Leadership magazine Sept/Oct 2014 V 44 No 1 | Page 30

• Help students access the new Common Core standards. Ideas into action: One example Once community input themes emerged, the development team surveyed existing successful programs looking for ways to expand services. In some cases, the team developed action plans that created new service models to meet student needs. Following is an example of the process we used to expand an existing program under the LCAP. Connecting Our Students To School (COSTS) was established in 2012 and had an impressive success rate. This program was funded through the district’s Migrant, American Indian, and Title lll budgets and consisted of a student support team that included district liaisons, counselors and a parent education component, in addition to partnerships with outside agencies for social and emotional services. The focus of the team was student attendance, parent involvement and academic intervention. In order to increase student attendance, the team had established procedures for reviewing student attendance, establishing incentives, and creating relationships with parents. The key to team success was to approach each case as a family unit and establish support for the student and family. Students in this program increased attendance and improved in academics. The COSTS program was expanded under LCAP to serve students across the district. COSTS addressed three out of the five community input themes and was a perfect action step to achieve the newly established district LCAP goals. The action step was to establish a Student Advocacy and Family Engagement Team at each elementary school. This included a new position – a student advocate technician – at each school to work with the district attendance officer. A similar structure was developed for middle and high school. Each student advocate technician maintains a caseload of more than 50 students, with a coordinated focus on student attendance and parent/community involvement. At the secondary level, a School Climate Team was also established to help decrease the incidents that lead to suspension or expulsion. This team supports students by connecting them with existing school services – academic and social intervention and after-school programs – and working closely with families to help them access outside services as needed. The team will include trained behavior technicians. The power of this process was to identify themes from the community, sift through district data, establish goals to meet the needs of students, and then to find programs either in place or that needed to be developed. Many of the actions of our LCAP were not wholly new; like the COSTS program they were already effective, but needed more resources to expand. The next phase of our stakeholders’ process was to hold a second round of meetings with the groups that gave input earlier in the Continued on page 38 30 Leadership