Oklahoma ESSA plan, Oklahoma Edge, approved by U.S. Education Department
OKLAHOMA CITY (July 2, 2018) – The Oklahoma State Department of
Education (OSDE) today announced that the United States Department of Education
(USDE) has officially approved the state’s comprehensive education plan, Oklahoma Edge.
Under the
Every Student Succeeds Act (ESSA), all state education agencies were required
to submit a plan for their use of federal dollars. Oklahoma Edge details how Oklahoma will use those funds to ensure
every Oklahoma student has a competitive edge upon high school graduation.
State
Superintendent of Public Instruction Joy Hofmeister said Oklahoma Edge encapsulates Oklahoma’s 8-year strategic vision for
education.
“This plan
is so much more than the charts, graphs and technical language that are routine
components of official policy whitepapers,” she said. “Oklahoma Edge establishes
a specific path forward for every student in our state to achieve the
educational outcomes Oklahomans value. These 238 pages reflect countless hours
of engagement with educators and more than 5,000 individual pieces of
stakeholder feedback. Among a number of innovations in the plan is a
methodology unique to Oklahoma: use of priority student groups to isolate and
unmask achievement gaps within federally recognized student subgroups.”
Oklahoma Edge is built on achieving six measurable
goals by 2025:
- Score among the top 20 highest-performing states on the National
Assessment of Education Progress (NAEP) – otherwise known as “the nation’s
report card” – in all fourth- and eighth-grade subjects.
- Reduce by 50 percent the need for mathematics and English language
arts remediation after high school.
- Rank among the top 10 states with the highest graduation rate for
students in four-, five- and six-year cohorts.
- Ensure that every student in grades 6 through 12 develops a useful
and meaningful Individual Career Academic Plan (ICAP).
- Align early childhood education and learning foundations to ensure
at least 75 percent of students are “ready to read” upon kindergarten entry.
- Increase student access to effective teachers, thereby reducing
the need for emergency-certified teachers by 95 percent.
The plan’s
overarching premise is that every child, educator and school can succeed. To
that end, it includes a host of innovative approaches to serving individual
learners:
- Using
food as an academic intervention by removing barriers to federal nutrition
programs
- Assigning
students to one priority student group in the school accountability system to
unmask learning gaps
- Initiating
robust, meaningful and periodic consultation between Oklahoma’s tribal nations
and the districts that serve their students
- Establishing
Programs of Excellence to celebrate focal areas of exceptional effectiveness in
six areas of a well-rounded education: fine arts, mathematics, science, social
studies/civics, world languages and safe and healthy schools
- Identifying
and supporting students of incarcerated parents
- Increasing
the identification of gifted and talented students of color
- Leveraging
out-of-school time to meet student needs and engage family and community
“We were
determined to establish audacious, measurable goals for our state and are
equally committed to achieving them,” Hofmeister said. “The work to that end is
well under way, with significant progress already made in a number of
areas. We are excited to forge ahead along a path that I am confident will
yield strong, positive academic outcomes that will benefit our students,
schools and state.”
In building Oklahoma Edge, OSDE sought input from a
diverse cross-section of education stakeholders statewide over a nearly
two-year period. That collaboration included more than 5,000 individual points
of contact among educators, parents, elected officials, members of the business
community, nonprofits, tribal partners and the faith-based community.
Click the image above to read the Oklahoma Edge plan.
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