Personal Graduation Plans (PGP)

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Personal Graduation Plans (PGP) Personal Graduation Plans (PGP) Implementing the Requirements of SB 1108, Section 7

description

Personal Graduation Plans (PGP). Implementing the Requirements of SB 1108, Section 7. Objectives. Review the law concerning PGPs Discuss options for implementation Instructional Issues Technical Issues Questions and considerations for local decision makers - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of Personal Graduation Plans (PGP)

Page 1: Personal Graduation Plans (PGP)

Personal Graduation Plans (PGP)

Personal Graduation Plans (PGP)

Implementing the Requirements of

SB 1108, Section 7

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Personal Graduation Plans (PGP)

Objectives• Review the law concerning PGPs• Discuss options for implementation

– Instructional Issues– Technical Issues– Questions and considerations for local decision

makers

• Review the requirements of the High School Success and Completion Grant

• Review related laws/programs/support systems• Preview the PGP Planner

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Personal Graduation Plans (PGP)

TEC §28.0212Personal Graduation Plan. (Senate Bill 1108, 78th Texas Legislature, 2003)

(a) A principal shall designate a guidance counselor, teacher, or other appropriate individual to develop and administer a personal graduation plan for each student enrolled in a junior high, middle, or high school who:

(1) does not perform satisfactorily on an assessment instrument administered under Subchapter B, Chapter 39; or(2) is not likely to receive a high school diploma before the fifth school year following the student's enrollment in grade level nine, as determined by the district.

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Personal Graduation Plans (PGP)

TEC §28.0212, Cont.• identify educational goals for the student; • include diagnostic information, appropriate monitoring and

intervention, and other evaluation strategies;• include an intensive instruction program described by

Section 28.0213;• address participation of the student's parent or

guardian, including consideration of the parent's or guardian's educational expectations for the student; and

• provide innovative methods to promote the student's advancement, including flexible scheduling, alternative learning environments, on-line instruction, and other interventions that are proven to accelerate the learning process and have been scientifically validated to improve learning and cognitive ability.

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Personal Graduation Plans (PGP)

TEC §28.0212, Cont.• Students served in special education…

– a student's individualized education program developed

under Section 29.005 may be used as the student's personal graduation plan under this section.

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Personal Graduation Plans (PGP)

District/Campus Considerations• Who is the designee?

– Counselor? Teacher? Team?

• Who is required to have a PGP?– Middle school, junior high, and high school students

who did not meet the standard on any TAKS test in the previous school year

• Grade 6 only if located on a middle school/junior high campus

– Students who are not accruing credits on the anticipated schedule

• How much time should be allocated to the development of the plan?

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Personal Graduation Plans (PGP)

District/Campus Considerations• How will the campus address each

element required by the PGP?• How will parents be involved?• When should the plan be completed?

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Personal Graduation Plans (PGP)

Components of the PGP• Educational Goals

– Graduation– Success on State Assessment– Credit Accrual– Transition Planning to workforce/IHE– Other…

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Personal Graduation Plans (PGP)

Components of the PGP• Diagnostic Information

– TAAS/TAKS/SDAA/LDAA/RPTE– Online Diagnostic (TRACK)– Grades– Formative Assessments– Informal Data– Attendance, discipline, ancillary data– Other…

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Personal Graduation Plans (PGP)

Components of the PGP• Intensive Program of Instruction (TEC)

– Enable the student to: • to the extent practicable, perform at the

student's grade level at the conclusion of the next regular school term; or

• attain a standard of annual growth specified by the school district and reported by the district to the agency; and

– if applicable, carry out the purposes of Section 28.0211.

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Personal Graduation Plans (PGP)

Components of the PGP• Participation of parent or guardian

– Consideration of the parent's or guardian's educational expectations for the student

– Forms of participation• parent conference• telephone conference• planning input through personal

correspondence (in the parent or guardian’s primary language when possible)

• other means of ensuring participation– Documented

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Personal Graduation Plans (PGP)

Components of the PGP• Innovative methods to promote the

student's advancement– flexible scheduling– alternative learning environments– on-line instruction– other interventions that are proven to

accelerate the learning process and have been scientifically validated to improve learning and cognitive ability

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Personal Graduation Plans (PGP)

District/Campus Considerations• Goals:

– School– Parent or Guardian– Student

• Intensive Instruction– Current effective practices– Acceleration of more than one year’s learning –

gap analysis between chronological grade level and performance level

– Direct and systematic– Goal Oriented

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Personal Graduation Plans (PGP)

District/Campus Considerations• Monitoring

– Regular and Ongoing– Formal and Informal– Communicated

• Intensive Instruction– Acceleration of more than one year’s learning – gap analysis

between chronological grade level and performance level– Direct, systematic, flexible, and supplemental– Varied and Goal Oriented

• Diagnostic Information– Collection and Interpretation– Focus

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Personal Graduation Plans (PGP)

District/Campus Considerations• Innovative Instruction

– Review suggestions noted in the code– Current effective practices– Role of significant adults and mentors– Identification of personnel and targeted approaches– Coordinated approaches for highest risk– Coordination of drop-out recovery methodologies– Placement in current classes/flexible groupings– Tutorial models and timing– Tiered interventions– Successful resources

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Personal Graduation Plans (PGP)

Other laws/programs • Compensatory, Intensive, and Accelerated Instruction

§29.081

– Design and implement appropriate compensatory, intensive, accelerated instruction to enable the students to perform at grade level at the end of the next regular school term

– Provide accelerated instruction to students who did not pass the exit-level assessment instrument or who is at risk of dropping out of school (CONSIDER AYP)

– Evaluate and document the effectiveness of the accelerated instruction, including the disparity between high school completion rates as compared to other district students.

– “Student at-risk of dropping out of school” (SEE SCE CRITERIA)

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Personal Graduation Plans (PGP)

Other laws/programs • Compensatory, Intensive, and Accelerated Instruction

§29.081

– Design and implement appropriate compensatory, intensive, accelerated instruction to enable the students to perform at grade level at the end of the next regular school term

– Provide accelerated instruction to students who did not pass the exit-level assessment instrument or who is at risk of dropping out of school (CONSIDER AYP)

– Evaluate and document the effectiveness of the accelerated instruction, including the disparity between high school completion rates as compared to other district students.

– “Student at-risk of dropping out of school” (SEE SCE CRITERIA)

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Personal Graduation Plans (PGP)

Other laws/programs • Drop-out Prevention/Recovery §29.081

– A school district may use a private or public community-based drop-out recovery education program to provide alternative education programs for students at-risk of dropping out of school. The programs must:

– Provide not less than four hours of instructional time per day

– Employ staff with baccalaureate or advanced degrees– Provide at least one instructor for each 28 students, – Perform satisfactorily according to performance indicators

and accountability standards adopted for alternative education programs by the commissioner, and

– Comply with this title and rules.

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Personal Graduation Plans (PGP)

Other laws/programs • OEYP §29.082

– A school district may set aside an amount from the district’s allotment for a period not to exceed 30 instructional days for:

– K-11th graders who are identified as likely not to be promoted to the next grade level for the succeeding school year; or

– 12th graders who are identified as likely not to graduate from high school before the beginning of the succeeding school year.

– Enrollment not to exceed 16 students in a class

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Personal Graduation Plans (PGP)

Other laws/programs • OEYP §29.082

– Taught by a teacher who has completed successfully a program that provides training to teach a class under this section

– A student who attends at least 90% of the program days under this program shall be promoted to the next grade level at the beginning of the next school year, unless a parent presents a written request that the student not be promoted.

– District policy must be in place to address eliminating student retention.

– Provide transportation to each student required to attend and who is eligible for regular transportation services.

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Personal Graduation Plans (PGP)

High School Completion and Success Grant Program

• Schools receiving funding under this grant must ensure that ALL students have an Individualized Graduation Plan (IGP).

• This IGP may serve as an extension of the PGP.• Students must:

– receive services from highly qualified staff (as defined by NCLB)

– have access to online diagnostic and assessment instruments, and

– be provided accelerated instruction in areas of academic weakness.

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Personal Graduation Plans (PGP)

PGP Template• Local district determines format• Sample format with required

elements• IGP compliant

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Personal Graduation Plans (PGP)

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Personal Graduation Plans (PGP)

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Personal Graduation Plans (PGP)

PGP: Additional Considerations

•What happens to the completed PGPs?– Who needs copies?

•Confidentiality Issues– Who is responsible for monitoring?– Where do we keep the original, both short

term and long term?

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Personal Graduation Plans (PGP)

FAQ (ESC Clarifications)Q. Should there be a district policy

to support PGP?A. Although a policy is not required

by law, the district should consider a policy to address the PGP. This is a local decision. What is important is that the procedures be consistent across the district.

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Personal Graduation Plans (PGP)

FAQ (ESC Clarifications)

Q. Is the PGP legally binding like an IEP?

A. No. A school district's determination of the appropriateness of a program for a student under this section is final and does not create a cause of action.

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Personal Graduation Plans (PGP)

FAQ (ESC Clarifications)Q. In our junior high, we serve 7th and

8th grade students. Do we wait until spring 2004 for TAKS results to identify who needs a PGP?

A. No. The school should use spring 2003 results to determine who is in need of a PGP at this time.

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Personal Graduation Plans (PGP)

Next Steps• District decisions:

– Determine what policies and/or procedures need to be in place to support campuses in meeting the PGP requirements.

• Consider what is already in place.• Allow flexibility and ensure consistency.

– Identify the campus points of contact.– Schedule campus training/ information sharing

sessions on PGP implementation.• Discuss existing and needed programs and services

to support PGP efforts.• Determine monitoring schedule and process.

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Personal Graduation Plans (PGP)

Next Steps

• Campus decisions:– The principal needs to designate who is

going to be responsible for ensuring that PGPs are developed for all eligible students.

– Determine how the campus is going to implement PGPs for eligible students.

– The principal may designate a point of contact to coordinate the effort.

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Personal Graduation Plans (PGP)

Next Steps• Campus decisions

– Build on available resources. (for example, accelerated instruction, curricular resources, flexible scheduling, etc…)

– Identify additional resources, as appropriate.– Determine monitoring schedule and process.

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Personal Graduation Plans (PGP)

PGP Planner 2003• Database management tool

– FileMaker Pro or runtime– Allow for import from student

management programs– Updated annually– Supported by each ESC or by ESC 13– Preview

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Personal Graduation Plans (PGP)

ESC Contact Information

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Personal Graduation Plans (PGP)

[email protected]

www.esc13.net/pgp/pgp.ppt512.919.5306