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For immediate release
July 6, 2017
Plan for NC Innovative School District Presented to State Board
New District to Administer Several Low-Performing Schools
The superintendent of North
Carolina’s new statewide school district created to include some of the state’s
lowest-performing schools outlined to the State Board of Education today the
broad framework of the initiative, which is aimed at turning around a number of
the state’s chronically struggling schools.
Eric Hall, who was named
superintendent of the Achievement School District earlier this year, shared
with the board his vision and emerging strategy for leading the effort, enacted
by the General Assembly in 2016. Hall told the board that the new district –
renamed the North Carolina Innovative School District – will follow a six-phase
strategy during the 2017-18 school year prior to operating the first group of schools
in the 2018-19 year.
During
the coming school year, Hall said, the district will focus on reviewing school
performance data to help identify schools for potential partnership with the
Innovative School District (ISD). In addition to weighing student achievement
data, Hall said that he and his team also will be conducting evaluations of
qualifying schools to determine viable options for improving student outcomes
in identified low-performing schools. This will help to determine if it is in
the best interest of students and the local community to partner with the ISD
or to consider other options, if available.
Hall said
he anticipates selecting at least two schools for operation under the district
in the 2018-19 school year and a total of five schools by 2019-20. All five
will be elementary schools or include elementary grades.
List of Prospective Schools Expected in September
Hall told
the board that he expects to release a list in September showing prospective
schools that qualify for the ISD based on school performance data from 2016-17
and recent years. He will then work with local districts and communities to
determine a final selection of schools for the State Board of Education to
approve by December.
Schools approved by the board will undergo six months of planning for transfer to the Innovative School District, for which Hall will be selecting a charter or educational management organization (CMO/EMO) to operate the school for a period of five to eight years under contract with the State Board of Education. Schools operating under the new district, in partnership with the local school districts and community, will be known as “Innovative Schools.”
As planning continues for the ISD, Hall will be working to identify qualified charter and education management organizations with an interest in partnering with the state, the local communities and the schools to ensure that the goals of the initiative are met. Hall said he expects that final CMO/EMO partners will be selected no later than January 2018 so that planning can start quickly for schools transferring to the ISD in 2018-19.
In his presentation to the board, Hall also proposed a draft of the ISD’s mission statement: “We create innovative conditions within low-performing schools in partnership with communities across North Carolina focused on improving equity and opportunity through high expectations for student achievement.” As a starting point, Hall said, the statement places a strong emphasis on partnerships and parents.
“It is important that we partner with local schools, our districts,
communities and parents to ensure that a comprehensive strategy is designed in
collaboration toward a common vision for student success,” Hall said. “The
opportunities that we have to drive meaningful and sustainable impact is
significant, and as we work toward success hand-in-hand with our local
communities, I am convinced that we can serve as national role models in how
people of diverse backgrounds and perspectives can come together to help
amplify student achievement in school.”
Innovation Zone Provides Additional Support for Districts with ISD Schools
In
addition to providing information about the process for identifying prospective
schools, Hall told the board that an additional provision of the 2016 law
allows for the creation of an Innovation Zone or I-Zone within local school
districts with low-performing schools included in the project to receive
additional support.
The I-Zone is a strategy that provides a group of
low-performing schools within a local district the opportunity to benefit from
additional flexibilities, often aligned with those provided to charter schools
in the state. These zones and their schools are established and managed by a
separate division in the local district, using matching funds from the state of
up to $150,000.
This I-Zone office will be managed by an executive director
and support team that is solely focused on the improvement of this group of
schools in a local district. An I-Zone is administered and controlled by the
local district, or other innovative strategies may be designed to ensure that
the schools in the zone operate with a great deal of autonomy and support from
the I-Zone office. I-Zones are created for a period of five years, with options
to extend if outcomes are proving effective.
Some of the additional flexibilities may include scheduling, calendar,
curriculum and even staffing flexibility, so that the professionals at the
school level and within the I-Zone can work together to create conditions for
accelerating student and school success. The process for launching an I-Zone
would align with the development of the innovative schools, with planning
during the 2017-18 school year and operations starting in 2018-19.
Click here
for more information about the NC Innovative School District.
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