roles of Various Key Players Communication & Awareness Activities Action Plan & Implementation Teams Annual Reviews The Planning Team Planning Team An ongoing body – does not disband following the selfstudy and team visit The oversight and decision-making body for improvement planning Responsibility and authority to develop, approve, implement, and monitor the Improvement Plan A cross section of the school’s stakeholders “Spear fishing” and “Net fishing” Action Teams Implementation Teams Optional Gets more faculty and staff involved An Action Plan Team may be responsible for each objective An Implementation Team may be responsible for implementing each action plan Reporting back to the Planning Team Content Component of AFG Plan for Growth and Improvement District Strategic Plan Mission Beliefs Profile of Graduates Results of Internal & External Scans 2-4 Measurable Student Performance Objectives with Technical Reviews Action Plans Mission Statement A mission statement should reflect in broad and visionary terms what the institution is and is striving to become. While the mission must acknowledge the current status of the institution, it should also identify shared hopes and aspirations. Mission Statement Components Audience -- whom do you serve? Action -- what do you do? Aim -- what is your purpose for existing? Identity -- what makes you unique? Means -- how, in broad terms, will you do what you do? Sample Mission Statement The mission of Harry S. Truman High School, as a unique, culturally-diverse learning community, is to ensure that every student achieves his/her personal and academic potential by providing a safe learning environment, a broad, challenging curriculum and the knowledge and skills necessary for a meaningful productive life. Belief Statements The guiding lights for the institution Compass points – the “true north” Not all are focused on school/learning/ teaching Maximum of 8 to 10 Should reflect walking the talk What you are ready to go to the mat for WTTW: Give adequate time for development and “digestion” of beliefs. This is a substantive and thoughtful part of the process. Student Performance Objectives 2-4 Measurable Objectives Stated as a desired end result: what students need to know, to achieve, to be able to do Measurable right now Measurable over time WTTW: Measurable means… I can see it, I can hear it, I can count it! Student Performance Objectives Should relate to a wide population within the institution, not just a single grade level or subgroup Should relate to the “aim” portion of the mission statement – what you hope to realize Student Performance Objectives Common Topics for Objectives Academics – at least one objective must be academic Citizenship Student engagement Technology - can be a tricky one Critical thinking Community Service Career Preparation/Readiness Action Plans The “doing” part of the plan for growth and improvement Serve as a road map for implementation – the “Mapquest” analogy SPECIFIC action steps to be taken to achieve the student performance objectives Action Plans Elements of an Action Plan • Description of the activity – Include sufficient detail • Who is responsible? • Timeline during which the activity will be completed • Resources needed • Indicators of success • Status of completion WTTW: Be sure that your Action Plans span all seven years of the term of accreditation; begin with more detailed plans, and fill in later years during each Annual Review The Validation Team Visit Five-person team Three and one-half day visit Numerous short, informal class visits Interviews with stakeholders Is your plan reflective of your institution? Do you have the resources and commitment to achieve your plan?