Thursday, February 28, 2013

Get Your #2s Ready for the CMT!

In the midst of all our snow closings and delays and sub-freezing temperatures, the CMT tests arrived in Central Office – all 48 cartons!  Ann Marie DePetto inventoried every barcode on every Math, Writing, Reading, and Science test booklet, in addition to counting the Test Examiner manuals, writing prompts, rulers, and so on, readying them for delivery to the schools.  In fact, by the time you read this, the cartons will have been reinventoried in the offices of our Principals who, in addition to their regular duties, are also serving as our Test Coordinators.  And, in the meantime, our Director of Curriculum and Instruction, Colleen Murray, took on the overall responsibility for the CMT’s, setting up the administration schedule and making certain each State guideline is followed to the letter.

Every farmer knows you can’t get the little pig fatter by weighing him.   I sometimes use this statement as an analogy to the obvious limits of standardized tests such as the CMT.   We certainly won’t make our children more 21st Century-skilled or more academically successful simply by testing them.   And while, this blog is an inside look at the time and effort that goes into the “weighing,” we all know the real work is what our teachers do every day in their classrooms to help our students achieve. When they teach students to explain their thinking in solving a complex word problem in math or to repsond in writing to a text-dependent question, they are not "teaching to the test," they are imparting important real-life skills. 
On the other hand, I’d also like you to know that preparing for these tests is no simple task … and our efforts in Orange are replicated in every school district across Connecticut.   Each year when our Coordinators and our Principals check-in our boxes, (which inevitably arrive wet and sandy), I remind myself that some districts are receiving 100’s of boxes and need a whole storage facility to store them.

Here are some facts to ponder!   Based on last year’s data, we can expect to spend a total of 58.5 total hours in actual testing. Our third graders have the least amount of testing -- 7.5 hours. Our fifth graders have the most – 13 hours!   We will likely administer about 250 make-up tests for students who were sick or away from school during test administration.   We will work with over 100 official accommodations, such as for those students who need a reader or scribe, or large print materials, or extended time and an alternate setting, per their special education Individualized Education Plan (IEP).   We will need about 90 teachers as trained proctors during the various exams.

The three school Principals, Colleen, and Ann Marie will spend about 175 hours on the various administrative tasks, including 50 hours in unpacking and inventorying tests and supplies, 15 hours training proctors and readers, 15 hours in phone or email correspondence with Measurement Incorporated over interesting testing ‘issues,’ and 30 hours repacking the test booklets for scoring.    We'll send back and forth about 140 emails.  Lest you think even the inventory is simple, at each school the principals will count hundreds of small blue paper rulers and formula sheets. 

There are individualized bar code labels for each student’s testing booklets. In addition, your school Principals, and sometimes even their PTO’s and parent volunteers, will spend many hours re-doing the bell schedule, planning whole school assemblies or pep talks, finding appropriate space for small group accommodations, scheduling proctors and substitutes, writing letters home, and even arranging healthy snacks for our test-takers.

At the end of March, we’ll count it and box it all up again – the completed tests and all the materials -- and each box will be taped shut, numbered, and affixed with its two security seals and two address labels routing it back to Measurement Incorporated.

No one is complaining!! (Well, maybe a little!) But, in Orange, we take this time very seriously, intending that every detail is well planned and every eventuality is controlled. It’s important to us that this community continue to enjoy its excellent test scores.   But, more importantly, it’s crucial to us that your children continue to master the math, reading, writing, science, and analytical problem-solving skills that the Connecticut tests measure.   We want them to feel confident going into these tests and proud of their accomplishments afterwards.  It wouldn’t be fair of us to send them into a testing situation feeling overwhelmed or underprepared.  

Over the summer, we'll study our results and make changes in curriculum and instruction that will help more children reach the goal.  We'll report back to you on the results.  In a few weeks, I'll blog about the new test, the SBAC, headed our way.  In the meantime, we've posted March's CMT schedule and some easy-to-follow tips on the webpage.

Thursday, February 14, 2013

School Security -- We Care!

The devastating tragedy in our neighboring Newtown forever changed our comfort level and the nature of our community-wide conversation about our children’s safety. After all, this is not an event we can rationalize or compartmentalize. This was not a custody battle gone wrong. This was no former employee with a grudge, looking for revenge. This was not even a media-numbed student trying to put his grievances against school or peers to right through violence. This was simply random and senseless.

The images from Sandy Hook left us reeling with sadness and torn between two basic instincts: the first, to button up our schools, to lock all the doors and make them fortresses; the second, to let our children be children in a nurturing environment that welcomes parents and volunteers and celebrates community.

We are, of course, engaged in the serious study of Orange’s facilities and safety procedures. We are trying, to the degree we are able, to provide as much protection for our children and staff as we can. In January 2013, the Police Department, Fire Department, and our Facilities Director, along with several Board members and parents with experience in the field, participated in a SWOT Analysis. This is an assessment of the district’s buildings and infrastructure with regard to our Strengths, Weaknesses, Opportunities, and Threats.   This deep level of assessment was not new to Orange, as our SWOT reports date back to 2006; but Sandy Hook gave them a new sense of urgency and level of importance.  

In the past, many of the recommendations that came out of a SWOT Analysis were considered ‘just out of reach.’   So, where the SWOT Analysis may have recommended such items as video surveillance cameras, classrooms blinds, or new locksets that locked classrooms from inside the room versus from the corridor, the implemented measures may have included the blinds, but not the cameras... or included a clever, but makeshift adjustment to the locks, but not the new lock themselves.   One of the best results of the past SWOT Analyses was the development of Orange’s Code Red Lock-Down Protocols which have served as a model for other school districts for several years. We know that lockdown procedures, while they could not prevent the events in Newtown, did save lives.   We have come to understand this as the difference between prevention and mitigation. While, we cannot prevent an incident from arriving at our doorstep, we can mitigate the impact. That is the approach we have applied as we paid much closer attention to our SWOT Analysis than ever before. We no longer want the installations that can save lives to be ‘just out of reach.’ 

On January 28, 2013, the Board of Finance became our strong ally when they funded the school district money for two immediate projects and recommended the remainder of the projects be bonded. Thus, my intention is to effectively discuss the issue of student safety and to demonstrate both the level of our preparedness and our plans for increased security measures, but to do so in a way that engenders your confidence and perhaps lessens your anxiety.   Our security plans going forward are about finding a place to land while the national debate rages around us.  

That said, I’m assuming these are your questions and concerns:

Why must I state my name, the nature of my business, and provide an ID at school doors?

First and foremost, there is a need that everyone follows our new safety procedures. Please don’t be personally offended if a staff member asks for your name and the nature of your visit. Please be patient if signing in or out your children takes extra time; please be courteous while staff looks up your name or checks a database. Staff members are not singling you out. 

These new, more stringent, policies are meant to assure that our staff members stay alert, assess visitors, and then make conscious decisions at the entryway doors. Staff members can get overly comfortable and ‘buzzing in’ can become automatic and lax. While our regular, easily recognizable guests may pose no threat, if they breeze in and out of school, the district’s safety message is rendered false.

It feels rude to shut the door when another visitor is coming up right behind me!

While it is probably contrary to the way you were raised, please do not hold the door open for other people who are not in your party. Please allow our school staff members to assess all visitors and buzz in all the school’s guests. If you feel the need, say hello and tell the visitor you hope they understand the security procedures do not allow holding the door open.

What will the rapid call system do?

While there’s no doubt the adults in Sandy Hook acted admirably, there’s also no doubt the systems didn’t cooperate. A standard morning announcement system is simply not the most effective way to engage emergency procedures, especially when moments matter. Too many steps in the process! Too much chance for operator error! 

We are installing ‘rapid call systems’ (or ‘panic buttons’) in all four buildings. The buttons will simultaneously initiate a pre-recorded message throughout the school that the school is in lock-down, a call to the Police Department that there is a lock-down emergency, and the automatic closing of the interior fire doors. This is one of the immediate projects funded by the Board of Finance in late January.

Why does the district need ID card readers at the doors?

This is the second project funded by the BOF, and it has many merits even beyond security. First and foremost, however, ID Card Readers will allow the school entrances to be permanently locked at all times, even in the morning when teachers are arriving to work. Technology will control the ID readers, turning on and off access as warranted. Teachers will scan themselves in from the front doors and from the playgrounds after recess. No more will doors be unlocked or propped open. Teachers, too, will be expected not to hold the doors open for each other, as the card reader will become the attendance record the police will use in an emergency. 

These colorful IDs will also identify teachers as staff to police officers … and as ‘people you can trust’ to students. We will, of course, carefully establish protocols to secure the IDs.

What is a ‘sally-port’? Does ‘shatter-guard’ really work?

You’re no doubt very familiar with the concept of a sally-port, even if you didn’t previously know the term for it. It refers to a second set of doors that creates a locked foyer. A visitor is buzzed into one set of doors and then signs-in with a receptionist before being buzzed through the second set of doors. Now, that I know what they are, I have begun to recognize them everywhere I go. My dentist’s office has one, as do Woodbridge and Amity. My grandchildren’s schools in Massachusetts have sally-ports, as do most banks and many office buildings. You may have heard that we could only install sally-ports at three of the schools and would need to install a service window at Race Brook, instead of a sally-port. Recently, we worked out an option for a sally-port at Race Brook, as well.  

We will work hard to ensure the sally-ports are attractive and welcoming, while at the same time adding a second level of entrance security. Coupled with shatter guard, they should make us all more comfortable with how much more difficult it would be for an intruder to gain access.

Yes, shatter-guard is impressive. We saw a demonstration of a product that was bullet-proof, and about 17 minutes into the demo, even using sledge hammers and axes, the window was still impenetrable. I’m not going to go into the full plan here; but without changing the look of our schools, we have added those precious moments that become essential in mitigating a potential threat at our doors.

Won’t video surveillance cameras be an invasion of privacy?

There’s no doubt that video cameras can see and record everything these days. If you watched the Inauguration, you witnessed how powerful they are and how closely they can zoom in, from even a mile away, on someone yawning or scratching their nose. However, we are not planning to station anyone at a monitor, watching the cameras and zooming in on the students or staff on playgrounds or loading docks or in hallways.

We are carefully considering the camera placement, so that both the exterior doors and interior common areas are covered. This includes the entrances and offices. It does not include the lavatories, classrooms, and any semi-private or private areas! We will provide proper notice of the presence of surveillance cameras with signs stating ‘video surveillance in use.’ We will also develop all the legal protocols and policies for taping, reviewing, releasing, and so on.

In our security plan, the principals, Central Office, the Technology Administrator, and the Police will all be able to access the cameras from a computer and zoom in when an incident is in progress. This provides the opportunity to observe any unfolding events in real time. It also allows the Police Department or us to back-up the cameras’ DVR recordings and see what had happened in the previous minutes or hours, which is helpful if a child goes missing or we’ve suffered vandalism to one of the buildings.

At Sandy Hook, video surveillance could not have prevented the tragedy; but it would have allowed the police to view the school inside and out in real time. They would have been able to rerun a camera and quickly identify a backpack left at one of the doors as belonging to the perpetrator, saving the time they spent looking for a second intruder.

In each of the SWOT analyses prior to this January, the Police and Fire Departments requested video surveillance, but it was one of those ‘just out of reach’ plans. We can no longer afford to put off these security measures.

$100,000 for classroom locksets!

Our plan is to change the locksets on all the classroom doors so they will be automatically locked when shut and can be opened from the corridor only with a key. Shutting the door… locks the door!  This eliminates a lock-down protocol in which the teacher pulls a Velcro strip and ‘tests’ whether or not the door is locked from the hallway. It also eliminates ‘operator error.’   This upgrade is significantly overdue, as many of the current locksets are simply worn out and difficult to ‘key.’

There is an additional bonus in that classrooms will be locked when empty, as well. This makes students’ belongings and the classroom equipment much more secure. As we move to BYOD (bring your own device), and begin to allow students to use their own Kindles, iPads, and such, we’ll need to ensure their equipment is as protected as possible in the classroom.

What is an SRO?

An SRO is a highly-trained police officer who serves as a School Resource Officer. This important addition to our school security is both a preventative and mitigating measure. Because the addition of this Officer to the schools is a Police Department personnel change, it occurs in their budget, not ours. But, it certainly warrants our attention and full support.

A School Resource Officer would rotate, unscheduled, throughout the schools. He or she would work closely with students, their teachers, and families on programs such as bullying prevention, D.A.R.E., good decision-making, Internet and social media safety, and so on. The SRO is also another set of eyes, watching how students interact and spotting isolation and students at risk. He or she develops trusting relationships, serves as a strong role model, and taps into the community’s resources as necessary to support students and their families.

How important is the Police Department’s request for a Wireless Backhaul System?

Very! The value of the rapid call notification systems in the schools and the live feeds from the interior and exterior surveillance cameras is lost to us if the Police Department cannot access these software applications through a wireless system from their patrol cars. They have wanted the backhaul system for a while because, as we all know, wireless is faster and more reliable. Moments matter!

As you likely have realized, there is nothing we can do which guarantees trouble will not arrive at our doors. However much we agree that a tragedy the scale of Sandy Hook is unlikely, it is still important that we modernize our facilities with upgrades which make sense.  It's important we add a level of security that capitalizes on modern technologies and puts what we’ve learned into practice. The Police have told us again and again that perpetrators look for easy or ‘soft’ targets. The degree to which we look and act prepared (i.e. less ‘soft’) is a significant deterrent. Our intention is to demonstrate that preparedness in word and deed, affirming your trust in the safety of our facilities while simultaneously conveying to our children that, yes, we do still welcome and value community.