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District 112 takes pride in our collective work to serve the students and families of our communities. In the last several years, we have embedded a continuous improvement expectation into virtually every aspect of our programs and services. This expectation meant that during the 2010-2011 school year, we continued the implementation of our Secondary Redesign Initiative, began serious work on implementation strategies for our elementary schools INSPIRE initiative, and engaged staff and community in dialogue to identify current strengths and future goals. Last years 2010 Student Achievement Report showcased work in the second year of implementation of our Secondary Redesign Initiative. During the 2010-2011 school year, the third year of our fouryear implementation cycle, our teachers and support staff learned new content, methodologies and strategies; as we learned, we carefully reflected on our important work to monitor and adjust appropriately. New courses, new expectations within existing courses, new programs, and new opportunities for high school students emerged. Administrators and secondary curriculum review teams continued to monitor standards and develop Capstone opportunities within our four areas of study, and to gear up for even more exciting and engaging student learning. As we worked to develop critical thinking skills to meet the demands of our students post-high school lives, we kept a close eye on our own progress. Elementary administrators and teachers used information gathered in surveys and discussions in January 2010 to guide the work of committees charged with researching possible program additions for the elementary schools. These committees met in the summer of 2010 to study best practice and to craft recommendations for School Board consideration. Those recommendations were accepted by the board in November of 2010, and are described in this report. Each committee continued to work throughout the remainder of the year to be ready to pilot exciting new components to INSPIRE in Fall of 2011. As always, District 112 staff looked to the future while remaining firmly grounded in the important daily work of the present. We believe our students deserve our very best to reach their very best, and our promise to deliver an exceptional, personalized learning experience for every student is still foremost. Student achievement results data in the body of this report shows gains, suggests areas for improvement, and helps us plan our next steps. Gathering the data for this annual report affords a gift of reflection. When I see the collection of data and remember the enthusiasm and arduous work that collection chronicles, I am proud of our people---families, students, staff and our communities. You will find we are eager to share our news with you. If you have questions or comments regarding this report, please contact me at ScearcyL@district112.org I would welcome your insights about our work. We want each student to strive for his or her personal best, and we gratefully acknowledge your countless contributions to our efforts. Sincerely, Dr. Lynn Scearcy Assistant Superintendent/Chief Academic Officer
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At the High School Level With our first year of implementation in 2009-2010 completed, staff worked in 2010-2011 to add the second phase of new courses, and continued work on the development of third year implementation plans including Capstone courses. A critical component for the second phase of implementation took place in the Physics First initiative. In 2009-2010, all ninth and tenth grade students took physics. In 2010-2011, all tenth graders took chemistry. Reinforcement of critical math skills through applications in science courses should enhance mastery of those math skills. Early indicators lead us to believe that the change in the sequence of science courses will have a value-added component for our students math achievement. As the change becomes routine, we anticipate that math scores will improve in spite of the fact that successive years see state-mandated increases in expectations. Accelerated courses in English and science met student needsTime becomes a variable for students with the ability to move more quickly through coursework. Students condensed a year-long class into a semester or incorporated additional deeper study into the class. These classes fulfilled graduation requirements and will allow students to select more electives in later years. After the second year of experience with these classes, Jamie Crannell, a science teacher who works with this program noted, amazing to see how fast these students can grasp content. They get the big Its concepts quickly and that enables them to move through a class faster. This approach works because our students are ready and able to take on the challenge. Our approach is unusual. Not many schools give a full years credit for a half-year course. Chris Lenius, Coordinator of Gifted Services for the High Schools, concurred: Accelerated classes tell students that the district cares about what you learn, not how many hours you sit in a classroom.
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Capstone course options introducedIn 2010-2011, high school staff completed early versions of Capstone courses, a graduation requirement for the Class of 2013. These courses were introduced to students in spring of 2011 as options for the 2011-2012 school year. Capstone courses ask students to apply what they have learned in their Program of Study. A Capstone course is a required, authentic, learning experience and performance assessment that allows a student to transition from the world of theory to the world of practice. These courses provide an opportunity to synthesize, extend, and showcase knowledge, skills, and talents in a Program of Study. Capstone courses have been developed in all four Areas of Interest, allowing students to experience this type of learning in Arts & Communication Global Studies Health & Social Sciences STEM Science, Technology, Engineering & Math At the Middle Level Middle School administrators and staff worked diligently in 2010-2011 to coordinate expectations to improve achievement for all middle level students. Using best practices of creating common expectations for students and common practice for teachers led to a concentrated focus on writing learning targets and developing common formative assessments to help teachers assess student success. Jim Bach, Principal of Chaska Middle School East said, is the exciting part of moving This from the planning phase of secondary redesign into implementation. We can focus on teaching and learningnot the stressors of transition. We believe in the plan, do, study, act method of raising student achievement, and it is energizing work. Next steps meant, as Chaska Middle School West principal Sheryl Hough noted, that learning targets were translated into kid-friendly language and posted daily in classrooms. All three middle school staffs involved in common professional developmentsProfessional Learning Communities made up of teachers from Pioneer Ridge, East, and West middle schools met together as departments to ensure common expectations for all Eastern Carver County middle school students. This led, Hough explains, to having three middle schools participate in common staff all development, and as those targets are conscientiously embedded in curriculum maps for each class, the groundwork for development of formative assessments is established. Electives ExpandedMiddle school students found more opportunities to explore individual interests with the addition of encore classes in coursework correlated with the four Areas of Interest available at the high schools.
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At the Elementary Level During the 2009-2010 school year elementary principals and site councils studied national best practice research to inform the INSPIRE initiative. As a result of parent and staff surveys, teams coalesced around four identified new directions for elementary programs. In November of 2010, the School Board heard the collective recommendations of the four teams, and endorsed moving ahead with plans to Embed STEM (Science, Technology, Engineering, and Math concepts and strategies as a core in elementary schools with a simultaneous curriculum review in math and science (Programs to begin in Fall of 2011) Initiate a Dual Language Spanish language program (K-1 Pilot to begin in Fall of 2012) Nurture and build cultural competence focusing on the arts, specialists, and crosscurricular connections Move toward a continuous progress instructional model that allows children to progress through curriculum as they are able, rather than a strict adherence to age/grade configuration (Full implementation by 2015) In preparation for these programs, summer work in 2011 built scaffolding for each area. A team of 24 teachers, representing each school and grade level, trained at the Science House, the training institute of the Science Museum of Minnesota. Cathy Gallagher, Director of Teaching and Learning, noted that this team will be learning to integrate STEM concepts across disciplines, and emphasized that the real world, these topics are interrelated. In Although the Dual Language program is not slated for implementation until fall of 2012, staff worked with the CARLA Institute at the University of Minnesota (Center for Advanced Research on Language Acquisition) to determine best practice in the area of Spanish language instruction. Work there also informed dialogue around the third focus areabuilding cultural competence through the arts, specialists, and cross-curricular connections. Implementation of the Continuous Progress Instructional model will begin this fall, and will allow a child to progress beyond their typical age/grade in math and reading at all elementary schools. Consistent with the District 112 premise of one elementary program at eight sites, goals developed in the 2010-2011 school year have an implementation timeline of five years, with all schools charged with meeting common expectations to advance students at their own rate with rigor and opportunity. The INSPIRE initiative is consistent with the School Boards commitment to providing world class elementary schools by enhancing student learning through innovation and a commitment to personalized learning.
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The District communicates with residents and parents in a variety of ways - publications, newsletters, emails, websites and social media. 96% of both residents and parents said they are receiving the information they want and need about our schools. Both residents and parents identified the Community Report as the most credible source of information about the school district. Residents and parents strongly support the exploration of advertising (i.e., scoreboards, publications and websites) as a way to generate new revenue. In the area of personal experience with a child enrolled in our schools (asked of parents only): 90% felt their child is taught by teachers who care about them 82% believe their child's progress is adequately monitored Parents would like to see Spanish taught in the elementary schools (61%) and they would prefer one period per day in the existing curriculum. The least favored approach to elementary language instruction was a full immersion program. In the area of instructional technology: 85% of parents and 88% of residents rate the technology opportunities for students good or excellent. 92% of residents and 96% of parents believe a student's ability to use new technologies effectively is very important or absolutely essential.
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Percentages of students scoring proficient on the state reading standards at each school by grade:
School BCE BCE BCE CES CES CES CHAN CHAN CHAN CRE CRE CRE EUE EUE EUE JES JES JES VES VES VES CMSE CMSE CMSE CMSW CMSW CMSW PRMS PRMS PRMS CNS CHS Grade 3 4 5 3 4 5 3 4 5 3 4 5 3 4 5 3 4 5 3 4 5 6 7 8 6 7 8 6 7 8 10 10 School 83.5% 92.2% 86.5% 89.5% 72.6% 85.5% 89.9% 87.0% 88.8% 90.7% 87.1% 89.5% 93.1% 78.6% 78.1% 87.6% 84.9% 85.2% 86.6% 81.5% 90.6% 84.8% 78.6% 82.3% 91.6% 81.1% 81.4% 84.6% 79.1% 77.0% 90.5% 91.1% DISTRICT 88.4% 84.1% 87.5% 88.4% 84.1% 87.5% 88.4% 84.1% 87.5% 88.4% 84.1% 87.5% 88.4% 84.1% 87.5% 88.4% 84.1% 87.5% 88.4% 84.1% 87.5% 87.1% 79.6% 80.2% 87.1% 79.6% 80.2% 87.1% 79.6% 80.2% 88.9% 88.9% STATE 78.5% 75.2% 80.3% 78.5% 75.2% 80.3% 78.5% 75.2% 80.3% 78.5% 75.2% 80.3% 78.5% 75.2% 80.3% 78.5% 75.2% 80.3% 78.5% 75.2% 80.3% 75.1% 69.6% 68.1% 75.1% 69.6% 68.1% 75.1% 69.6% 68.1% 75.3% 75.3%
Students in grades 3-8 took the new, more rigorous Mathematics MCA-III which is aligned to higher standards designed to prepare all students to be career and college ready. This was the first administration of the MCA-III assessment that is aligned to 2007 Minnesota Mathematics Academic Standards and College-and Career-ready internationally benchmarked standards. It was also the first time students experienced the new online format. Eastern Carver County students performed above their peers in Minnesota at all grade levels. Students in grades three through eight exceed state proficiency averages by 2-17 percent. The chart on the following page shows the percentage of students at each level who scored as proficient or above on state high standards. Page 10 of 18
Fall 2011 Student Achievement Report Grade 3 4 5 6 7 8 DISTRICT 76.1% 71.8% 55.3% 62.9% 66.4% 70.5% STATE 70.1% 67.2% 53.6% 50.3% 51.7% 53.2%
Percentages of students scoring proficient on the state mathematics standards at each school by grade:
School BCE BCE BCE CES CES CES CHAN CHAN CHAN CRE CRE CRE EUE EUE EUE JES JES JES VES VES VES CMSE CMSE CMSE CMSW CMSW CMSW PRMS PRMS PRMS Grade 3 4 5 3 4 5 3 4 5 3 4 5 3 4 5 3 4 5 3 4 5 6 7 8 6 7 8 6 7 8 School 64.9% 78.5% 52.9%
79.0% 72.6% 49.5% 76.8% 74.1% 60.6% 79.1% 74.0% 58.3% 93.3% 75.0% 43.8% 80.7% 68.2% 56.3% 68.1% 65.1% 57.4% 62.0% 58.1% 74.5% 66.5% 70.7% 68.0% 59.8% 69.6% 68.7%
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We are particularly pleased with the very strong new baseline for the Mathematics MCA-III established by our middle schools. Middle school students exceeded state proficiency by 12-17 percent. Nancy Thul, Secondary Curriculum Coordinator, credits secondary redesign and the efforts of our secondary Mathematics and English teachers for their success. Thul also reflected on the significant increase over prior year performance in 6th grade Reading MCA-II and 10th grade Reading MCA-II at Chaska High. Eleventh grade students continue to take the Mathematics MCA-II test. Eastern Carver County Schools exceed state proficiency averages by 9 percent.
Grade 11 DISTRICT 58.0% STATE 48.6%
Percentages of students scoring proficient on the state mathematics standards at each school:
School CNS CHS ALP School 67.4% 49.8% 7.1% DISTRICT 58.0% 58.0% 58.0% STATE 48.6% 48.6% 48.6%
It is important to remember that the results of the MCAs are only one measure of achievement. Student growth is measured in multiple ways throughout a school year.
Graduation-Required for Diploma (GRAD) Test Results The state requirements for earning a diploma are tested through the MCAs each year. Students must pass GRAD tests in reading and math that are embedded within the MCAs as well as the 9th grade writing assessment. The chart below shows the percentage of district students meeting the state requirements on the 2011 spring assessments.
Grade/Test 9 Grade Writing 10th Grade Reading 11th Grade Mathematics
th
Each school in the district is busy analyzing their MCA data and creating improvement plans to ensure curriculum is aligned to Minnesota Academic Standards and to prepare students for future assessments. Students apply the knowledge and skills they learn every day in their daily lives and we need to be sure they also demonstrate that knowledge in required assessments, said Cathy Gallagher, Director of Teaching and Learning.
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Eastern Carver County science proficiency scores exceed states across grades 5 and 8
Results of the MCA II science tests show Eastern Carver County students continue to outperform their Minnesota peers in proficiency on high state standards by 8-16 percent. The results, released August 15, show that at the elementary level, students exceed state proficiency averages by 16%. In middle school, students exceed state proficiency averages by 8% The state science tests are taken by students in grades 5, 8, and those in high school biology. The chart below shows the percentage of students at each level who scored as proficient or above on the state high standards. Science Test Results 5th grade 8th grade District 112 62.73% 53.40% State 46.50% 44.70%
81.82%* High School * Only 11 students 53.9% tested in the district. *The high school percentage of 81.82% is based on the results of 11 students. Minnesota requires students to complete instruction in life science to be eligible to take the MCA Science test. This is a transition year in our high schools to Physics First. Students who traditionally would have taken biology took physics in 9th grade, chemistry in 10th grade and will take biology this year. The students will be eligible to test spring of 2012. Percentages of students scoring as proficient on the state science standards at each school: School Bluff Creek Elementary Chaska Elementary Chanhassen Elementary Clover Ridge Elementary East Union Elementary Jonathan Elementary Victoria Elementary Chaska Middle School East Chaska Middle School West Pioneer Ridge Middle School Percent Proficient 57.41% 56.52% 72.22% 56.53% 62.51% 68.00% 65.89% 46.96% 56.38% 56.86%
In addition, the elementary and middle level science curriculum continues its review cycle this year along with math. Elementary STEM initiative in INSPIRE will begin the first stage of implementation this year. Middle school science initiated the curriculum review process in early 2011with a goal of implementation in 2012 Teachers are focused on strengthening an already strong curriculum in order to prepare students for continued success in high school.
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English
School 21.9 22.3 23.2 23.0 22.4
Mathematics
School 22.1 22.8 24.0 23.8 23.5 State 22.5 22.6 22.7 22.9 23.0
Reading
School 22.6 23.0 23.7 23.9 23.1
Science
School 22.4 22.5 23.4 23.5 23.3
Composite
School 22.4 22.8 23.7 23.2 23.2
English
Mathematics
Reading
State
Science
School
State
Composite
School
State
22.8 22.5 22.5 23.0 22.5 22.6 23.1 22.6 22.7 23.2 23.0 22.8 24,0 22.9 22.9 23.9 22.8 24.2 22.9 One student at Chanhassen took the test
Advanced Placement program earns district high schools a spot on Washington Posts 2011 High School Challenge list For several years, The Washington Post has calculated the Challenge Index for high schools, defined as the total number of Advanced Placement (AP) exams administered divided by the number of graduating seniors. A list of schools scoring 1.00 or higher (giving more AP exams than they have graduates) is published each spring. While not the only measure of the overall quality of the schools, the rating can reveal the level of a high schools commitment to preparing average students for college. Chaska Page 14 of 18
High School made the list of 1900 top American high schools in 2011 as ranked by the Washington Post. Only seven percent of all of the U.S. public schools made the list. The High School Challenge calculates scores based on the previous years data. Because Chaska and Chanhassen High Schools shared many AP students and teachers in the 2009-2010 school year, the 2011 ranking reflects combined data from both schools published under the name Chaska High Schoolwhere our senior attended that year. Chaska High Schools 2011 Challenge Index of 1.662 ranked 18th in Minnesota, up from 1.101 and 28th place in 2010. This 51% growth was the largest of any Minnesota school that made list both years. Preliminary data from Spring 2011 shows that both high schools will have Challenge Index scores well above the 2010 data, said Chris Lenius. Lenius also noted that enrollment in AP courses as of September 2011 was up 30% at Chanhassen High School and up 67% for Chaska High School in just one year. One of the School Boards continuing goals has been to increase the number of high school students enrolling in Advanced Placement classes and taking the year-end exams. Advanced Placement classes are college-level courses taught by teachers trained to present the challenging coursework. Students may choose to take exams in the spring and, if successful, can earn college credit. In 2007, 691 AP courses were taken by Chaska High students, and students both took and passed 245 AP Exams. In 2011, those numbers had risen to 1250 AP courses, and 739 exams passed. This represents an increase of 37% in passed exams in the past year, and more than three times as many as four years ago. increase in the number of CHS students enrolling in Advanced Placement classes coupled with The the rising number of students taking the year-end exams relates directly to the recognition The Washington Post list brings to our school, said Principal David Brecht. of the primary goals of One the redesign of our secondary program was to increase rigor in our classrooms and better prepare our students for post-secondary programs. Increased enrollment in AP classes and more students earning passing scores are indications that we are on the right track. Eastern Carver County Schools believes offering AP opportunities to students is critical. We believe that teachers who teach those courses need and deserve the specific training to optimize these opportunities for our students; we also believe it is highly beneficial for teachers who do NOT directly teach the courses to attend training. In 2009, we started encouraging training for all teachers in departments that offer AP courses (Art, English, Math, Music, Science, Social Studies, and World Languages). In 2009-2010, 13% of teachers in those departments had attended an AP Summer Institute (week-long, arduous sessions) within the past five years; for 2011-2012, 59% will have done so.
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We believe our commitment to AP courses has paid off. Using the tuition cost at the University of Minnesota to approximate the value of college credits, we estimate that students passing AP exams in 2011 have saved our families over $1.3 million in college tuition. We are proud of that fact!
The Proficiency results are strong. All cells were met except for the following areas: District - Hispanic/LEP Math Bluff Creek Elementary - Special Ed Reading Victoria Elementary - Hispanic/LEP Math, Special Ed Reading Chaska Middle School West - LEP Math Chaska High School - Free/Reduced Lunch Math Chanhassen High School - Special Ed Reading
The District and Chaska Elementary, Jonathan Elementary and Clover Ridge Elementary are receiving Title 1 funds for 2011-12. The District was cited for Hispanic/LEP Math. All three of the elementary schools met AYP in all areas this year! Last year, while all Jonathan students took the tests and were proficient, the state believes it did not receive all answer sheets. An appeal to the state was not approved and it was placed on AYP. While they are proficient again this year, the 2 year minimum requires that they still be placed on AYP.
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Term Expires 2012 2012 2013 2012 2012 2013 2012 2012 2011 2013 2011 2012 2012 2012 2012 2013 2011 2011 ----2011 2011 ------2011 2012 2012 2011 2013
STAFF
Rachel Alrick, Chaska Middle West Dawn Dammann, Victoria Elementary Molly Gove, Chanhassen Elementary Janet Johnson, Chaska Elementary Catherine Martens, Chaska High Connie Nuss, Chanhassen High Laura Porter, Pioneer Ridge Middle Mary Schoen, Jonathan Elementary School Jennifer Shinn, Clover Ridge Elementary Cindy Yokiel, Bluff Creek Elementary
ADMINISTRATORS
Ranell Johnson, Community Education Kathy Jungerberg, Special Education Matt Dorschner, Elementary Administrator Judy Nagel, Secondary Administrator Lynn Scearcy, District Administrator Chris Lenius, Gifted Education Coordinator Arlene Borner, Secondary Professional Development, Teacher on Special Assignment
AT-LARGE
Pat Scheuble, Community Member
STUDENTS
Kelsey Krocak, Chanhassen High Kayla Peters, Chaska High Zachary Lindquist, Chanhassen High
SCHOOL BOARD
Lisa Anderson, Director
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