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School Story

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School Story . Coyote Ridge is proudly in our 3 rd year of existence! Our K-5 th school population is comprised of 350 students (up from 297 last year) Diversity: Hispanic – 9% Asian – 4% Black – 2% White – 80% Other – 4% Male/Female: 50/50% Free and Reduced Meals (FARM): 13% - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: School Story

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Page 2: School Story

+School Story Coyote Ridge is proudly in our 3rd year of existence!

Our K-5th school population is comprised of 350 students (up from 297 last year) Diversity:

Hispanic – 9% Asian – 4% Black – 2% White – 80% Other – 4%

Male/Female: 50/50% Free and Reduced Meals (FARM): 13% Students with IEP’s and/or ILP’s: 9% have an IEP, 16% have an ILP Students with ALP’s: 5%

CRES aspires to become an Authorized IB PYP School. We will complete the second phase of that process, “Application A” this year!

We are thrilled to be “Accredited with Distinction” by CDE

Page 3: School Story

+Data--Science

2008-2009 5th 71%

2009-2010 5th 94%

Page 4: School Story

+Data--Math2009-2010 Math

3rd- 100%

4th- 100%

5th- 100%Median Growth- 92%

2008-2009 Math

3rd- 83%4th- 100%5th- 88%

Page 5: School Story

+Data--Reading2009-2010 Reading

3rd Grade- 4th Grade-5th Grade-Median

Growth- 86%

2008-2009 Reading

3rd- 88%4th- 92%5th- 96%

Page 6: School Story

+Data--Writing2009-2010 Writing

3rd- 80%4th- 78%5th- 94%

Median Growth- 95%

2008-2009 Writing

3rd- 61%4th- 75%5th- 79%

Page 7: School Story

+Celebrations & Challenges Celebrations:

Continued growth year to year on CSAP and other measures Growth of ALL students! Successful implementation of RtI practices

PST Team for both academic and behavior challenges Interventions for all kids who need them

Challenges: 53 new students to our school + 70 kindergartners

Sixty six 2nd graders registered in 2 classes No additional FTE from district provided Reconfigured our staffing plan to solve the problem

Resulted in loss of 2 aides to help in large classrooms, etc. Loss of literacy interventionists, no FTE for math

interventions 1.5 FTE last year to .75 this year – 123 new students in our

school Space for interventions is minimal/school is packed

Page 8: School Story

+Rationale: How/Why targets were

selected We chose our targets based on:

Previous success on CSAP and other assessments Growth of all students/desire to replicate student success

Desire to continue IB work, which we directly relate to our success

Alignment of school-wide curriculum Targeting writing instruction

Articulation between all grade levels Common literacy vocabulary taught in all grade levels

Implementation of best teaching practices New state standards used to drive our Units of Inquiry Deepen our use of performance assessments to monitor

progress Development of common assessments especially in K-2

Page 9: School Story

+Results of Root Cause Analysis We believe our students’ overall academic achievement can be

partially attributed to the implementation of our staff’s collaborative work to become an authorized IB school including: Professional development plan which included weekly vertical articulation to create our Programme of Inquiry (POI), horizontal articulation to develop grade level unit planners, use of Backwards Design to create Units of Inquiry, implementing and teaching technology skills, teaching research skills, teaching through inquiry to maximize critical thinking, providing opportunities and teaching students to be reflective, integrating action-based community service, knowing and aligning the teaching of the new Colorado 21st Century Learning Standards.

We believe that the gap was closed by the following practices we employed (and we will continue to use): Careful analysis of data to identify gaps, grade level articulation (horizontal and vertical), grade level team planning with interventionists, & instructional coach, flooding model in reading to increase literacy blocks from 90 minutes to 120 minutes, and for targeting student needs in small groups, Inquiry based approach to teaching, use of common assessments and rubrics among grade levels, allocated financial resources to purchase intervention programs and fund intervention positions, actively engaged volunteers to help meet student’s literacy goals.

Page 10: School Story

+Highlights of Action Plan We will be able to define and articulate what students

will be able to do, know, and understand in each of our grade level units of inquiry.

We will articulate and define what students need to be able to do at each grade level in writing. We then we will be able to create a school wide writing rubric.

We will deepen our understanding of the inquiry process and how it applies to our IB planners. We will have opportunities to observe inquiry in action, and will begin to take risks in showing off our newly acquired skills.

We will use what we know about inquiry and apply that understanding in creating performance assessments.

Page 11: School Story

+Review of Plan: August 2nd & 3rd: District Training w/ Leadership Team

Data shared with staff, individual review of data

August 11th & 12th: Full Staff work on SIP Review of Data Opportunities to reflect/discuss in small and large groups Root Cause Analysis done by full staff – lead by Leadership Team

Sept. 1st: District Day, Standards work/Literacy goals through IB Units

Sept. 9th: Literacy Committee Work began to a set direction for our writing goal work

Sept. 12th: Leadership Team Retreat Sunday to complete the SIP Template

Sept. 22nd: SIP presented to the staff and incorporated feedback

Sept. 27th: SAAC presentation incorporated feedback, set topics for SAAC discussions

Sept. 29th: Plan finalized after last staff review and submitted to district