SCORE Roadmap to Success | Page 22

stake holder responsibilities State Board of Education 1. Ensure a culture of high expectations underlies every single policy you develop. 2. Hold steadfastly to higher academic standards in the State of Tennessee, even if and when the resulting student outcomes do not appear as favorable. 3. Monitor the progress of the National Governors Association/ Council of Chief State School Officers Common Core Standards project. If the project identifies specific areas where Tennessee’s standards could be improved, adopt these specific improvements. Otherwise, continuously modify Tennessee’s standards to ensure they are internationally benchmarked by regularly reviewing and updating all standards. 4. Define TCAP proficiency in each subject as being on pace to meet the ACT college-ready benchmark in that subject. Define this proficiency threshold prior to students taking the assessments in the spring of 2010. 5. Create a process by which alternative providers can be granted the authority to certify principals. 6. Require students score at least basic on select end-of-course tests for high school graduation with appropriate alternative assessment opportunities for special education students and English Language Learners. Implement this recommendation over time as the reliability of each endof-course assessment is validated. Ideally, the State Board of Education’s Middle Grades Policy would be implemented concurrently. 7. Either remove the Praxis I as an option for gaining entry into teacher training programs or raise the performance requirements on the Praxis I to make them equivalent to current ACT and SAT score requirements. 8. Participate in a task force to revise the existing Teacher Training Program Report Card and to create a School Leadership Program report card. 9. Propose enhancing the Tennessee’s College-and-Career Ready Policy Institute (CCRPI) progress report by: (1) making goal #2 track both 4th and 8th grade student college-readiness (2) replacing metric #3 with the percent of students who score at or above proficient in reading and math on the 4th and 8th grade TCAP and NAEP assessments and the gap between the percent proficient on the two tests (3) adding dual credit and International Baccalaureate programs to metric #7 and (4) adding a new metric to track the percent of first time postsecondary students completing degrees within 150 percent of normal degree program time (e.g., three years for associate’s degree and six years for bachelor’s degree). 10. After these changes have been made, align metrics tracked by the State Board of Education and metrics tracked in the Annual Joint Report on Pre-Kindergarten through Higher Education in Tennessee with the College-and-Career Ready Policy Institute report so that all entities involved in education are tracking a single set of outcome metrics. 22 A ROADMAP TO SUCCESS Tennessee Department of Education Data and Assessment 1. Identify best practices for school readiness assessments for students in grades K-2. Over time, provide state funding for these new assessments and add an additional metric to the CCRPI report tracking student readiness on these assessments. 2. Negotiate a statewide contract for K-12 formative assessments that districts can purchase at a reduced price. Over time, provide state funding for these formative assessments. 3. Directly provide all principals and teachers log-in information to the appropriate portions of the TVAAS database. 4. Reconfigure existing TVAAS, teacher effect, and other student achievement data reports to ensure they are transmitted electronically and easy for teachers to understand. 5. Create an easy-to-understand printout of each child’s student achievement data that is clearly connected with projections of how a child is likely to perform in the future and ensure this printout is given to each child’s teacher. 6. Track postsecondary remediation rates and costs of recent high school graduates back to each high school and district on the Tennessee Department of Education Report Card. Professional Development and Accountability 1. Focus professional development efforts on (1) helping principals, teachers, and guidance counselors successfully implement the Tennessee Diploma Project and (2) training superintendents, principals, guidance counselors, and teachers how TVAAS works and how it and other assessment tests (e.g., PLAN and EXPLORE) can be effectively used to improve classroom instruction. Use the Electronic Learning Center as a method for delivering this training and a forum for teachers to collaborate and share resources. 2. Identify ways for improving the effectiveness of interventions for low-performing schools and districts by enhancing evaluation mechanisms of current support programs (e.g., Exemplary Educators, AGE, and STAT teams) and better