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Best Practices for MSDS & Accountability Steps to Success and Timeline for Accountability

Best Practices for MSDS & Accountability Steps to Success and Timeline for Accountability

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Page 1: Best Practices for MSDS & Accountability Steps to Success and Timeline for Accountability

Best Practices for MSDS & Accountability Steps to Success and Timeline for Accountability

Page 2: Best Practices for MSDS & Accountability Steps to Success and Timeline for Accountability

The Michigan Student Data System (MSDS)

•CEPI operates and collects the information by schools statewide.

•Students are identified as unique individuals through the use of the UIC (Unique Identification Code).

•Each collection in the MSDS is very important in its own way (fall/spring general, , EOY, TSDL, etc.)

•For accountability, the fall, spring, student record maintenance (SRM), and end-of-year (EOY) collections are CRITICAL.

•Getting the student record submissions correct is a MUST to ensure that accountability is accurately attributed to your school and/or district.

Page 3: Best Practices for MSDS & Accountability Steps to Success and Timeline for Accountability

The Michigan Student Data System (MSDS)

•BAA uses the MSDS as it’s ONE source of student enrollment data and holds the data to be true once certain review/correction windows have passed.

•BAA links assessment data from MEAP, MME, MI-Access, and MEAP-Access to MSDS records to build a picture of our students and ultimately, our schools and districts.

•Schools and districts cannot change enrollment or demographic data in the BAA Secure Site. It must be done in the MSDS to take effect.

Page 4: Best Practices for MSDS & Accountability Steps to Success and Timeline for Accountability

Why MSDS?•S

trong need for clean data.

•Strong need for data that is consistent for all uses (federal reporting, state reporting, district reporting, accountability).

•Allows the state to collect the data once and use many times.

•Provides an equitable route for data collection where the system is fair and the same rules are applied to everyone.

Page 5: Best Practices for MSDS & Accountability Steps to Success and Timeline for Accountability

Steps for SuccessEssential Definitions and Updates

Page 6: Best Practices for MSDS & Accountability Steps to Success and Timeline for Accountability

What is a PEPE?•“

Primary Education Providing Entity”

•Entity that is primarily responsible for the student’s education—i.e. the entity that we will hold accountable!

•Determined by CEPI through business rules based somewhat on FTE, but also other provisions.

•When deciding which school “gets” a student for accountability, we now look ONLY at the PEPE

•Home school and nonpublic school students: must report with correct residency code

•All public school students have a PEPE, regardless of FTE, and we will hold that PEPE accountable—even “part-time” students

Page 7: Best Practices for MSDS & Accountability Steps to Success and Timeline for Accountability

Homeschooled and Nonpublic Students

Without reporting the proper student residency codes, you could end up being held accountable for that student!

Example: Johnny is homeschooled and takes gym class at East Lansing High School. ELHS reports Johnny in the MSDS with .1 FTE. Since no one else is reporting Johnny elsewhere, ELHS becomes the PEPE for him. If ELHS uses “15” as his student residency code, ELHS will not be held accountable for Johnny.

Homeschooled students must have a student residency code

reported of 07 or 15!

Nonpublic school students must have a student residency code

reported of 04 or 08!

Page 8: Best Practices for MSDS & Accountability Steps to Success and Timeline for Accountability

Special Notes for SWD and LEP Students

All SWD students need the special education component submitted for them; this does NOT have to be submitted by the PEPE.

Students with Disabilities(SWD):

Limited English Proficient (LEP) Students:

Once a student is determined to be LEP eligible, they remain LEP-eligible until (and only when) they are exited because they obtained proficiency. Make sure that students are reported in each collection as LEP. Fall collection—need to re-report students as LEP unless they were exited.

Page 9: Best Practices for MSDS & Accountability Steps to Success and Timeline for Accountability

Clarification and Changes to LEP Status•L

EP exit codes 51 and 52 have been retired by CEPI.

•Only exit codes 50 (proficient) and 53 (graduated) remain.

•If a student is not exited using the valid LEP Exit Reason codes, the district must re-report the student as LEP in the following school year.

•Failure to re-report the student will not remove the student from the district’s accountability calculations; however, it will negatively impact the district’s funding allocations (the rules for determining allocations and other funding sources are available through CEPI).

•If a student is eligible for LEP services but the student/parent refuses services, report the LEP Instructional Program characteristic with code 15 (refused services).

Page 10: Best Practices for MSDS & Accountability Steps to Success and Timeline for Accountability

MSDS Grade 14 Changes•T

he description for this grade is now “Special Education Transition” and may only be reported if all the following conditions are met:– The student with an IEP is attending a transition program, or is moving from

a standard K-12 environment to a transition program. – The student with an IEP is 18 years of age or older as of December 1 of the

current school year.– The student completed a high school 11th grade state assessment in the

current school year or any previous year.

•If the student with an IEP is in a graded classroom for either special education or general education, report that grade. This includes shared time students who attend graded classrooms in other districts.

Page 11: Best Practices for MSDS & Accountability Steps to Success and Timeline for Accountability

Grade 14 Changes

•If the student with an IEP is only educated in an ungraded setting, report the most appropriate grade based on the student’s age as of December 1 of the current school year.

•The table here is a guideline districts should follow when assigning a grade based on the student’s age as of December 1.

Grade Age as of December 1

Under 5 - Early Childhood

Under 5

K (Code 00) 5 or 6

1 (Code 01) 7

2 8

3 9

4 10

5 11

6 12

7 13

8 14

9 15

10 16

11 17

12 18 or 19

Page 12: Best Practices for MSDS & Accountability Steps to Success and Timeline for Accountability

Steps for SuccessActivity Window Descriptions and Timeframes

Page 13: Best Practices for MSDS & Accountability Steps to Success and Timeline for Accountability

Step 1: Accurate MSDS Collection Data

Page 14: Best Practices for MSDS & Accountability Steps to Success and Timeline for Accountability

Step 2: Tested Roster (BAA Secure Site)

Page 15: Best Practices for MSDS & Accountability Steps to Success and Timeline for Accountability

Tested Roster: What to Review?

Page 16: Best Practices for MSDS & Accountability Steps to Success and Timeline for Accountability

Step 3: Students Expected to Test (BAA Secure Site)

Page 17: Best Practices for MSDS & Accountability Steps to Success and Timeline for Accountability

Students Expected to Test: What to Review?

Page 18: Best Practices for MSDS & Accountability Steps to Success and Timeline for Accountability

Step 4: Corrections in the MSDS•S

chools will have until May 1 to review Tested Roster and Students Expected to Test for MME & MI-Access.– Fall ‘12 MEAP, MEAP-Access, and MI-Access TR closed on 12/4/12.

•Please check for errors in your:– Enrollment information– Demographics

*Any errors should be corrected using Student Record Maintenance (SRM) in the MSDS

by 5/1/13 at 5:00 PM with an “as of” date of 3/21/13. These dates are still tentative.

Page 19: Best Practices for MSDS & Accountability Steps to Success and Timeline for Accountability

Step 5: Students Not Tested (BAA Secure Site)

•Fall Students Not Tested was open 12/10-12/20– Spring Students Not Tested will be in early to mid-May.

•This is the appropriate time to submit reasons why a student did not test.

•Note that there are a very limited number of valid reasons for a student to be exempted from the participation calculation.

•SNT is not a time to fix errors with enrollment or demographics; must be done during Tested Roster/Students Expected to Test window.

Page 20: Best Practices for MSDS & Accountability Steps to Success and Timeline for Accountability

Students Not Tested in Content Areas

01,0002,0003,0004,0005,0006,0007,0008,0009,000

10,00011,00012,00013,00014,00015,000

Fall2010

Spring2011

Fall2011

Spring2012

Fall2012

Students Not Tested Issues•A

fter each test cycle, we process on average, 14,000 issues where students have not been assessed in certain content areas!

•Some issues submitted are handled automatically, depending on the type, AGAIN– only very few issue types are allowed for exemption.

•All others are reviewed by our staff & usually takes a few weeks to process the issues.

Page 21: Best Practices for MSDS & Accountability Steps to Success and Timeline for Accountability

General Comments about Assessment and MSDS Data for School Accountability

•Create coordination between data and instructional staff, in order to ensure accuracy.

•Timelines are FIRM. Please be mindful of them! Fair accountability means the same standards and rules applied equally to everyone.

•Please read the weekly emails from BAA. Usually every Thursday afternoon a new announcement is sent out with important items relating to assessment and accountability.

Page 22: Best Practices for MSDS & Accountability Steps to Success and Timeline for Accountability

Timeline for Accountability Order of Operations & Important Dates

Page 23: Best Practices for MSDS & Accountability Steps to Success and Timeline for Accountability

Overview of the Accountability Timeline

Summer Accountability

Release!

Spri

ng

Fa

ll

Page 24: Best Practices for MSDS & Accountability Steps to Success and Timeline for Accountability

Important Dates for 2012-2013•F

all 2012– Count Day: 10/3/12

– Testing: 10/9-10/26/12 (MEAP)

– “As Of” Date: 10/26/12

– Tested Roster/Exp. To Test: 11/28-12/4/12

– Students Not Tested: 12/10/12-12/20/12

•Spring 2013– Count Day: 2/13/13

– Testing: 3/5-3/7/13

– “As Of” Date: 3/21/13

– Tested Roster/Exp. To Test: 4/24-5/1/13 (tentative)

– Students Not Tested: Early to Mid-May

Page 25: Best Practices for MSDS & Accountability Steps to Success and Timeline for Accountability

Resources Available to Help You•B

iannually, the BAA and CEPI release an “Assessment and Accountability Data Timeline”

•This resource is posted on each assessment’s main web page.– Link to Fall 2012 Timeline:

http://www.michigan.gov/documents/mde/Fall_2012_Assessment_And_Accountability_Data_Timeline_v1_2_397833_7.pdf

•Spring 2013 timeline will be available soon!

Page 26: Best Practices for MSDS & Accountability Steps to Success and Timeline for Accountability

Resources Available to Help You•B

AA Secure Manual – Detailed information and screenshots on Tested Roster, Students Expected to Test,

and Students Not Tested.

•MSDS Collection Details Manual– Detailed information regarding the fields in the MSDS, including those that are

especially import for accountability puproses (student residency, resident district, etc.). This is great to reference when reporting or reviewing your collection records.

•We understand that these manuals are very long and detailed, however, they may be able to easily address your questions and/or concerns.

Page 27: Best Practices for MSDS & Accountability Steps to Success and Timeline for Accountability

Resources Available to Help You

•MSDS Best Practices Guide on our Website:

http://www.michigan.gov/documents/mde/MSDS_Best_Practices_400576_7.pdf

•Produced by our staff to help understand the minutia of the assessment, accountability, and MSDS world.

Page 28: Best Practices for MSDS & Accountability Steps to Success and Timeline for Accountability

We’re here to help, too!877-560-8378, Option 6 [email protected]