Building Successful Academic and Behavioral Programs for At-Risk Youth: Low and No Cost Options

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Georgia Southern University Digital Commons@Georgia Southern National Youth-At-Risk Conference Savannah Mar 8th, 10:15 AM - 11:30 AM Building Successful Academic and Behavioral Programs for At-Risk Youth: Low and No Cost Options Jeannette Hallam Coweta County School System, jeannette.hallam@cowetaschools.net Follow this and additional works at: http://digitalcommons.georgiasouthern.edu/nyar_savannah Part of the Educational Assessment, Evaluation, and Research Commons, Educational Leadership Commons, Educational Methods Commons, Elementary and Middle and Secondary Education Administration Commons, and the Secondary Education and Teaching Commons Recommended Citation Hallam, Jeannette, "Building Successful Academic and Behavioral Programs for At-Risk Youth: Low and No Cost Options" (2016). National Youth-At-Risk Conference Savannah. 40. http://digitalcommons.georgiasouthern.edu/nyar_savannah/2016/2016/40 This presentation (open access) is brought to you for free and open access by the Programs and Conferences at Digital Commons@Georgia Southern. It has been accepted for inclusion in National Youth-At-Risk Conference Savannah by an authorized administrator of Digital Commons@Georgia Southern. For more information, please contact digitalcommons@georgiasouthern.edu.

Building Successful Academic and Behavioral Programs for At-Risk Youth: Low and No Cost Options Jeannette Hallam, EdD Assistant Principal East Coweta High School

Who we serve at my school At my high school we serve 2,804 students daily 865 Freshmen 703 Sophomores 603 Juniors 633 Seniors We serve a diverse group of students 38.5% of students are in the free/reduced lunch program 8.9% of students are served in Special education 22.3% of students are served in Gifted classes 1.0% of students are English language learners

Who we serve (continued) Diversity of our Student Body 49.5% males 50.5% females 63.1% White 23.1% Black 13.8% other Ethnicities Mobility of our student body 12.5% mobility rate per year

Our Staff 146 Teachers 5 Guidance Counselors 2 Media Specialists 2 School Resource Officers 2 Communities in Schools representatives 6 Assistant Principals 1 Principal

Our accomplishments in student achievement We raised our graduation rate to a record level for the 2014/15 school year. Almost all of our subgroups also showed drastic gains in their graduation rates 4 year grad rates 2015 (change from 2014) Asian/Pacific Islander = 95.5% (up 0.5%) Black = 86.6% (up 23.9%) Hispanic = 80.8% (down 0.2%) White = 89% (up 8.2%) Multi-racial = 85.7% (up 3.3%) Students with Disabilities = 62.3% (up 21.4%) Economically Disadvantaged = 79% (up 12.5%)

Two Areas for School Improvement Relationship Building (no cost) This is important for all staff members of a school Vital for taking the next steps in student achievement Students may do it for you, but not themselves Another level of accountability for a student and support in meeting goals Changes in Policies and Procedures that restrict student growth Flexibility is key - try things a different way Use data to determine needs and areas for focus Use teamwork to brainstorm solutions to those problems Use research to determine appropriate solutions to implement

How do you start building appropriate relationships with students? Get to know your students and their interests What are their goals? What steps have they taken toward their goals? How can you support them in their goals? Let the students get to know you Do you have similarities? What is your story? What were your struggles in school? What are your goals and what are you doing to achieve those goals? Notice things about the student Celebrate each other s successes

Building appropriate relationships (cont.) Teacher versus friend Stay away from: social media, phone calls, etc with students (don t blur the lines for the student) Be stern but compassionate Ask questions and listen to answers Show them respect Make contact with parents or other guardian (positive first) Hold high expectations, but provide support

Tier I Interventions - Things we do for all students Mentoring program Two approaches (benefits and drawbacks) Topics for sessions icebreaker to get to know one another goal setting (see form) and self-evaluation/reflection on progress graduation requirements teaching of school wide expectations mental health awareness cyber safety Share expectations with staff (mentoring pledge)

Tier II - Group interventions for at-risk students Credit repair (low cost) For students who failed a course Teacher assigned prescription Grade changed to a 70 upon completion Credit recovery (low cost) For students who failed a course Students retake the entire course online Saturday School (low cost) Intercession to prevent students from failing a course Teacher assigned prescription Online learning communities (low cost) For students significantly behind on credits

Group Interventions (Cont.) Peer mentoring/ tutoring (no cost) Gives peers leadership opportunities Communities in Schools collaboration (low cost) Provides support to meet students non-educational needs as well as educational needs Food program Mentoring School Supply closet Housing resources Medical resources Anger Management Courses Job Fair (for students and parents) Apply to College Day

Group Interventions (Cont.) Positive Behavior Supports (low cost) High-Fives (student recognition) Free Ice Cream Sports Tickets Administrative coaching (no cost) Select at-risk students discuss goals beyond high school and current needs meet weekly or monthly, depending on needs currently working with Seniors, but will expand to 10th grade and 9th grade Purple Blitz tutoring (no cost) identify students who have failed multiple state tests or classes and have several risk factors

How do we identify students to serve with Tier II? Look at data (high school examples) 4th year students behind on credits Students failing multiple state assessments 1st year students failing courses Students with several risk factors (ED, MV, SWD, medical diagnosis, etc.) Teacher data collection Class profile data (see form) Teacher recommendation Saturday School form, Credit Repair Parent recommendation

Tier III Interventions - SST Interventions based on individual student needs beyond Tier I and Tier II interventions Interventions are determined based on a detailed analysis of student performance over time and in comparison to like peers At times, partial achievement testing, IQ testing, physician recommendations, and other information is requested to make informed decisions Goals are set for the student and interventions are planned, monitored and adjusted. If this process does not produce results with several adjustments, a referral to Tier IV can be made.

How to use data to determine priorities for change Look at multiple sources of student and staff data use growth model data to determine teacher strengths use behavior data to determine trends and needs type of referral (changes over time) excessive referrals by teacher multiple referrals for one student use data to determine students in need of additional interventions test scores risk factors credit deficiencies use data to determine professional learning priorities and effectiveness Observation data Teacher input, survey data Student survey data

How to use data (cont.) Use data for 9th graders to find trends from different Middle Schools Helps inform vertical planning Use data from a student exit survey to determine why students are dropping out of school Use data from parent surveys to determine changes school climate interventions Use data from staff surveys to determine changes what areas to focus on for school improvement based on qualitative and quantitative data Analyze suggestions from students

Questions? Please feel free to contact me for a copy of this presentation with links to our documents. Jeannette Hallam Jeannette.Hallam@cowetaschools.net @JeannetteHallam 770-254-2850, ext 2031