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News Release - 9/28/07
DAVENPORT COMMUNITY SCHOOLS DEVELOPS PLANS
TO SUPPORT STUDENT ACHIEVEMENT On Thursday,
September 27th the Davenport Community Education
Advisory Council, a committee within the Davenport
Community Schools, sponsored two community sessions
to engage parents and community partners in the new
Comprehensive School Improvement Plan (CSIP) for the
Davenport Community Schools. (The CSIP is a
multi-year planning document, featuring specific
learning goals for students at all levels, and is an
important part of accountability as required by the
Iowa Department of Education.) Outcomes from the
sessions indicated that parents and community
members had a significant interest in supporting
three specific aspects of the plan:
Goal 1: Increase familiarity of students, families
and community partners with district standards and
benchmarks through promotion/awareness activities
i.e., curriculum nights, resource materials,
district website and community outreach.
Goal 2: Expand partnership with community
organizations and families through communication,
resource coordination, collaborative committees and
program alignment with student support services in
and out of school.
Goal 3: Create friendly, welcoming environments for
families and community at every school and district
facility with clearly understood expectations and
safety protocols.
During the sessions, the district’s Director of
Curriculum and Staff Development, Juli Staszewski,
presented the framework of the CSIP which includes
specific school improvement activities in six
categories: Curriculum, Assessment, Instruction,
Student Engagement, Parent and Family Engagement,
and Leadership. Participants were asked to comment
on specific strategies or add new ideas and concerns
in each of these categories, to identify strategies
that would have the greatest impact on students that
they could best influence. Once the lists were
compiled, each participant received three “votes” to
award to individual strategies in order to assist in
prioritizing the suggested activities. The three
concepts listed above emerged as focus areas for the
development of a Community Assistance Plan to
support the district’s efforts toward school
improvement.
According to Julio Almanza, Superintendent of the
Davenport Community Schools, the involvement of
parents and the community in the district
improvement plan is critical to ensure student
success for the long term. “Although the district is
seeing steady progress in many academic areas and
with most of our identified student groups, there
are still areas requiring additional support and
response,” he notes. Because of these “achievement
gaps” that still exist in some subject areas and in
some student groups across the district, primarily
students with Individual Education Plans (IEP’s –
Special Education Students) and our African American
students, he explains that the district has been
designated as a District in Need of Assistance by
the Iowa Department of Education. As of the current
year, there are several large school districts
across the state of Iowa that have received this
same designation – indicating that schools are
finding it more difficult to meet the proficiency
scores required by No Child Left Behind as the
trajectories for improvement become steeper each
year through the target date of 2013.
What this means is that the Iowa Department of
Education has put together a team of professionals
to assist our district in developing an action plan
to address the learning needs of students and
provided additional support for our local efforts to
bolster student achievement, especially among the
targeted groups mentioned above. For the past
several months – following an intensive site visit
by the team from the Department of Education, an
audit of instructional practices and resources,
research of best practices, meetings including
teacher and parent representatives, and analysis of
local student data – district leadership and staff
have been working on a plan to address these
specific needs. This District in Need of Assistance
or DINA plan significantly influenced the district’s
development of the new long-term CSIP. The two plans
dovetail together to provide support for learning
goals for all district students, both in the short
term and during the next several years.
A copy of the DINA plan is currently available on
the district website and is attached. The full CSIP
document will be posted on the site as soon as it is
approved by the state. (A copy of the CSIP student
learning goals is attached.) Both plans focus on
parent and community involvement, professional
development for teachers in instructional strategies
and interventions for students at all levels and
abilities, more sophisticated data analysis and
assessments, and improved systems for monitoring
student progress.
Next steps for the CSIP community sessions will
include the development of a “Community Action Plan”
to align parent and community resources and support
with student needs and learning goals.
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