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Ensuring Equitable Access to Excellent Educators Copyright © 2014 American Institutes for Research. All rights reserved. Jennifer Baker Office of Next Generation Learners February 24, 2015

Ensuring Equitable Access to Excellent Educators Copyright © 2014 American Institutes for Research. All rights reserved. Jennifer Baker Office of Next

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Page 1: Ensuring Equitable Access to Excellent Educators Copyright © 2014 American Institutes for Research. All rights reserved. Jennifer Baker Office of Next

Ensuring Equitable Access to Excellent Educators

Copyright © 2014 American Institutes for Research. All rights reserved.

Jennifer BakerOffice of Next Generation Learners

February 24, 2015

Page 2: Ensuring Equitable Access to Excellent Educators Copyright © 2014 American Institutes for Research. All rights reserved. Jennifer Baker Office of Next

Engage stakeholders, with the purpose of informing the design of a State Plan to Ensure Equitable Access to Excellent Educators.

Encourage stakeholders to offer their ideas, insights, and perspectives to improve educator equity.

Provide stakeholders with the background information they need to offer informed feedback.

Use this input to help ensure that states’ equitable access plans are designed and implemented in a way that not only complies with federal requirements but also leads to meaningful educational advancements.

Today’s Outcomes

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Page 3: Ensuring Equitable Access to Excellent Educators Copyright © 2014 American Institutes for Research. All rights reserved. Jennifer Baker Office of Next

What Is Equitable Access?

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Page 4: Ensuring Equitable Access to Excellent Educators Copyright © 2014 American Institutes for Research. All rights reserved. Jennifer Baker Office of Next

The following student groups are less likely to have access to great teachers and school leaders according to virtually every metric available:Students of colorStudents from low-income familiesRural studentsStudents with disabilitiesStudents with limited English proficiencyStudents in need of academic remediation

Source: Institute of Education Sciences, data from the U.S. Department of Education’s Office for Civil Rights

Findings From Research on Equitable Access

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Page 5: Ensuring Equitable Access to Excellent Educators Copyright © 2014 American Institutes for Research. All rights reserved. Jennifer Baker Office of Next

The 2002 reauthorization of the Elementary and Secondary Education Act, known as No Child Left Behind, called for all students to be taught by highly qualified teachers by 2006.

States also were required to create plans to ensure that students from low-income families and students of color are not taught at higher rates than other students by underqualified, inexperienced, or out-of-field teachers.

Currently, Kentucky has 99.7% of HQT.

Historical Background

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Page 6: Ensuring Equitable Access to Excellent Educators Copyright © 2014 American Institutes for Research. All rights reserved. Jennifer Baker Office of Next

New plans must be submitted to the U.S. Department of Education by June 2015 and must include:

Plans to Ensure Equitable Access to Excellent Educators

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Page 7: Ensuring Equitable Access to Excellent Educators Copyright © 2014 American Institutes for Research. All rights reserved. Jennifer Baker Office of Next

The Kentucky Department of Education is using data from the Kentucky Center for Education Workforce and Statics (KCEWS) to determine equity gaps. Preliminary data was shared with stakeholders during the Commissioner’s Advisory Councils in the fall of 2014.

Educator Equity Data

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Page 8: Ensuring Equitable Access to Excellent Educators Copyright © 2014 American Institutes for Research. All rights reserved. Jennifer Baker Office of Next

• High-poverty, high-minority and schools with low average test scores are more likely to hire new teachers.

• Newly hired teachers are significantly more likely to be placed with students with lower incoming math scores compared with other teachers.

• Returning teachers have a larger impact on student test scores than newly hired teachers.

• There is a wide variation in median student growth percentiles for KY teachers.

• Teachers in high-poverty and schools with low average test scores are more likely to transfer to other schools in the following year.

• Schools located in cities have higher teacher turnover.

• Just over half of newly hired teachers were still teaching in the same school two years later.

Key Findings for Kentucky

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Page 9: Ensuring Equitable Access to Excellent Educators Copyright © 2014 American Institutes for Research. All rights reserved. Jennifer Baker Office of Next

Addressing Equitable Access in Kentucky

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Page 10: Ensuring Equitable Access to Excellent Educators Copyright © 2014 American Institutes for Research. All rights reserved. Jennifer Baker Office of Next

Stakeholder Engagement Identification of Equitable Access Gaps Identification of Root Causes for Equitable Access Gaps Identification of Strategies to Address the Root Causes Determination of Metrics to be used to Assess Gaps Public Reporting of Progress

Components of the Statewide Plan

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Page 11: Ensuring Equitable Access to Excellent Educators Copyright © 2014 American Institutes for Research. All rights reserved. Jennifer Baker Office of Next

Let’s Hear From You

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Identify the reasons for the key findings that stand in the way of providing equitable access to effective teachers and principals in Kentucky.

Thinking about the root causes you have identified, what are some potential strategies that may address the reasons for the inequities that exist?

Page 12: Ensuring Equitable Access to Excellent Educators Copyright © 2014 American Institutes for Research. All rights reserved. Jennifer Baker Office of Next

Proposed Measures to Evaluate Progress

TELL Working Conditions Survey

Teacher and Principal Effectiveness (Each domain and Student Growth)

Overall Effectiveness

Total % of first year and KTIP teachers in all schools

Teacher Retention Data

Let’s Hear From You

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Page 13: Ensuring Equitable Access to Excellent Educators Copyright © 2014 American Institutes for Research. All rights reserved. Jennifer Baker Office of Next

Public Reporting of Progress

Tab on the District and School Report Card

Let’s Hear From You

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Page 14: Ensuring Equitable Access to Excellent Educators Copyright © 2014 American Institutes for Research. All rights reserved. Jennifer Baker Office of Next

For additional information or comments please contact:

Jennifer Baker

[email protected]

(502) 564-1479

Questions and Answers

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