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ADMINISTRATOR EVALUATION: Legal requirements after S.B. 290 Nancy Hungerford The Hungerford Law Firm Feb. 1 , 2013

ADMINISTRATOR EVALUATION: Legal requirements after S.B. 290

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ADMINISTRATOR EVALUATION: Legal requirements after S.B. 290. Nancy Hungerford The Hungerford Law Firm Feb. 1 , 2013. Before there was S.B. 290. 1979: ORS 342.805 et seq., which applies to teachers and administrators (except superintendent) - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: ADMINISTRATOR   EVALUATION: Legal requirements after S.B. 290

ADMINISTRATOR

EVALUATION:Legal requirements after S.B. 290

Nancy Hungerford

The Hungerford Law Firm

Feb. 1 , 2013

Page 2: ADMINISTRATOR   EVALUATION: Legal requirements after S.B. 290

Before there was S.B. 290

• 1979: ORS 342.805 et seq., which applies to teachers and administrators (except superintendent) ORS 342.835: Probationary administrators may be

dismissed or nonrenewed for “any cause deemed in good faith sufficient” by the school board.

ORS 342.850: Establishes requirements of evaluation process, including “programs of assistance for improvement” to be developed “if one is needed to remedy” a deficiency

Page 3: ADMINISTRATOR   EVALUATION: Legal requirements after S.B. 290

Before S.B. 290

• Post-probationary administrators can be dismissed for any of the reasons listed in ORS 342.865, including inadequate performance.

• Post-probationary administrators were given “permanent status” and not subject to periodic contract renewal but were subject to dismissal at any time.

• Dismissed administrators could appeal to the Fair Dismissal Appeals Board.

Page 4: ADMINISTRATOR   EVALUATION: Legal requirements after S.B. 290

After S.B. 880 in 1997

• Administrators are employed on three-year contracts. By Mar.15 of second year, the board either: Non-extends the contract “Rolls over” the contract for a new 3-year term Extends the contract for only one more year

• Non-extensions cannot be appealed to FDAB

• Administrators may be transferred to another administrative position without loss of pay

Page 5: ADMINISTRATOR   EVALUATION: Legal requirements after S.B. 290

After S.B. 290 in 2013

• Local districts must adopt standards that mirror State Board-adopted (ISLLC-based) standards “customized” through “collaborative efforts”

• Administrators must be evaluated every year during probation and then every other year, using a four-level rating scale.

• Evaluation must be based on “multiple measures” that include goal-setting around “student learning and growth”

Page 6: ADMINISTRATOR   EVALUATION: Legal requirements after S.B. 290

Local “Collaborative Process”

*No prescribed membership of team Open

*Collaboration by administrators

with superintendent?

* OEA position: teachers included

* SB 290: Standards must be

“separately developed for

teachers and administrators”

Page 7: ADMINISTRATOR   EVALUATION: Legal requirements after S.B. 290

“Musts” for Standards

*Must “take into consideration multiple measures of educator effectiveness

*Must “take into consideration evidence of student academic growth and learning based on multiple measures of student progress, including performance data of students, schools, and school districts.”

*Must be “research-based”

*Must be “customized” for each district,

which may include “individualized

weighting and application of standards”

Page 8: ADMINISTRATOR   EVALUATION: Legal requirements after S.B. 290

• Disagreement over “ownership” of student learning and growth.What if principal is in first year in the building?

What about District-level administrators below assistant superintendent?

• Disagreement over data to be used to measure “administrator’s impact on academic growth of all students”

• Does drop in test scores = unsatisfactory?

• Linked to success of teachers on their goals?If teachers average 2.75 on “student learning and growth” does principal score 2.75 automatically?

Potential Issues in Implementation

Page 9: ADMINISTRATOR   EVALUATION: Legal requirements after S.B. 290

S.B. 290 ACTION PLAN

To comply with the requirements of S.B. 290:1. Determine if your current evaluation procedures meet all

requirements of S.B. 290 and the “Framework”:

•Four-level rating scale?

•Annual goal-setting process (SMART goals) that includes at least two goals related to student learning?

•Administrator and evaluator select evidence of goal completion?

•Mid-year and end-of-year meeting over progress on student growth goals?

•Summative evaluation every year (probationary) and at least every two years (contract administrators).

Page 10: ADMINISTRATOR   EVALUATION: Legal requirements after S.B. 290

S.B. 290 ACTION PLAN

2. Compare your current standards of performance to ODE’s Educational Leader/Administrator Standards (OAR 581-022-1725)

•Visionary Leadership

• Instructional Improvement

• Effective Management

• Inclusive Practice

• Ethical Leadership

• Socio-Political Context

Option: Retain current standards but align to State standards

Page 11: ADMINISTRATOR   EVALUATION: Legal requirements after S.B. 290

S.B. 290 ACTION PLAN

3. Establish a process & timeline for “collaboration” efforts

• Determine size and membership of review group.

• Provide time for “collaboration” with administrators, superintendent, board members?

• Determine involvement of other stakeholders

• Set timelines for work product of collaboration group.

• Allow time for school board study, adoption

• Allow time for administrator training

• “Pilot” implementation during 2013-14

Page 12: ADMINISTRATOR   EVALUATION: Legal requirements after S.B. 290

S.B. 290 Action Plan

4. Provide for “multiple evidence-based measures to evaluate administrator performance and effectiveness, including:

*Evidence of professional practice

*Evidence of Professional Responsibilities

*Evidence of Student Learning and Growth

Evidence from all three categories must be used to “holistically” rate performance.

Page 13: ADMINISTRATOR   EVALUATION: Legal requirements after S.B. 290

S.B. 290 Action Plan

Evaluating “Professional Practice”:

*Observation, documentation and feedback360º feedback, surveys developed with staff, staff communication, teacher development, feedback to teachers

*Examination of Artifacts Handbooks, records of mentoring/coaching, teacher use of data, staff

meetings, teacher observations, teacher evaluations

Page 14: ADMINISTRATOR   EVALUATION: Legal requirements after S.B. 290

S.B. 290 Action Plan

Evaluating Professional Responsibilities:*Administrator’s reflections and self-reports

*Professional goal-setting, school-wide goals

*Parent and community involvement

*School-wide budget

*Staff retention rate

*Collaborative leadership

Page 15: ADMINISTRATOR   EVALUATION: Legal requirements after S.B. 290

S.B. 290 ACTION PLAN

Develop at least two goals for “student academic growth and learning,” aligned with Achievement Compact indicators where applicable

• At least one goal must use state assessment as a measure (“e.g., building-level data on proficiency and growth in reading and math, including all subgroups”)

• Common national, regional, district-developed measures (e.g., ACT, AP, IB, DIBELS, C-PAS)

• Other school-wide or district-wide measures (Graduation rate, attendance rate, dropout rate, discipline data, college and career-readiness indicators)

Page 16: ADMINISTRATOR   EVALUATION: Legal requirements after S.B. 290

Target based on Achievement Compact

Target: Increase percentage of 9th-graders “on track”

GOAL: Increase from 50% to 60% students who have 6 or more credits at the end of 9th grade.

Target based on common national measure:

Target: Increase student participation/success on AP classes

GOAL: Increase from 5% to 20% percentage of minority students in grades 11-12 enrolled in AP classes and earning “3” or higher

Sample Student-Centered Goals

Page 17: ADMINISTRATOR   EVALUATION: Legal requirements after S.B. 290

“School-based” student learning goals?

• “Number of suspensions and expulsions of H.S./M.S. minority students will decline from 50 to 35.

• “Participation of girls in athletics will increase from 25% to 35% of female H.S. students.

• “H.S. drama, speech, and music teams will increase number of students sent to state competition from __ to ___.”

Page 18: ADMINISTRATOR   EVALUATION: Legal requirements after S.B. 290

Designing Data Collection

The goal must be MEASURABLE so reliable EVIDENCE must be obtained through targeted DATA COLLECTION.

• Administrator suggests what evidence would be needed, how it might be collected

• Administrator designs data collection devices, summaries

• Set early deadline for submission of preliminary data

• Use staff, parent surveys?

• Plan for data that can be gathered

in observations of administrator.

Page 19: ADMINISTRATOR   EVALUATION: Legal requirements after S.B. 290

S.B. 290 ACTION PLAN

5. Involve and inform the school board and public.• Present to Board an Action Plan to meet S.B. 290

• Introduce “collaboration” group

• Address Board member opinions with research, information

• Allow time for presentation of recommendation

• Schedule Board vote in spring 2013

Page 20: ADMINISTRATOR   EVALUATION: Legal requirements after S.B. 290

S.B. 290 ACTION PLAN

6. Work to change the “culture” of evaluation

• What is meant by 2013-14 “piloting”?

• Group discussions of reliable “evidence” of student growth, experience of first year

• Use of data to focus evaluation efforts

• Identify administrator “inputs” that influence student “outputs”

Page 21: ADMINISTRATOR   EVALUATION: Legal requirements after S.B. 290

S.B. 290 ACTION PLAN

7. Supervise, train, educate the evaluators:

• Use collaborative process to review, revise administrative standards, evaluation process

• Provide training in observation methods to

establish consistency

• Build in peer, group assessment

• Establish accountability systems to require identification, remediation efforts

Page 22: ADMINISTRATOR   EVALUATION: Legal requirements after S.B. 290

What’s Next?

• Possible additional changes in OARs, Framework to retain NCLB waiver

• Possible legislative change in 2013?• Likely litigation over use of evaluations in

personnel decisions?• More opportunities for training, assistanceFor updates, call The Hungerford Law Firm at 503-781-

3458 or e-mail [email protected]