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Georgia SIG 200407

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Almost 70 parent leaders in the GA Parent Mentor Partnership ... The parent mentor also partnered with the 12 students' local child care centers ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Georgia SIG 200407


1
  • Georgia SIG 2004-07
  • Literacy
  • SIG/SPDG Regional Meeting
  • November 1, 2007

2
Goal Increased Reading Achievement
  • Expanded Reading First
  • Training and support activities for general and
    special education teachers who teach low
    incidence (Deaf/HOH,OI, VI, Mod./Severe)
  • Professional development courses for teachers of
    students with mild disabilities

3
Results
  • Professional Development (Struggling Reader
    Courses) Increased emphasis on
  • providing services to SWD in general education
    classrooms
  • cross-training within DOE to better connect TA
  • developing frameworks for administrators and
    school teams to use in examining interventions
    that are research-based

4
Low Incidence
  • Academy for students with VI
  • Deaf/HOH diagnostic immersion weekends,
    development of literacy course and sign language
    video-book series
  • OI Reading Academies, onsite visits,
    collaboration with IHES, website and distribution
    of Strategies Manual/CD

5
Low Incidence (cont.)
  • Moderate/Severe improved communication skills,
    teachers on special assignment produced adapted
    materials, lessons aligned w/GA Performance
    Standards
  • Speech Language fostered collaboration among SLPs
    and teachers in KG or 3rd grade to target
    phonemic awareness and vocabulary skills

6
Content Implementation
  • Piloting
  • Scaling-up
  • Parent involvement
  • Role of leadership, local team buy-in, factors
    influencing change

7
Family Engagement research showed to increase
literacy in Georgia it would mean including
families in after school reading activities
promoting books in the home and making families
understand the importance of reading.
SIG participated in activities to train and
target parent leaders among the subgroups
raising students at risk to build capacity in
family engagement!
The National Network of Partnerships, Johns
Hopkins and the Family Information Network of
Educators, Harvard University
8
SIG Findings on Family Engagement
  • Families need training to assist in both
    readiness and reading development of their
    children
  • Resistance of participating by some families is
    not due to lack of interest but lack of reading
    competency.
  • Parents can encourage and assist in reading
    development without being readers themselves
  • The community working on increasing literacy
    together is more effective than separately.
  • Cultural differences, including those caused by
    poverty, most be considered and addressed.

9
SIG Family Community Partners Working to Increase
Achievement
  • Almost 70 parent leaders in the GA Parent Mentor
    Partnership
  • The GA Parent Leadership Coalition, (PLC) started
    by the GaDOE parent liaison with the assistance
    of the Southeast Regional Resource System
    consisting of 12 major education/advocacy groups
    including the Division for Early Childcare and
    Learning and the state PTA
  • 25 community navigation teams led by the PLC

10
Year one of the SIG
  • The GA Parent Mentor Partnership sponsored a
    day-long symposium in Macon with parent leaders
    across the state, administrators and parent
    mentors. More than 200 people attended to learn
    about Reading First strategies and worked in
    local teams to come up with sustainable plans to
    go back to their communities. Parenting became
    a focus of increasing literacy.

11
Family Leaders in partnership with the SIG
developed local sustainable activities guided by
the National Parent Engagement Standards with 90
percent of those activities targeting reading at
every age level, particularly up to 8 years of
age.
An important component was collaborating with
Title I. Parent Mentor Pam Madison from Madison
County, north Georgia, shares comments with her
Title I coordinator and US Senator Johnnie
Isaacson.
12
Parent Mentors found ways to increase student
reading by offering opportunities for parents to
learn to be a better parents of a reader. This
always did not mean the parent could read him or
herself.
  • Parent Meetings at libraries that involved local
    High School Clubs to work with students while the
    parent mentor conducted a meeting with families
    on a popular issue such as behavior strategies or
    Medicaid waivers.
  • Participating in book distributioncampaign where
    free books would go home.
  • Setting up audio book exchanges with tape
    recorders so families could listen together and
    follow along with the book.

13
More Example of Activities by Parent Mentors and
other Parent Leaders around Reading
  • 100 Easy Steps to Read Parent Mentor Holly
    Markert in Bibb County, an urban community in
    Mid-Georgia, trained about 8 mothers how to use
    this hands on book.
  • The mothers worked with their children everyday
    or as much as possible. Ms. Markert followed up
    each week and encouraged the parents, many who
    did not believe they were capable of teaching
    their children because many did not finish high
    school.
  • The majority of the students increased test
    scores the following year. Several of the
    families moved and did not leave a forwarding
    address which can be typical among families
    living in poverty.

14
More Examples..
  • Increasing a childs reading can mean
    encouraging a learning environment in the home ,
    according to Michelle White, a parent mentor in
    Trion City, a rural community North GA.
  • Ms. White targeted 12 students with disabilities
    who failed the state achievement test in 2006 and
    also were Title I eligible and in a Needs
    Improvement grade school.
  • Launching a parent education program to
    emphasize the importance of reading and school
    achievement, the families began encouraging
    reading at home and setting regular bed times and
    turning off the television. The parent mentor
    also partnered with the 12 students local child
    care centers to increase reading activities.
  • The 12 students passed the state achievement
  • test in May, 2007.

15
Another .
Richmond County Parent Mentor Grace Bagley found
both students and parents volunteers at her
homework club in an Augusta inner city federal
housing development got a lot more interested if
books if she read them books about Black History.
She also brought in authors and speakers on
various aspects of African American Culture to
increase the excitement over reading. The local
grade school principal gives the parent mentor
full credit for getting the school off the AYP
list because of the increased test scores of
these 40 children.
16
A major part of a childs education is the
Parenting Standard
C.A.F.E. Circles of Adults Focusing on Education
Parent Leaders in the Video
Parent leaders assisted the GaDOE to develop
a teaching video on the Parent Standards
developed by the National Network of Partnership
at Johns Hopkins University under the direction
of Joyce Epstein, PhD. The main message is for
parents to find ways to encourage reading and
math after 3 pm.
17
Supplementary Education Services
  • Parent Mentors found many parents did not do the
    follow up needed for reading because they too
    could not read.
  • They partnered with Title I coordinators across
    the state to increase tutoring opportunities for
    eligible students.
  • It often took visiting homes and explaining one
    on one to families for the commitment to the
    tutoring services available.

18
Cultural Needs
  • The SIG targeted a county with 500 students with
    disabilities who also speak English as a second
    language. The parent outreach liaison first began
    English classes for parents and incorporated
    special education language into the lessons.
  • Parents could not attend the classes unless they
    agreed to volunteer in the schools. For some, it
    was the first time to step into a school
    building.
  • Patricia Davalos, SIG Parent Latino Liaisons
    qualitative data
  • showed families understanding
  • the importance of their role in education to be
    active participants
  • and not on the side lines.

19
SIG TARGETED FAMILIES WITH SPANISH AS THE FIRST
LANGUAGE
  • Finding some parents could not read Spanish as
    well as English, the SIG pilot in Hall County
    also included training as reading coaches for the
    siblings of the Latino students with
    disabilities in five targeted grade schools on
    Needs Improvement status. The community provided
    incentives such as tickets to a local amusement
    park to the siblings. This activity as well as
    several other Family SIG pilots in the five
    schools was put into the systems Comprehensive
    Improvement Plan. The SIG activities were part of
    the improvement plan credited for increasing
    student achievement among some of the students in
    this group and decreased absenteeism.The pilots
    are going statewide in the SPDG.

20
FOCUSED MONITORINGParents on Focused Monitoring
Teams assisted educators in understanding the
face of literacy in local communities. Parent
leaders reminded school systems of the need to
increase adult education opportunities in places
other than schools where some parents are not
comfortable and also with needed supports such as
childcare. They also encouraged systems being
monitored on reading to think out of the box and
find ways to allow these parents to participate
without being readers themselves.
  • Shirley Daniels, Mitchell County Parent Mentor
  • and Tracy Rogers, Seminal County Parent Mentor
    assist on teams in monitoring systems similar to
    their own. They come from two South
  • Georgia rural systems
  • with less that
  • 300 IEPs each and the challenge of escalating
  • Unemployment, drop out and poverty levels.

21
Ms Davalos, also is member of focused monitoring,
and runs focus groups of Spanish speaking parents
directed toward achievement of SWD in math and/or
reading during the Focused Monitoring
process.As a member of the last SIG team, she
found Spanish-Speaking parents needed a voice
during during Focused Monitoring and other public
meetings concerning school issues. She said many
of her families would not speak out in public
considering it bad manners and needed a different
arena.
Patricia Davalos, now SPDG state Latino Outreach
Liaison
22
Management
  • Site identification (equitable distribution
    issues)
  • Staffing/resource allocation (timely use of
    funds)
  • Relationship building

23
Management Specifics
  • Collaboration with Reading First (had sites
    chosen plus requirement to do professional
    learning for all K-12)
  • Worked through GLRS as they were partners in
    first SIG
  • Trained 30 trainers (experts in progress
    monitoring, etc)
  • Used Texas Struggling Reader Materials

24
Specifics (cont.)
  • Intense collaboration/same mindset/always there
  • Initial model was one of training not so much
    support
  • SIG Staff contact person w/Reading First

25
Once More-Content Implementation
  • Piloting
  • Scaling-up
  • Parent involvement
  • Role of leadership, local team buy-in, factors
    influencing change

26
Evaluation
  • Continually assessing/frequent meetings with
    Reading First
  • Constantly tweaking ( ex. saw need for support in
    data driven instruction)
  • SIG gave support to DOE literacy coaches who
    worked with teachers (increased ownership by
    literacy coach on data, interventions, etc.)

27
Sustainability
  • Give it away!
  • Established partnership with Reading First so
    that as they built resources SWD included
  • More acceptance from General Education
  • Enable the resources! 17 GLRS centers have
    trainers, materials and support mechanism for
    schools
  • Continued networking within DOE and agencies

28
Questions?
  • What worked for you?
  • Let me know your successes!
  • Julia Causey
  • Georgia Department of Education
  • 404-657-9954
  • jcausey_at_doe.k12.ga.us
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