the standard - MSA-CESS
Transcription
the standard - MSA-CESS
THE STANDARD Spring 2013 From the Middle States Association Commissions on Elementary and Secondary Schools This is Not Your Father’s Accreditation! Message from the President Henry G. Cram Ed.D Although the Middle States Association celebrated its 125th anniversary in 2012, tradition has not kept the organization from keeping pace with changes in education or the accreditation landscape. Responding to the feedback from its members, the emergence of new educational venues and the growing demand for both accountability and improvement MSA’s accreditation protocols, procedures and new services are keeping pace. INSIDE THIS ISSUE: This is Not Your Father’s Accreditation! Sustaining Excellence: A New Protocol Spring 2013 Accreditation Actions Make Data Habit, not a Crisis John Plesha Moves to the Golf Course! Middle States has redesigned its accreditation protocols to reflect a developmental sequence of accreditation processes designed to advance a school’s capacity for strategic planning and continuous school improvement. Believing that the accreditation process should be a professional development experience and improve a schools capacity for self-reflection, planning and improvement, the available protocols are matched to the schools developmental stage. The recommended protocol for initial accreditation (Designing Our Future) focuses more comprehensively on the traditional aspects of the accreditation process establishing a baseline for the school and Middle States to measure future growth. Subsequent accreditation protocols (Accreditation for Growth and Excellence by Design) are less prescriptive, build on the previous accreditation cycle and are designed to further improve the schools capacity for continuous reflection and growth. The new capstone protocol (Sustaining Excellence-see related article) currently being piloted and scheduled for release in 2014 is an action research project centered on a systemic improvement, the results of which are to be shared with the larger educational community. MSA also offers a systems version of its accreditation process. Additionally, MSA has a credential program which allows schools with outstanding specialties to apply for recognition by MSA. These specialty credentials are currently available to accredited institutions for International Education, World Languages, Service Learning, Music, Visual Arts, 21st Century Skills, Guidance Services and Early Childhood Education (a STEM credential is being developed). The application process can also serve as an excellent program assessment instrument for schools looking for world class standards in the specialty areas. Our standards too are being revised (scheduled for release in late 2013) to reflect, within the traditional 12 standards, new and revised indicators for institutions that are proprietary, faith-based, distance learning, career and technical or serving students with special needs. (continued on page 5) 1 Sustaining Excellence: A New Protocol For Excellence Protocol must be committed to establishing and sustaining a planning ethic within the school and that it becomes part of the school’s culture. Additionally, the protocol requires vision-driven processes, continuous clarification of the school’s mission, and long-term strategic action plans that integrate programs, services, facilities, and support to address the school’s growth objectives. schools effectively growing, improving, and sustaining high levels of student performance, what is the next step in pursuing continuous improvement? This was the question buzzing through MSACESS Associate Director Art Albrizio’s mind as he was driving back from visiting one of those “high performance” schools. Mr. Albrizio had recently been introduced to a protocol What is the next step used by the Elementary Albrizio and his MSACommission – “The in pursuing continuous CESS colleagues believe Project.” He began to think improvement? this protocol will serve as a that this protocol – with catalyst to empower school some modifications and communities to dedicate resources to expanding and additions – would have merit for all schools. to raising student achievement. Consulting with colleagues, Albrizio enlisted their assistance in transforming “The Project” into an action “This is a more creative way of approaching and extending the concept of continuous improvement,” research protocol re-named, “Sustaining Excellence.” says Albrizio, “it is empowering the schools to engage students, faculty, administration, parents, local leaders The New Protocol in developing an initiative that will lead to quantifiable The Sustaining Excellence Protocol provides an improvement.” optional protocol to schools that have consistently The Pilot Phase demonstrated high levels of student performance or consistent growth in student achievement. MSA-CESS Albrizio says the Commission recruited schools envisions schools qualifying for this protocol as those it thought might be interested in participating in a that are not satisfied with the status quo. Sustaining pilot. MSA-CESS was looking for schools that had Excellence helps a school: a sustained history of accreditation a solid record of • Discover how current research informs efforts growth and performance. The response to the invitation to grow and improve an aspect of the school’s to become involved in the pilot was excellent and CESS educational program, services, and/or learning was able to engage a representative cross-section of public, private, international and faith-based schools to environment; • Develop a proposal for an action research participate in the pilot: • American Community School, Athens Greece project to demonstrate application of that • Central HS, Philadelphia research in the living laboratory of the school; • Christian Brothers Academy - NJ • Implement the research project and • Colegio de San Ignacio – San Juan, Puerto documenting the results of implementation; Rico and, • East Brunswick HS - NJ • Share what was learned from the implementation • High Technology HS/Monmouth County with the broader education community in the Vocational Schools-NJ form of a colloquium. • Holmdel High School - NJ Schools seeking accreditation by using the Sustaining • Julia R Masterman HS, Philadelphia (continued on page 6) 2 Spring 2013 Accreditation Actions At their Spring 2013 meetings, the Middle States Commissions on Elementary and Secondary Schools took the following actions: Actions Taken by the Commission on Elementary Schools Accreditation Ten Years Haddonfield Friends School, Haddonfield, NJ Peck School (The), Morristown, NJ Accreditation Seven Years Armenian Sisters Academy, Radnor, PA Children’s Learning Center at Morningside Heights (The), New York, NY Good Shepherd Catholic Regional School, Ardsley, PA Holy Redeemer School, Ellwood City, PA Holy Rosary School, Duryea, PA Holy Sepulcher School, Butler, PA Home Away From Home Academy, Aberdeen, NJ John H. Woodson Junior High School, Kingshill, St. Croix, VI Lititz Area Mennonite School, Lititz, PA Nazareth Academy Grade School, Philadelphia, PA North American Martyrs School, Monroeville, PA Northern Cambria Catholic School, Nicktown, PA Norwood-Fontbonne Academy, Philadelphia, PA Our Lady of Good Counsel School, Moorestown, NJ Our Lady of Good Counsel School, Southampton, PA Pilot School Incorporated (The), Wilmington, DE Providence Heights Alpha School, Allison Park, PA Qatar Academy Al-Khor, Qatar Queen of Peace Elementary School, North Arlington, NJ Red Balloon Day Care Center, New York, NY Saint Agnes Cathedral Elementary School, Rockville Centre, NY Saint Aloysius School, Pottstown, PA Saint Anne School, Bethlehem, PA Saint Anne’s School, Garden City, NY Saint Anselm School, Philadelphia, PA Saint Boniface School, Kersey, PA Saint Charles Borromeo School, Cinnaminson, NJ Saint Edmund’s Academy, Pittsburgh, PA Saint Irenaeus School, Oakmont, PA Saint Jane Frances De Chantal School, Easton, PA Saint John the Evangelist Catholic School, Bellefonte, PA Saint John Vianney School, Orchard Park, NY Saint Luke School, Erie, PA Saint Malachy School, Coraopolis, PA Saint Michael School, Loretto, PA Saint Patrick School, Bay Shore, NY Saint Rose of Lima School, Altoona, PA Saint Theresa School, New Cumberland, PA Saint Wendelin School, Butler, PA Saints Peter and Paul School, Beaver, PA Sheridan School, Washington, DC Twin Parks Montessori Schools, New York, NY Villa Maria Academy, Immaculata, PA Accreditation Six Years Forcey Christian School, Silver Spring, MD Accreditation Five Years Bethany Christian School, Fort Lauderdale, FL Blake School, Plantation (The), Plantation, FL Liberty Christian School, Owings Mills, MD Rochester Christian School, Inc., Rochester, NY Accreditation Removal of Stipulations Chesterbrook Academy Elementary School-West Chester, West Chester, PA Mount Aetna Adventist Elementary School, Hagerstown, MD Probationary Accreditation Centreville School, Centreville, DE Far Brook School, Short Hills, NJ Recognition of Accreditation by Another Agency Pinewood Christian Academy, Middleburg, FL Additional Grades American International School of Libreville, Gabon American International School of Lome, Togo Hillcrest Christian Academy, Bethel Park, PA International Community School, Abuja, Nigeria Orchard Friends School, Riverton, NJ Actions Taken by the Commission on Secondary Schools 3 Accreditation Ten Years Mount Saint Joseph Academy, Flourtown, PA Shady Side Academy, Pittsburgh, PA* Accreditation Seven Years Bangor Area High School, Bangor, PA Calvert Hall College High School, Baltimore, MD Central Catholic High School, Pittsburgh, PA Christ the King Preparatory School, Newark, NJ Delone Catholic High School, McSherrystown, PA Emmaus High School, Emmaus, PA Frederick Douglass High School, Upper Marlboro, MD Frisch School (The), Paramus, NJ Gunston School (The), Centreville, MD Henry Snyder High School, Jersey City, NJ Holy Family Academy of Bayonne, Bayonne, NJ Holy Redeemer High School, WilkesBarre, PA Liberty High School, Eldersburg, MD Martin Luther School, Maspeth, NY* MMI Preparatory School, Freeland, PA Monsignor Scanlan High School, Bronx, NY North Shore Hebrew High School, Great Neck, NY Northside Urban Pathways Public Charter School, Pittsburgh, PA Pinelands Regional High School, Tuckerton, NJ Pinelands Regional Junior High School, Tuckerton, NJ Saint John’s College High School, Washington, DC Saint Joseph By-the-Sea High School, Staten Island, NY245 Saint Mary of the Assumption High School, Elizabeth, NJ Saints Peter and Paul High School, Easton, MD Salesianum School, Wilmington, DE Sleepy Hollow High School, Sleepy Hollow, NY South Brunswick High School, Monmouth Junction, NJ Syosset High School, Syosset, NY Thomas Jefferson Arts Academy, Elizabeth, NJ Accreditation Five Years Advantage Career Institute, Eatontown, NJ* Chapelgate Christian Academy, Marriottsville, MD (continued on page 6) Spring 2013 Accreditation Actions (continued) (continued from page 5) Accreditation Remainder of Term Boonton High School, Boonton, NJ Cardinal Spellman High School, Bronx, NY Colegio San Jose Superior, Caguas, PR Elizabeth Seton High School, Bladensburg, MD Fairmont Heights High School, Capitol Heights, MD Saint Andrew’s School, Middletown, DE United States Senate Page School, Washington, DC Accreditation Removal of Stipulations Carson Long Military Academy, New Bloomfield, PA Gonzaga College High School, Washington, DC Irvington High School, Frank H. Morrell Campus, Irvington, NJ Our Saviour Lutheran School, Bronx, NY Windsor School (The), Flushing, NY Award of Credentials-Music Calvert Hall College High School, Baltimore, MD Probationary Accreditation ASaint Joseph High School, Frederiksted, VI Removal of Accreditation Cape Henlopen High School, Lewes, DE Delcastle Technical High School, Wilmington, DE Dr. Charles E. Brimm Medical Arts High School, Camden, NJ Greenburgh-North Castle Union Free School District, Dobbs Ferry, NY Middletown High School – South, Middletown, NJ Montgomery High School, Skillman, NJ Springfield Township High School, Erdenheim, PA Wyomissing Area Junior - Senior High School, Wyomissing, PA Recognition of Accreditation Bass Memorial Academy, Lumberton, MS Customized Education Design, Yakima, WA Ibero High School, San Nicolas, Aruba Actions Taken by the Commissions on Elementary and Secondary Schools Accreditation Ten Years American Creativity Academy, Kuwait Loudonville Christian School, Loudonville, NY Rye Country Day School, Rye, NY Accreditation Seven Years American School of Kuwait, Kuwait American School of Valencia, Spain Antilles School, Saint Thomas, VI Baldwin School of Puerto Rico, Bayamon, PR Benjamin Franklin International School, Spain Chapel Hill Academy, Lincoln Park, NJ Colegio Calasanz, San Juan, PR Colegio San Conrado, Ponce, PR* Commonwealth-Parkville School, San Juan, PR Country Day School, Costa Rica Cupey Maria Montessori, San Juan, PR Dostyk American International School, Kazakhstan Dupont Park Adventist School, Washington, DC Hillcrest School, Nigeria Kimberton Waldorf School, Kimberton, PA* Lahore American School, Pakistan Modern English School, Cairo, Egypt Nardin Academy, Buffalo, NY Quakerbridge Computer Learning Service, Lawrence, NJ Saudi Aramco Schools, Saudi Arabia SciCore Academy for Science and the Humanities, Hightstown, NJ Tatnall School (The), Wilmington, DE Villa Victoria Academy, Ewing, NJ West-Mont Christian Academy, Pottstown, PA Wilson Christian Academy, West Mifflin, PA Accreditation Six Years Huntington Learning Center DP0, Dunwoody, GA Huntington Learning Center LZ0, Peachtree City, GA Huntington Learning Center PA1, Huntersville, NC Huntington Learning Center VZ0, Wyomissing (Reading), PA Huntington Learning Center XR0, Tampa, FL Kendall Park Learning Center, Kendall Park, NJ New Hope Christian Academy, Inc., Thomasville, NC Accreditation Five Years Calvary Christian Academy, Philadelphia, PA Accreditation Remainder of Term American School of Barcelona, Spain Colegio Nuestra Senora de la Providencia, San Juan, PR Ursuline Academy, Wilmington, DE Accreditation Removal of 4 Stipulations Colegio Evangelico Capitan Correa, Arecibo, PR International School of Athens, Greece Lab School of Washington (The), Washington, DC Accreditation Removal of Probation Huntingdon Valley Christian Academy, Huntingdon Valley, PA Probationary Accreditation New International School, Japan Recognition of Accreditation Alamance Christian School, Graham NC Evangelical Christian Academy, Madrid, Spain International School of Choueifat-Doha (The), Doha, Qatar Schaumburg Christian School, Schaumburg IL Wake Christian Academy, Raleigh NC Removal of Accreditation Clinton Christian School, Upper Marlboro E. T. Richardson Middle School, Springfield, PA Grant C. Madill Elementary School, Ogdensburg, NY Harvey C. Sabold Elementary School, Springfield, PA John F. Kennedy Elementary School, Ogdensburg, NY Lincoln School, Ogdensburg, NY Ogdensburg Free Academy, Ogdensburg, NY Scenic Hills Elementary School, Springfield, PA Sherman School, Ogdensburg, NY Springfield High School, Springfield, PA *Accredited with Stipulations Make Data a Habit, not a Crisis By Brian Bedrick Many schools spend a lot of time and effort gathering and reporting data to prepare for accreditation or re- accreditation. During the self-study period, schools compile data to demonstrate how well they are performing and the progress they are making towards their strategic objectives. For many schools, tracking down and compiling this data is a stressful event that requires a lot of energy. But there is a relatively simple way to significantly reduce that stress. Make data collection, reporting and analysis a part of your routine operations rather than a once every few years crisis. When I help schools create online data dashboards, my first step is to walk the school through a process that helps them identify what data they should be collecting, how it can be regularly monitored, and how it can inform decision-making. The core elements of this process are: • Clarity - Align your data with your mission, vision and strategic goals. Review these guiding documents and determine what data will help you track how well you are doing. • Context - Display your data so that it ‘tells a story’. Establish a baseline and show trends over time. Compare yourself to world averages, peer schools or internal targets. Add a narrative that interprets and explains the raw data. • Consistency - Don’t design your metrics and reports and then forget about them. Use them in your staff and Board meetings. Keep constant metrics and formats so that people are instantly familiar with what they see. Review and analyze the data regularly so that it becomes a habit. You don’t need a dashboard or other specialized tools to follow the basic principles described above, so anybody can do it. And these actions are closely aligned with the self-study process so if you do it now and practice it consistently, a major part of your self-study will already be done! MSA-CESS realizes the value of this kind of thinking and is ‘walking the walk’ by using an online dashboard to track their own internal goals and objectives. The dashboard is reviewed regularly and is a valuable tool for monitoring progress, communicating results, and guiding decisions. So when MSA-CESS encourages you to use data as an integral part of your self-study and ongoing action plans, keep in mind they are following that same advice as well.; Brian Bedrick is the Managing Director of Interactive Data Partners, a company dedicated to helping schools make more effective use of their data using dashboards and other data visualizations tools. Interactive Data Partners is an Associate Business Member of the Middle States Association. This is Not Your Father’s Accreditation! (continued) (continued from page 1) Regardless of how education is changing, we know that quality will continue to count and MSA is committed to be there to help schools grow, improve and change, and to recognize through our accreditation services educational quality wherever it exists. We are not your father’s accreditation! For more information about MSA services visit www.msa-cess.org and follow us on Facebook or on our blog ED CRED.; 5 John Plesha Moves to the Golf Course! Dr. John Plesha, former MSA-CESS Associate Director, is still focused on education, despite his recent retirement – but now it’s his education and it’s related to his golf swing! Life’s a lot different for John now that he has retired to a golf course community in South Carolina after his 10 years at Middle States and his time before that as a high school principal. And, although he’s excited about the opportunity to “take the time to do things I never had time to do and relax for awhile,” John will miss Middle States. “Middle States is a group of very dedicated and determined professionals,” says John. “They are very interested in their jobs. They are self-motivated and determined to do the best they can for our members. They are friends as well as colleagues,” John explains, “and I’ll miss them.” while the other only completes18 of those 32 chapters!” He says that Middle States Accreditation makes a school “constantly look at itself and get better. They’ll grow. They’ll ask themselves, ‘what kind of quality programs are we offering, should we be offering?’ and they will improve.” John will be missed, too, by his colleagues and the member schools with whom he worked for more than a decade. As Rebecca Cunningham, Assistant Principal for Grades 9 and 10 at the Fox Chapel Area High School notes, “Having Dr. Plesha as a guide for the Middle States Accreditation process was extremely valuable – his knowledge, expertise, and experience on everything from the beginning orientation to the final recognition was treasured and respected by everyone on our team.” But John notes that much is dependent on the leadership at the school in question. “Are they willing to do more than just sit on their past laurels and reputation at the school? They can’t be just a ‘maintainer’, they must change and grow!” Despite retirement, John still strongly believes in Middle States Accreditation. “Middle States brings credibility – whether it’s a public or private school, it doesn’t matter. Your child takes Algebra II and gets all As at XYZ School – is it the same as taking Algebra II and getting all As at ABC school? One school completes 28 of 32 chapters, What’s next for this dedicated man? He says he’s ready for the next phase of his life, but he acknowledges that he “can’t golf all of the time”, and he has to be careful to “not get on my wife’s nerves!” Enjoy John!; Sustaining Excellence: A New Protocol (continued) (continued from page 2) • Magnet High School/Union County Vocational Technical School – NJ • Marine Academy of Science and Technology/ Monmouth County Vocational Schools - NJ • Marine Academy of Technology and Environmental Science/Ocean County Vocational Schools - NJ • • • • North Hunterdon Regional HS - NJ Rumson Country Day School - NJ Saint Dominick’s Elementary School - PA Visitation Elementary School - PA Albrizio stresses that although the protocol is being piloted and not yet “public”, “early results have exceeded our expectations.”; 6