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Dedicated to high student achievement through quality charter schools Association Update Eileen Sigmund March 14, 2011

Arizona Charter Schools Association

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Arizona Charter Schools Association. Association Update Eileen Sigmund March 14, 2011. Arizona Charter Schools Association. AGENDA Legislative Bills Charter Student Funding Arizona Republic. Legislative Bills. H2197: CHARTER SCHOOLS; AGE RESTRICTED COMMUNITIES - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Arizona Charter Schools Association

Dedicated to high student achievement through quality charter schools

Association UpdateEileen SigmundMarch 14, 2011

Page 2: Arizona Charter Schools Association

Dedicated to high student achievement through quality charter schools

AGENDA

Legislative Bills

Charter Student Funding

Arizona Republic

Page 3: Arizona Charter Schools Association

Dedicated to high student achievement through quality charter schools

Legislative Bills

Charter

Students

10%

9,307

Students

District

Students

10%

92,843

Students

Charter

Students

80%

74,452

Students

Charter

Students

10%

9,307

Students

• H2197: CHARTER SCHOOLS; AGE RESTRICTED COMMUNITIES The statute governing the placement of charter schools is amended to prohibit a charter school from being located on commercial or residential property in an age restricted community in an unorganized territory

• H2587: SCHOOLS; MILITARYRECRUITING; FORM The Dept of Education is required to provide a form to school districts andcharter schools that allows students to request that directory information notbe released. A person wrongfully denied access to directory informationor access to school property may notify the Dept of Education, which in turnmust report the alleged violation to the U.S. Dept of Education

• H2710: STUDY COMMITTEE;OUTCOME-BASED FUNDING Establishes a 13-member Joint Legislative Study Committee onOutcome-Based Education Funding to develop legislation that will transitionpublic school funding from a system based on instructional hours to asystem based on student achievement. Report to the Governor and the

Legislature by December 31, 2011. Self-repeals October 1, 2012.• Immigration; School Finance; etc. http://www.azcharters.org/legislativeupdates

• BUDGET IS FOCUS

Page 4: Arizona Charter Schools Association

Dedicated to high student achievement through quality charter schools

Charter Student Funding

Page 5: Arizona Charter Schools Association

Dedicated to high student achievement through quality charter schools

Note: Not included in the formula amounts are those items that come to school districts from local property taxes such as budget overrides, desegregation dollars, and other items outside the Revenue Control Limit (RCL) and funding provided by the School Facilities Board.       

Page 6: Arizona Charter Schools Association

Dedicated to high student achievement through quality charter schools

Desegregation $211,896,784.00

Adjacent Ways $132,424,913.00

Excess Utilities $115,139,070.00

Small School Adjustment $24,633,161.00

Dropout Prevention $5,834,540.00

Career Ladder $48,619,217.00

M&O Overrides $374,605,060.00

Capital Overrides $88,064,443.00

K-3 M&O Overrides $58,017,684.00

K-3 Unrestricted Overrides $655,300.00

Capital Debt Service $764,883,369.00

School Facilities Board Debt Service $79,000,000.00

Total: $1,903,773,541Average Per Pupil: $2,069

Revenues Unavailable to Charter Schools

Page 7: Arizona Charter Schools Association

Dedicated to high student achievement through quality charter schools

Page 8: Arizona Charter Schools Association

Dedicated to high student achievement through quality charter schools

STUDENT INEQUITIES

Charter

Students

10%

9,307

Students

District

Students

10%

92,843

Students

Charter

Students

80%

74,452

Students

District

Students

80%

742,743

Students

Charter

Students

10%

9,307

Students

District

Students

10%

92,843

Students

Not a district versus charter story: AFFECTS ALL STUDENTS

“Education is a precondition to survival in America today,”

Marian Wright Edelman, Children’s Defense Fund

Page 9: Arizona Charter Schools Association

Dedicated to high student achievement through quality charter schools

$7.5 Billion Student Inequities

Charter

Students

10%

9,307

Students

District

Students

10%

92,843

Students

Charter

Students

80%

74,452

Students

District

Students

80%

742,743

Students

Charter

Students

10%

9,307

Students

District

Students

10%

92,843

Students

Page 10: Arizona Charter Schools Association

Dedicated to high student achievement through quality charter schools

ARIZONA REPUBLIC

Charter

Students

10%

9,307

Students

District

Students

10%

92,843

Students

Charter

Students

80%

74,452

Students

Charter

Students

10%

9,307

Students

I am writing to request that The Arizona Republic (Republic) provide the Arizona Charter Schools Association with the underlying data, analysis and methodology used to write March 6th A1 story, “Questions Arise Over Big Gains on Aims”  (Big Gains). Although you indicate that the Republic does not intend to release the data because you believe we can conduct the same analysis as the Republic, we believe that it ismost important to understand how you arrived at your conclusions related to the data.  We cannot conduct the same analysis without seeing your data, analysis and methodology.  The Association represents Arizona’s robust charter movement, and our student analysis data did not reveal the same red flags inferred by the Republic.We have no other option but to conclude and caution that the Republic reported information that is inaccurate or leads the reader to inaccurate conclusions. We believe you have a public responsibility to be free from erroneous or imprecise information whenever possible.  In all instances, your credibility dictates that you correct factual errors of the record.  We would ask that you no longer report the Big Gains information until it can be verified.  At the very least, we are requesting a meeting so you may provide us the methodology that assisted your efforts.    For these reasons, the Association respectfully requests the Republic’s data, analysis and methodology for the March 6th A1 story, “Questions Arise Over Big Gains on Aims.” 

Page 11: Arizona Charter Schools Association

Dedicated to high student achievement through quality charter schools

NEED FOR REPUBLIC DATA

Charter

Students

10%

9,307

Students

District

Students

10%

92,843

Students

Charter

Students

80%

74,452

Students

Charter

Students

10%

9,307

Students

We cannot conduct the same analysis without seeing the Republic’s data, analysis and Methodology for the following reasons:•  The Republic did not identify the methodology used, rather they state "...found using a methodology widely recognized by mathematicians and testing experts" (pg. A1).• The Republic indicates that the "data analysis used by the Republic and USA TODAY is similar to the one used by the Florida Department of Education used to identify schools with unusual gains." (pg. A6) Since the Republic did not replicate the Florida analysis exactly, the Association does not know what modifications were made to their analysis and cannot use the Florida model to help guide our work.• The Republic states they "calculated mean test scores for each grade in each school. They then used statistical methods to compare how students in each grade performed one year with how the same group performed the next year." Many different statistical methods can be used to compare test results.• In the description of the schools' profiles, the Republic refers to "percentiles" compared to how other students did in Arizona; however, the limited explanation of the Republic’s methodology references comparing the overall percentages of students’ scores by grade and school. The use of the term "percentile" makes the interpretation of the results unclear- did the Republic use a growth model such as The Arizona Growth model where percentiles are calculated for all students in the state? Percentages and percentiles are not the same thing.

Page 12: Arizona Charter Schools Association

Dedicated to high student achievement through quality charter schools

NEED FOR REPUBLIC DATA

Charter

Students

10%

9,307

Students

District

Students

10%

92,843

Students

Charter

Students

80%

74,452

Students

Charter

Students

10%

9,307

Students

• The number of students is not reported for any of the schools. While it was reported that no schools with fewer than 20 students were included we would like to review the data, especially for those small counts. Given the potentially small numbers of students who can be tracked from one year to the next - and in one referenced school, the Republic connected five years of data – the changes in percentages can be volatile and swings can be large simply due to the size of the sample.• The other alarming data reported comes from transitions between elementary to middle school. This drop in student performance statewide has been chronicled in the Republic for years. Arizona students do poorly in middle school math due to the increased expectation in the content standards, a more rigorous expectation and more difficult cut scores.• Another possible explanation for the changes reported in elementary school between grades three to four is the impact of ELL students reaching proficiency. Since most of the data is math, this can still be significantly impacted on language proficiency. Not knowing how many of these students reached language proficiency in fourth grade makes it difficult to interpret the results; however, this pattern of change is consistent in analyzing ELL students’ scores.

Page 13: Arizona Charter Schools Association

Dedicated to high student achievement through quality charter schools

THANK YOU!

Please contact us at 602.944.0644 with any questions or visit our website at

www.azcharters.org