Butler Elementary School
SCC Agenda
2/9/2022
Parent Members Employee Members
Lori Carter __X___ Summer Briggs __X___
Tyson Grover ___X__ Gretchen Givone __X___
Annettte York _____ Jeff Nalwalker ___X__
Chris Gunther ___X__
January Anderson __X___
Kerri Welter __X___
Welcome-Lori
Winter School Data Updat
Goal review attached below.
- Winter 2022 Reading Data
- 61% of K-3 students in Pathways of Progress
- Unavailable
- This matches to the B goal of moving red to yellow
- 77% of K-3 students at or above benchmark on Acadience Comp Score
This does not match to a goal
-
- 67% of 4th graders and 76% of 5th graders scored proficient or advanced on Reading Inventory. This score is measured against EOY benchmarks. (71% combined)
This matches to C on the goals, which is 80% of our kids proficient on the reading inventory
-
- Unavailable
Data not available yet for rise since we have not taken that test yet
- Winter 2022 Math Data
- These can be found on the second page of the TSP goals on the addendum
- 74% of students K-5 are at or above benchmark on Acadience Comp Score
This was used using winter data from 2021.
We want to have 80% by the end of the year, currently 74%
-
- Unavailable
Because we just received this data, we do not have the information here yet. This is a manual calculation
-
- Unavailable
Not available yet as this is based on the RISE test, but that has not happened yet.
The one that concerns J. Nalwalker the most is the kids on pathway to progress as we want all children to be making progress. Another element that could affect this is our intervention time. Ideally we want kids in Tier 2 to be providing extra intervention time, though due to COVID, these individuals have also been performing sub duties with the lack of subs.
J Nalwalker would like to review the Tier 1 instruction and that can help us better understand how to focus on that additional group of children that need extra help in Tier 2. There are around 6-8 kids per class that receive the extra instruction in each class.
A few things going on now
All of our K3 teachers are involved in a higher level of training for science and reading. The teacher is understanding more of the science of reading so they can better look at the student to fill the holes where the students need more assistance. Currently the state is paying for the training for the K3 teachers. The school will look into this testing for the K4 and K5 teachers next year.
The board did approve our text book adoption for next year, that program will be a very big upgrade from the current reading street. The teachers will not have to create the program and piece it together, all of that is built in.
The teachers are very excited, as the group noted that reading street is very out dated.
About 80% of the teachers were looking forward to this adoption, so it is very well received in the school and class rooms
Other business-Lori
The group introduced Carrie. Carrie lives in Cottonwood Heights, her daughter is in 3rd grade and in DLI.
- Carter reached out to the teachers to see how they were doing.
- Givone noted that the social and emotional team with Kelsey Wever have been beyond amazing to help the children, as she noted there is for sure more of a need, and she can feel the stress from the children and there is a lot more of that team working with the children.
ACTION: L. Carter will contact the other SCC chairs regarding the Bill to see what the team can draft up. She will attend with them in person on March 2nd during the meeting and email them prior. J. Nalwalker will send the link out to the team so they can review it prior to the next meeting. During the next meeting the SCC will discuss this as a group and move forward with a SCC vote to bring to the board to vote against the bill. The group will plan to talk about this next meeting and vote formally.
Next Meeting
7:30am March 30th.
- Nalwalker motion to adjourn, S. Briggs did the motion to second. All in favor. The meeting was ended. The meeting was formally ended.
Butler Elementary School 2021-2022 School LAND Trust Plan
GOAL: Language Arts
By May 2022:
- Increase the number of students in the pathways of progress on Acadience Reading Composite Scores from 66% (January 2021) to 75%.
- Increase the number of students moving from below benchmark on Acadience Reading Composite Scores to at or above benchmark from 39% (January 2021) to 60%.
- Increase the number of students at or above proficient on Reading Inventory scores from 66% (January 2021) to 80%.
- Raise overall school proficiency on RISE ELA scores in grades 3-5 from the 80th percentile (May 2019) to at or above the 85th percentile of demographically similar schools.
Action Plan Steps
- Fund Tier 2 interventionists to provide evidence-based interventions to students achieving below benchmark or otherwise lacking specific identified skills in reading.
- Ongoing professional development for expanding proficiency in structured classroom discussions
- Focus on Teacher Clarity by conducting staff book study of The Teacher Clarity Playbook
- Include time in PLCs for grade-level professional development
- Public practice using peer walkthroughs and video observation and reflection
Planned Expenditures
Salaries and Employee Benefits 100 and 200 / Action Plan-Step 1 / $78,620
Estimated Carry-over (as needed if the carry-over is >10%)
$0
Funding Changes
Language Arts Goal, Parts A-D
- Hire additional interventionists
- Increase hours of existing interventionists
- Increase opportunities for public practice (additional sub days for peer observations)
- Purchase technology hardware and/or software to support academic goals
- Purchase new materials or replace current materials to support academic goals
Butler Elementary School 2021-2022 School TSSP
GOAL: Math
By May 2022:
- Increase the number of students at or above benchmark on Acadience Math Composite Scores from 70% (January 2021) to 80%.
- Increase the number of students moving from below benchmark on Acadience Math Composite Scores to at or above benchmark from 53% (January 2021) to 75%.
- Raise overall school proficiency on RISE Math scores in grades 3-5 from the 75th percentile (May 2019) to at or above the 80th percentile of demographically similar schools.