Advanced Learning Taskforce Redux
From Shauna Heath:
We have had several questions regarding the AL Task Force. I have included information about members and member selection below and provided more detail about the entire task force in the attached draft charter. The draft charter will be brought before the Task Force to finalize at the meeting on Oct. 23, 2013.
Our Taskforce Members
Baker Harvey, Bruce; Bennett, Erinn P; Bower, Stephanie; Boy, Ronald D; Campbell, Carri J; Clemons, Noelle; Daniels, Roger; Geoghagan, Rina; Heath, Shauna L; Herman, Gail; Hertzog, Nancy; Hochwalt, Nisha; Horrigan, Meg; Horwich, Lisa; Huff, Sumiko ; Libros, Tracy; Martin, Stephen B; Ruiz, Bernardo; Schweickhart, Vicky; Simon, Brenda; Skjei, Terri; Triandofilou, Katherine; Vasquez, Kathleen; Watters, Cindy J; Whitworth, Kim; Williams, Sharmila Naidu
Member Selection
Because this is a task force and not an advisory committee we invited members. The invites went to all members of the Advanced Learning Advisory Committee, parents of highly capable and advanced learning students and community based organizations such as Rainer Scholars that are active with highly capable students. Additionally, we requested representation from teachers and principals in schools that have both APP and Spectrum programs. There was intentionality in representing the diversity of the district both racially and regionally. The list of invitations was developed in conjunction with principals who support APP services in their buildings.
Draft charte*
We have had several questions regarding the AL Task Force. I have included information about members and member selection below and provided more detail about the entire task force in the attached draft charter. The draft charter will be brought before the Task Force to finalize at the meeting on Oct. 23, 2013.
Our Taskforce Members
Baker Harvey, Bruce; Bennett, Erinn P; Bower, Stephanie; Boy, Ronald D; Campbell, Carri J; Clemons, Noelle; Daniels, Roger; Geoghagan, Rina; Heath, Shauna L; Herman, Gail; Hertzog, Nancy; Hochwalt, Nisha; Horrigan, Meg; Horwich, Lisa; Huff, Sumiko ; Libros, Tracy; Martin, Stephen B; Ruiz, Bernardo; Schweickhart, Vicky; Simon, Brenda; Skjei, Terri; Triandofilou, Katherine; Vasquez, Kathleen; Watters, Cindy J; Whitworth, Kim; Williams, Sharmila Naidu
Member Selection
Because this is a task force and not an advisory committee we invited members. The invites went to all members of the Advanced Learning Advisory Committee, parents of highly capable and advanced learning students and community based organizations such as Rainer Scholars that are active with highly capable students. Additionally, we requested representation from teachers and principals in schools that have both APP and Spectrum programs. There was intentionality in representing the diversity of the district both racially and regionally. The list of invitations was developed in conjunction with principals who support APP services in their buildings.
Most of the "taskforce" is district staff
(several were on the previous taskforce). One member is a member of
FACMAC and was also on the last AL Taskforce. That would be Gail
Herman. Stephanie Bower was also on the last AL Taskforce.
The "invites" went to specially picked parents so no surprise there.
Draft charte*
It appears at some point there will be "facilitated discussions" with stakeholders (but maybe you need an "invite" for that as well. According to the charter, they could adopt changes to use as soon as next school year. It also mentioned "potential changes which comply with State Mandates" - don't know what that means. Is the district out of compliance with state mandates?
The meetings (there has been one) are on Thursdays from 10-11:30 am in room 2700. Well, that's convenient.
On the topic of taskforce versus advisory committee, they say that's why they could "invite"members and not seek applications. This is a brilliantly written policy that will allow the Superintendent to rename almost anything. As Charlie put it, "Can he evade the policy on discipline by renaming it suspensions?"
Oddly, the Friday Report mentioned TWO taskforces. I'll have ask about that.
Update: here's a link to a memo that State Superintendent Randy Dorn wrote earlier this year to all superintendents, principals and district PR professionals. To note:
The 2013–14 school year will be a transition year for all districts to develop a plan for serving highly
capable students in Grades K–12. Beginning with the 2014–15 school year, all districts are required to provide highly capable programs and services for students in Grades K–12.
Update: here's a link to a memo that State Superintendent Randy Dorn wrote earlier this year to all superintendents, principals and district PR professionals. To note:
The 2013–14 school year will be a transition year for all districts to develop a plan for serving highly
capable students in Grades K–12. Beginning with the 2014–15 school year, all districts are required to provide highly capable programs and services for students in Grades K–12.
In the Revised Code of Washington (RCW) under Chapter 28A.185 RCW, the Legislature
determined that “for highly capable students, access to accelerated learning and enhanced instruction is access to a basic education.”
* The district has NO link to this charter so I'll put the whole thing here. Once again, we have work going on that parents and the public CANNOT access.
Taskforce on Qualifications of Advanced Learning and Highly Capable Students (TQALHCS)
Facilitator/Consultant: Barbara Grant
-->
determined that “for highly capable students, access to accelerated learning and enhanced instruction is access to a basic education.”
* The district has NO link to this charter so I'll put the whole thing here. Once again, we have work going on that parents and the public CANNOT access.
Taskforce on Qualifications of Advanced Learning and Highly Capable Students (TQALHCS)
Facilitator/Consultant: Barbara Grant
Our Taskforce Members
Baker Harvey, Bruce; Bennett, Erinn P; Bower,
Stephanie; Boy, Ronald D; Campbell, Carri J; Clemons, Noelle; Daniels, Roger;
Geoghagan, Rina; Heath, Shauna L; Herman, Gail; Hertzog, Nancy; Hochwalt,
Nisha; Horrigan, Meg; Horwich, Lisa; Huff, Sumiko ; Libros, Tracy; Martin,
Stephen B; Ruiz, Bernardo; Schweickhart, Vicky; Simon, Brenda; Skjei, Terri;
Triandofilou, Katherine; Vasquez, Kathleen; Watters, Cindy J; Whitworth, Kim;
Williams, Sharmila Naidu
Our Commitment/Taskforce Purpose:
The task of this team/project
is to review the systems and processes for
qualifying students for Highly Capable services and Advanced Learning programs
in Seattle Public Schools. The committee will:
By forming a joint taskforce and engaging in open
dialogue, we will learn and grow as an organization and ultimately work toward
a shared approach of qualifying for Highly Capable services and Advanced Learning
programs that best benefits students.
Taskforce Goals/Deliverables:
·
Engage stakeholders in
facilitated discussions to evaluate the strengths and weaknesses of the current
qualification systems and processes.
·
Explore potential
alternatives to our current achievement criteria (MAP) and our cognitive
assessment (CoGat).
·
Make recommendations
to the Superintendent (by December, 2013) regarding potential changes (which
comply with State Mandates) for adoption during either the 2013-14 or 2014-15
school years.
Scope of Work and Expectations of Members
The scope of work for this taskforce is to
understand the new WAC for qualification of Highly Capable and Advanced Learning
Students and to answer the question, What
are the systems and processes that we must put in place District-wide to ensure
equitable access, opportunity, and support for every child who would need and
benefit from highly capable services and programs? Recommendations about our qualification systems and processes will be
made to the Superintendent. It
is outside the scope of work of this taskforce to consider the service delivery
model and/or systems and processes related to the delivery model. Below
is the list of expectations (or ground rules) involved in this taskforce:
Team Expectations & Meeting Norms
|
|
Confidentiality
and communication decisions need to be followed.
|
Meetings
start and end on time.
|
Everyone
participates - one person talks at a time.
|
All
ideas and comments are valid - respectful "debate."
|
Listen
with an open mind - listen first as an advocate for the other person's idea.
|
Meetings
will have a clear purpose, outcomes, and agenda.
|
Everyone
has equal status during the meeting session.
|
Attend
all meetings if at all possible - if you miss a session, support the decision
made in your absence.
|
People
don't have to agree BUT - Be clear about what you are committing to - speak
up if you can't commit and say why you can't.
|
Defer
to the facilitator or agenda if the group is stuck - use a parking lot.
|
Do
the pre-work/post-work assigned so the meeting time is productive.
|
No
hidden agendas - no lectures.
|
Advocate
from your own personal experience & POV and listen to other perspectives.
|
Assume
positive intent.
|
Provide
guidance regarding organizational and implementation “speed bumps” and
recommendations for moving through them.
|
Agreement to support the final decision of the
group – even if it wasn’t the one you personally like best.
|
Provide
informal communication to others in the organization about the project, the
benefits of the project and organizational impacts of the project.
|
Recommendations should be based on research and
objective data and presented in a fact-based manner.
|
Support
and Advocacy – mainly of an informal nature (such as communicating about it
at association / department meetings, at agreed-upon times.)
|
This is important work which we take seriously
AND it's okay to have fun along the way too.
|
Taskforce Timeline and Deliverables (at a high-level)
October
10, 23 & 29
|
November
5 & 19
|
December
3 & 10
|
Form the Taskforce;
The implication of the new WAC on processes and
systems for qualification.
|
Review current demographic data and evaluate
the demographics of who we are qualifying and how that impacts the diversity
of the services and programs
|
Offer options for alternative qualifications.
|
Discussion of the question; revision and
requests for next steps.
|
Discuss strengths and limitations of MAP and
CoGat 7.
|
Make recommendations for qualifying
students.
|
Discuss and adopt Charter.
|
Alternative systems and processes for
qualification.
|
|
Dec. Final recommendations for Superintendent;
Discuss and finalize recommendations.
|
Regular Meeting Schedule, Time & Place
Six taskforce meetings are scheduled on Thursdays from 10-11:30 am (shown
on calendars below. ) A couple of additional meetings may be necessary in order
to achieve our goals by the required deadline and will be determined as the
work progresses. All meetings will be
held at the Central Office in Conference Room 2700.
Member Selection
Because this is a task force and not an advisory committee we invited members. The invites went to all members of the Advanced Learning Advisory Committee, parents of highly capable and advanced learning students and community based organizations such as Rainer Scholars that are active with highly capable students. Additionally, we requested representation from teachers and principals in schools that have both APP and Spectrum programs. There was intentionality in representing the diversity of the district both racially and regionally. The list of invitations was developed in conjunction with principals who support APP services in their buildings.
Role and Typical Expectations of each role during this Taskforce
Role
|
Typical Expectations
|
Identified Person(s)
|
Taskforce
Lead(s) - Assists team in development of charter, and
ensures the team accomplishes the goals and objectives in alignment with the
organization’s values, and ensuring the taskforce goals are attained.
|
· Schedules
& attends team meetings.
· Communicates
with team members, stakeholders, team sponsor and other key relationships as
to the results the team is achieving.
· Oversees
the entire project to ensure the team’s mission is attained.
· Manages
relationships with outsiders, including removing obstacles for the team.
· Maintains
documentation of action items and their completion.
· Utilizes
the skills of the team members as effectively as possible.
· Does
real work along with the team.
|
Stephen Martin and Shauna Heath
|
Project
Sponsor & Exec. Sponsor - The Team Sponsor is the
person(s) who ultimately decides whether a team is to be created or not.
|
· Asks
for a team to be formed.
· Sets
parameters for the purpose of the team and the work they should accomplish.
· Provides
resources (time, money, etc.) for the accomplishment of the work.
· Checks
in with Team Leader to assess progress and direction.
· Makes
final decision to go/no-go on results created by team.
|
Assistant Superintendent
Michael Tolley
|
Facilitator
- There may be overlap in this role with the Project Lead and/or it
sometimes is the same person filling both roles. Facilitation is the design
and management of structures & processes that help a group do its work
and minimize the common problems people have working together. The focus is on group dialogue, who needs
to be involved, what needs to be accomplished, and maintaining momentum.
|
· Prepares
agendas & facilitates team meetings.
· Clarifies
the group charter
· Publishes
agendas and disseminates information
· Manages
group discussion, team dynamics, and decision-making.
· Maintains
documentation of action items and their completion.
· Utilizes
the skills of the team members as effectively as possible.
· Results
of group work communicated to members, sponsors, and stakeholders
· Some
general project management to ensure next steps are carried out
|
Barbara Grant
|
SME-Subject
Matter Expert - A subject
matter expert (SME) is a person who is an expert in a particular area or
topic. An expert in a
particular field who contributes or verifies the accuracy of specific
information needed by the project team.
|
· May
or may not be an active member of the team but is a go-to person or group for
factual information, advice, input, or perspective.
· May
influence decisions or outcomes but often does NOT have a vote or say in the
final outcome.
· Shares
their perspective, opinion, and objective information openly with the team
for their edification and discussion.
· Expresses
what they think or feel based on their expertise and gives suggestions.
|
Stephen Martin,
Shauna Heath,
Central Office
Staff
OSPI
|
Team
Member - Individuals who have specific tasks that
they must perform in order for the team’s work to be accomplished. They may provide research, consulting,
technical and interpersonal task work for any given team. Team members have specific knowledge,
skills, or abilities that will accomplish specific tasks as outlined by the
team or team leader.
|
· Attends
team meetings on time and with assigned work completed.
· May
collect input/feedback from other stakeholders.
· Works
collaboratively with other team members and staff to accomplish work.
· Contributes
to the overall mission, outcomes, and success measures of the team through
development of the charter and completion of work.
|
See list of members
|
Comments
--APP in ALO
I think parents should be included on the committee, but I consider the stakeholder pool of advanced learning to be much broader than the current pool of parents of children involved in the system.
zb
fyi
There is a post on the APP blog (dated 9/27) about changes in the law. We will have to make changes to our highly capable program nex fall. I would love to hear how you think it will play out for high school.
Ben
Lynn, if you could give me a link to these changes, I'd be glad to read them.
And there you have it, Ben.
for the APP state law change link at the blog
zb
The discussion at the other blog concerns identification and services post 8th grade. I'm guessing the current scheme of 8th grade ID w/ IBX program access would satisfy the law in part, but it doesn't address those who might be identified 9-10 grade, since the IBX program is a sequence.
zb
I'm just wondering if changes can really be expected, or if SPS is likely to say they already comply with these requirements...
HIMSmom
Does this mean they can't use the MAP for APP eligibility starting next year???
HIMSmom
The AL office and the OSPI Highly Capable office have confirmed that the WACs require identification K-12.
No one had been able to find a district in the state that does this yet - so who know what APP will look like next year? I think it might have an affect on High School enrollment choices in the future.
Can you fix the draft charter link?
I wonder why isn't she there...
- Curious
The WAC authorized OSPI to develop regulations on this issue, though, so perhaps those are done and would provide that clarification? Do you happen to know if the regs are available? I wasn't able to find them.
HIMSmom
Washington Ass. Of Educators of the Talented and Gifted
Read the events column article by acting AL director Martin to see what may be coming
GW
OSPI
That isn't true. I was a member of the Advisory Committee and I was not invited to join the task force.
Also, the superintendent is using task forces to evade the requirements of the policy for advisory committees. Task forces are just advisory committees under a different name. They fulfill the exact same function.
Even if one believe that they are different, should there not be any policy that governs them? Or should the policy on advisory committees be repealed?
It appears that the Board has no input to offer on advanced learning and has no interest in writing an advanced learning policy.
Looking at the names I think they meant that they sent out invitations to the members of the current APP Advisory Committee (and not to the Advanced Learning Committee you were on).
I guess some of them accepted the invitation, like Bruce Baker-Harvey, Stephanie Bower, Gail Herman, Noelle Clemons, Vicki Schweickart. This could be actually good for the APP parents (not so much for the Spectrum/ALO group), but I feel problematic to not have any APP teacher/principal there with a long APP history.
- Curious
I wonder why you think that the Board should write an advanced learning policy. I thought that they only supervise the District, so I think the District should write one finally...
- Curious
GW
HIMSmom
(And yes, I finally caught on that the WAC and the regs are one and the same. Doh!)
He could be really good if they would let him. I don't believe Tolley and Heath will release the slowly-tighten iron grip they are putting on programs.
i agree that it's hard to tell from the documents, so I asked several people. My questions were forwarded to Stephen Martin. Here is part of his response:
The question of testing into highly capable services in grades 9-12 is one that has not been addressed before. None of the districts I contacted have a plan in place, and OSPI has no substantive guidance to offer, beyond acknowledging that the WACs call for identification and services K-12. As you know, the programs offered to advanced students (AP and IB) are currently open to all students who wish to register. We will be working with OSPI and districts across the state to figure out how best to meet the new requirements.
In addition, at the end of the Webinar on that OSPI page, there was a question and answer period that I believe addressed it
Finally, there are the HCP Technical Working Group Recommendations
ID & entry
*Consider entry into HCP for students who's strong in one area, i.e. Verbal or quantitative. Their needs are not being well met in non AL settings. As part of that, need to investigate furthur if this a learning disability issue such as dyslexia. Or ELL student who has not yet reach academic fluency. Consider other means of testing and evaluation besides MAP and CogAT in such cases.
*consider ID-ing students with potential and aptitude and bringing them in EARLY into the program so they can develop their abilities and parlay that into achievement.
*more PD to help staff understand what to look out for especially in populations which are under served and easy to miss. (i.e. the bright, quick to pick up an idea or concept, curious students who show potential, but spend much of their time in the hallway or in the office/resource room because of behavioral issues.) They may be students with undiagnosed issues.
Educational outreach (a booklet, PDF to refer to) for parents with updated HCP content and research.
Lots more, but a wish list for this task force to start with. Last, but not least, a curriculum guide.
-a parent
Agenda
Minutes
Task Force
First, let's split APP into 3 or 4 or 5 different pathways, because it's so darn huge.
Then six months later: oh look, our task force has recommended to clamp back down on the entry criteria, so we expect the numbers to actually get smaller and smaller for the next few years. You're not left with 3 or 4 or 5 viable cohorts? Whoops, sorry about that!
Seriously folks, APP cannot be allowed to be split N-ways right now, especially before big programmatic decisions about identification are in play.
The entire focus of the identification task force is to add students, not remove any.
Charlie said: Actually, I think you can expect them to greatly expand APP.
The entire focus of the identification task force is to add students, not remove any.
Charlie, I think you may be off target this time. None of us are SPS mind readers, but there has been a lot of talk recently from the administration about
1) Distinguishing between high achievers and gifted
2) The understanding that SPS is only required (funded) to serve the top 2.3%
Together, it "smells" to me like there will be a push to change the identification process to attempt to distinguish/separate those kids, and then to only fund programs that serve gifted, according to the new measures, while attempting to serve the rest in their neighborhood schools with differentiation. Not to give them any ideas, but it wouldn't surprise me if they killed the "APP" label and gave the new program a different name.
I don't particularly like this, but my tea leaves are sort of lining up that way.