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slides: 9 Challenges Facing Portland Public Schools

Thursday, May 07, 2015

 

Aiming to lower expulsion rates, especially for students of color, and raising high school graduation rates are among Portland Public Schools’ top priorities. Working to ensure students have reading skills by third grade that will carry them through the rest of their education is a third. 

See Slides Below: 9 Challenges Facing Portland Public Schools

This is the first year that the district has prioritized inequality in discipline as a top goal. “Our goal is to cut our exclusionary discipline in half and close the gap between color and white by half,” said Sascha Perrins, senior director of PK-12 Programs. 

In the past, PPS has been sanctioned by the Oregon Department of Education (ODE) for disparity in exclusionary discipline of special education students of color, which means that they must set aside 15 percent of federal funding to address intervention services. 

Perrins said that one way the district is addressing this is by avoiding exclusionary discipline when possible. “When kids start getting suspended and expelled that catches up to them, and they don’t do well later,” he said. “One mess up puts him further behind than the deed that got him in trouble.”

Gwen Sullivan, president of Portland Association of Teachers, added that disciplinary changes must consider safety of teachers and other students, too. 

“One of our kindergarten teachers really needs extra help,” said Sullivan. “She’s been asking for help since fall.” 

One of her students regularly bites and scratches her, she said. “It got to the point where there was some sort of shuffle and kid pushes her down and she got a concussion.” 

Sullivan suggested that there are other ways, such as in-school suspension to address behavioral issues, but, of course, that would take more staff, which would need more funding.

“We need to be making sure we address equity in an honest way and not a political way,” she said. “The kids that are actually doing some of these things, they’re not getting the help they need either.”

Certainly disciplinary issues are tied in with the ultimate measure of academic performance—high school graduation. In 2009-2010, only 55 percent of Portland Public students earned a high school diploma with their four-year cohort (the students with which they started ninth grade)—11 percentage points below the state graduation rate. 

The district has improved over the last five years. However, data calculations have changed giving a broader picture of the issue while also giving the stats a lift. A change in how data was collected “strengthened the way we looked at it,” said Perrins. 

In 2010, the state started collecting data for fifth-year completers aiming to capture students who received a regular high school diploma, as well as those who completed other forms of high school requirements such as: an adult high school diploma, a modified diploma, an extended diploma, or a GED. 

The district has found as much as 10 percent more students are captured as completers if a fifth year is included. 

While graduation rates and discipline top the district’s priority list, created by Superintendent Carole Smith, the district faces a variety of other challenges, ranging from principals that teachers say rule with intimidation to finding space for a growing student body to modernizing and upgrading the district’s aging buildings. Here is the full list of some of those challenges. This list is certainly not meant to be exhaustive.

 

Related Slideshow: 9 Challenges Facing Portland Public Schools

Aiming to lower expulsion rates, especially for students of color, and raising high school graduation rates are among Portland Public Schools’ top priorities. See what other challenges the schools are facing here. 

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Raising Graduation Rates 

In 2012-2013, about 75 percent of students graduated with their cohort, while another 7 percent of their cohort completed some form of high school requirements during a fifth year, finishing in 2013-2014.

Sascha Perrins, senior director of PK-12 Programs, said Portland Public School District has raised rates by doing more career technical education alongside regular curriculum, giving students deeper offerings all the way back to middle school, as well as by identifying students sooner who have fallen behind. 

Graduation rates got a little boost from another data change in 2013-2014 that could be a little deceiving. In 2013-2014, the state began counting students who received a modified diploma in the four-year cohort rate, reasoning that a modified diploma is enough to qualify for college financial aid. 

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Reducing Expulsions 

The district also has a strategy to address an issue that goes hand in hand with graduation rates: exclusionary discipline of students. “We’re seeing a really high link with kids who are excluded (via expulsion) and kids who don’t graduate on time,” said Perrins. “I’m not saying if you miss… suddenly you can’t graduate, but it’s more symptomatic of your experience in school.”

Additionally, students of color are far more likely to experience expulsion than white students—a national trend that doesn’t miss Portland. In 2013-2014, 10.5 percent of African American students were expelled at least once, while 7.4 percent of Native Americans, 4.4 percent of Pacific Islanders, 3.9 percent of Hispanics, 3.8 of percent mixed race, 2.3 percent of whites and 1 percent of Asians were expelled. 

In the last few years, the number of students being expelled has decreasd, but the rate of expulsion for African American students has not changed much. In 2013-2014, they were about 4.6 times as likely to be expelled than a white student.

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Improving Leadership

Portland Association of Teachers President Gwen Sullivan said that the district has huge leadership issues starting with principals but also at the central office. 

“People are just being mean. In some cases it feels like they are being encouraged to be,” said Sullivan. “I don’t know when (the district) will actually fire a principal. They tend to go on leave and disappear.”

Recently, the district has had a number of principals abruptly go on leave—one after being accused and arrested for domestic abuse and the other after teachers complained about the hostile environment, reported Willamette Week. 

Sullivan said that the central office must have good leadership, too, in order to address these issues. 

“We know that in a school where you have a supportive principal, the teacher feels supported, the parents feel supported, the kids feel supportive and the environment is good to teach in,” Sullivan said.

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Improving Parent and Community Engagement 

“(Parent involvement) is one of the things that everyone talks about and everyone tries to figure out how to approach,” said Otto Schell, long time parent advocate and PTA volunteer. “Some communities have done really well at engaging parents at the school level and others not so much.” 

“The PTA model works very effectively in some schools and in other schools we don’t reach all the parents,” said Schell, who is currently a Grant PTA member and the legislative director for the Oregon PTA.

Schell gave the example of watching the Caeser Chavez community come out and presented during the budget meeting at Roosevelt High School, which included a Spanish translation services. “It’s a great example of how you can do it if both the school staff and parent community coalesce and work together,” he said.

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Redrawing Boundaries

Due to anticipated growing enrollment, PPS began a boundary review process this year that would address balancing the district population in the available space in school buildings. 

Some sticky areas include achieving diversity of racial and ethnic groups and addressing space needs in some schools. 

Additionally, the district has a mix of K-5 and K-8 schools, about which parents have had mixed opinions. Some feel that middle school students get stronger offerings in a 6-8 school as classes like band or choir are difficult to offer middle school students in a K-5 school lacking a larger population.  

“Middle schools should have shop, art, band… a variety of different things,” said Sullivan. 

A district-wide committee is rethinking boundary changes for the fall 2016 school year.  

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Completing Building Upgrades and Rebuilds Using 2012 Bond Money 

Hand-in-hand with rebalancing school populations, the district is planning and currently undergoing building changes for Portland’s growing student body. While some plans are already underway, the district will still consider whether building spaces already in the works will be enough to house enrollment projections 15 years from now.

“We’d hate to overbuild or underbuild,” said Miles. 

The district has released its list of 27 summer projects in elementary schools, which includes seismic upgrades as well as science classrooms and ADA (American with Disabilities Act) work. It is also beginning work at Franklin High School with a groundbreaking at noon on Saturday, May 16, and at Roosevelt High School. Work at Faubion PK-8, which will create a shared space with Concordia University, begins in the fall. Planning for modernization at Grant High School is currently underway with construction planned for 2017. 

There are a few more years of the bond after that during which the district could consider how to adapt other smaller buildings. 

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Ensuring Third Graders Can Read to Learn 

Before third grade, teaching is more directed at helping teach students how to read, but in third grade, the curriculum shifts to reading in order to learn more. “You have to read to access more information,” said Perrins. “We want every child to access all that learning to come up after third grade.” 

Reading to learn by third grade is a priority of the Oregon Department of Education, which administers state testing in third grade. But that will only tell you what a student has learned in the past, said Perrins, which is why the district administers smaller “formative assessments” to understand what struggling students are learning. These could be done every two to three weeks. 

To support reading in elementary schools, the district hires instructional specialists especially at schools with higher poverty, divides students into smaller groups, provide mentorship for younger teachers and professional development options to strengthen teaching.

Sullivan added that in the case of reading the district is doing a good job by adding 25 more librarians next year. 

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Improving funding

The district isn’t the only player to consider in the game of funding schools. But certainly many challenges would be easier to face with more funding. 

This year, the Oregon Legislature increased funding from the last biennium to $7.255 billion spread across the state. However, most local school districts had supported a $7.5 billion budget for K-12. The reduced number isn’t really anything new for public schools, which have for years been asking for more than the legislature gives it.

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Providing More Wrap Around Services 

Sullivan said teachers could benefit from better connections with other services available to their students from impoverished families. They need things like counselors, mental health providers and food assistance—some of which can come from other sources like the county.

But, sometimes the extra support could come from special education services, which requires the district to be supportive of teachers making referrals.

 
 

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