Leadership magazine Sept/Oct 2014 V 44 No 1 | Page 10

Resources for calculating the LCFF and developing your LCAP T hese resources will help you successfully calculate the LCFF and navigate the development and approval of your LCAP. The LCAP regulations will continue to be refined over time. n Association of California School Administrators – Leadership for Local Control Accountability Planning ACSA Academy: www.acsa.org/academies n ACSA – Electronic LCAP Template (ACSA’s web-based tool): www.LCAPca.com n California Department of Education – LCFF: www.cde.ca.gov/fg/aa/lc n California Department of Education – LCAP: http://goo.gl/H2uQlw n WestEd – LCFF Channel: lcff.wested.org/lcff-channel n Fiscal Crisis & Management Assistance Team – LCFF resources and LCFF calculator: fcmat.org/local-control-funding-formula-resources n California Longitudinal Pupil Achievement Data System: www.cde.ca.gov/ds/sp/cl/ index.asp n California County Superintendents Educational Services Association – LCAP Approval Manual: ccsesa.org/special-projects/lcap-approval-manual n County Offices of Education: Contact your local COE for additional LCFF and LCAP guidance. will continue to be one of the worst funded states in the nation as rated by per-pupil spending. Local Control Accountability Plan The LCAP represents the system of accountability developed by the state in order to ensure that LEAs align their locally controlled LCFF funds with the instructional program goals as delineated within the LCAP. The emergency LCAP template was released by the state in March 2014 for school districts to utilize. When developing the LCAP, the state requires school districts or LEAs to focus on the areas of “involvement” and “transparency.” In order to achieve the latter criteria, governing boards must consult with teachers, principals, school personnel, students and local bargaining groups regarding the LCAP. Additionally, the district’s parent advisory committee and English Language Acquisition Committee must be allowed to review and comment on the LCAP. The superintendent must respond in writing to parent comments. The LCAP process also requires a public hearing and concurrent adoption with the budget. LCAP goals must be established based on student needs assessments and must address all eight state LCAP priorities. Below is a list of sample needs assessments that an LEA may choose to utilize within their LCAP: • Formative student assessment data (standardized states assessments such as California Standards Test and Smarter Balanced Assessment Consortium). • Summative student assessment data (school district local assessment calendars specific to curricular subject areas and adopted curriculum). • California English Language Development Test. • School Accountability Report Card. • Professional development committee needs assessment. • School district and school site community forums – qualitative data. • Facilities Inspection Tool. • California Healthy Kids survey. • California physical fitness test. • Parent/teacher surveys. Continued on page 36 10 Leadership