Overview of the Annual Performance Report Development:
See Overview of the Development of the Annual Performance Report in the Introduction section, page 1.
|
Monitoring Priority: FAPE in the LRE |
Indicator 1: Percent of youth with individualized education programs (IEPs) graduating from high school with a regular diploma compared to percent of all youth in the State graduating with a regular diploma.
(20 U.S.C. 1416 (a)(3)(A))
|
Measurement: New York State’s Measurement: Percent of “total cohort” of students with disabilities who graduate with a high school diploma (Regents or local diploma) as of June 30 after four years of first entering 9th grade or for ungraded students with disabilities, after four years of becoming 17 years of age. NYS will begin using the performance of the 2003 total cohort for accountability under the No Child Left Behind (NCLB) Act. New York State’s Calculation: NYS has set its targets based on the performance of the “total cohort”. See below for the definition of the 2003 total district cohort. The 2003 district total cohort consists of all students, regardless of their current grade level, who met one of the following conditions:
Students who have spent at least five months in district schools or out-of-district placements during year 1, 2, 3, or 4 of high school are included in the district total cohort unless they transferred to another diploma-granting program outside the district. For the 2003 Total Cohort, Year 1, 2, 3, and 4 are the 2003-04, 2004-05, 2005-06, and 2006-07 school years, respectively. A student will be included in the district total cohort if the student’s enrollment record in the district shows that the student was enrolled for:
|
|
FFY |
Measurable and Rigorous Target |
|
FFY 2006 |
The percent of youth with IEPs graduating from high school with a regular high school diploma within four years, as of June, will be 37 percent. |
Actual Target Data for FFY 2006:
|
Graduation-Rate Cohort, As of August 31, Four Years Later |
||||
|
Cohort Year |
All Students |
Students with Disabilities |
||
|
# in Cohort |
Graduation Rate |
# in Cohort |
Graduation Rate |
|
|
1998 |
165,226 |
77% |
14,306 |
55% |
|
1999 |
173,978 |
76% |
15,056 |
58% |
|
2000 (old baseline data) |
179,092 |
77% |
18,909 |
53% |
|
2001 |
181,848 |
77% |
19,504 |
49% |
|
2002 |
192,149 |
75% |
23,150 |
50% |
Total Cohort, As of June 30, Four Years Later |
||||
|
Cohort Year |
All Students |
Students with Disabilities |
||
|
# in Cohort |
Graduation Rate |
# in Cohort |
Graduation Rate |
|
|
2000 |
199,312 |
67% |
21,262 |
46% |
|
2001 (new baseline data) |
212,135 |
66% |
26,281 |
38% |
|
2002 |
210,910 |
67% |
27,453 |
37% |
|
2003 |
||||
|
Total Cohort Analysis of Students with Disabilities’ (SWD) Graduation Rates for New York City, Large Four Cities Combined and Rest of School Districts |
||||||
|
Need/Resource Capacity Category |
2001 Total Cohort of SWD |
2002 Total Cohort of SWD |
2003 Total Cohort of SWD |
|||
|
# in Cohort |
Grad. Rate |
# in Cohort |
Grad. Rate |
# in Cohort |
Grad. Rate |
|
|
New York City |
7,627 |
17.6% |
7,587 |
18.6% |
||
|
Large Four Cities |
1,784 |
21.7% |
1,862 |
20.5% |
||
|
Urban/Suburban High Need Districts |
2,487 |
30.4% |
2,619 |
28.8% |
||
|
Rural High Need Districts |
2,165 |
32.5% |
2,240 |
31.2% |
||
|
Average Need Districts |
8,733 |
48.1% |
9,366 |
45.6% |
||
|
Low Need Districts |
3,459 |
74.0% |
3,740 |
74.1% |
||
|
Charter Schools |
11 |
15.4% |
39 |
15.9% |
||
|
Total State |
26,281 |
37.9% |
27,452 |
37.5% |
||
|
Total Cohort Analysis of Students with Disabilities (SWD) Graduation Rate by Need/Resource Capacity Category of School Districts |
||||||
|
Group of School Districts |
2001 Total Cohort of SWD |
2002 Total Cohort of SWD |
2003 Total Cohort of SWD |
|||
|
# in Cohort |
Grad. Rate |
# in Cohort |
Grad. Rate |
# in Cohort |
Grad. Rate |
|
|
Big Five Cities |
9,411 |
18.4% |
9,449 |
19.0% |
||
|
Rest of State |
16,870 |
48.7% |
19,866 |
44.7% |
||
|
Total State |
26,281 |
37.9% |
27,453 |
37.5% |
||
Results for the 2003 total cohort will not be available until later this school year. The delay in finalizing these data is due to changing data collection systems for high school students from the System for Tracking Education Performance (STEP) to Student Information Repository System (SIRS). The transition from one system to another required extra steps for school districts to verify their data.
The State anticipates that next year, the total cohort data will be available earlier.
Discussion of Improvement Activities Completed and Explanation of Progress or Slippage that occurred for FFY 2006:
Explanation of Progress or Slippage
As soon as these data become available, NYS will revise the APR and provide the required data with an explanation of progress or slippage.
Improvement Activities Completed during 2006-07
Revisions, with Justification, to Proposed Targets / Improvement Activities / Timelines / Resources for FFY 2006: [If applicable]
The following activity was added:
|
Activities |
Timelines |
Resources |
|
Develop and implement revised monitoring protocols that specifically focus on compliance issues most related to improving graduation rates. |
2007-2011 |
SEQA SETRC Other Technical Assistance Networks |
Overview of the Annual Performance Report Development:
See Overview of the Development of the Annual Performance Report in the Introduction section, page 1.
|
Monitoring Priority: FAPE in the LRE |
Indicator 2: Percent of youth with IEPs dropping out of high school compared to the percent of all youth in the State dropping out of high school.
(20 U.S.C. 1416 (a)(3)(A))
|
Measurement: New York State’s Measurement: Percent of “total cohort” of students with disabilities who drop out as of June 30 after four years of first entering 9th grade or for ungraded students with disabilities, after four years of becoming 17 years of age. NYS will begin using the performance of the 2003 total cohort for accountability under NCLB. New York State’s Calculation: NYS has set its targets based on the performance of the “total cohort”. See below for the definition of the 2003 total district cohort. The 2003 district total cohort consists of all students, regardless of their current grade level, who met one of the following conditions:
Students who have spent at least five months in district schools or out-of-district placements during year 1, 2, 3, or 4 of high school are included in the district total cohort unless they transferred to another diploma-granting program outside the district. For the 2003 Total Cohort, Year 1, 2, 3, and 4 are the 2003-04, 2004-05, 2005-06, and 2006-07 school years, respectively. A student will be included in the district total cohort if the student’s enrollment record in the district shows that the student was enrolled for:
|
|
FFY |
Measurable and Rigorous Target |
|
FFY 2006 |
No more than 19 percent of students with disabilities will drop out of school. |
Actual Target Data for FFY 2006:
|
Total Cohort, As of June 30, Four Years Later |
||||
|
Cohort Year |
All Students |
Students with Disabilities |
||
|
# in Cohort |
Drop-Out Rate |
# in Cohort |
Drop-Out Rate |
|
|
2000 |
199,312 |
11.9% |
21,262 |
13.0% |
|
2001 (New Baseline Data) |
212,135 |
15.4% |
26,281 |
25.5% |
|
2002 |
216,910 |
14.0% |
27,453 |
22.2% |
|
2003 |
||||
|
|
||||||
|
Need/Resource Capacity Category |
2001 Total Cohort of SWD |
2002 Total Cohort of SWD |
2003 Total Cohort of SWD |
|||
|
# in Cohort |
Drop-Out Rate |
# in Cohort |
Drop-Out Rate |
# in Cohort |
Drop-Out Rate |
|
|
New York City |
7,627 |
37.8% |
7,587 |
30.4% |
||
|
Large Four Cities |
1,784 |
42.8% |
1,862 |
39.7% |
||
|
Urban/Suburban High Need Districts |
2,487 |
25.5% |
2,619 |
26.2% |
||
|
Rural High Need Districts |
2,165 |
25.1% |
2,240 |
26.1% |
||
|
Average Need Districts |
8,733 |
18.3% |
9,366 |
16.6% |
||
|
Low Need Districts |
3,459 |
7.5% |
3,740 |
5.6% |
||
|
Charter Schools |
11 |
42.3% |
39 |
30.8% |
||
|
Total State |
26,281 |
25.5% |
27,453 |
22.2% |
||
|
Total Cohort Analysis of Students with Disabilities (SWD) Drop-Out Rate for Big Five Cities combined and Rest of State |
||||||
|
Group of School Districts |
2001 Total Cohort of SWD |
2002 Total Cohort of SWD |
2003 Total Cohort of SWD |
|||
|
# in Cohort |
Drop-Out Rate |
# in Cohort |
Drop-Out Rate |
# in Cohort |
Drop-Out Rate |
|
|
Big Five Cities |
9,411 |
38.8% |
9,449 |
38.8% |
||
|
Rest of State |
17,496 |
18.1% |
19,866 |
18.8% |
||
|
Total State |
26,281 |
25.5% |
27,453 |
22.2% |
||
Results for the 2003 total cohort will not be available until later this school year. The delay in finalizing these data is due to changing data collection systems for high school students from STEP to SIRS. The transition from one system to another required extra steps for school districts to verify their data.
The State anticipates that next year, the total cohort data will be available earlier.
Discussion of Improvement Activities Completed and Explanation of Progress or Slippage that occurred for FFY 2006:
Explanation of Progress or Slippage
As soon as these data become available, NYS will revise the APR and include the explanation of progress or slippage.
Improvement Activities Completed during 2006-07
Revisions, with Justification, to Proposed Targets / Improvement Activities / Timelines / Resources for FFY 2006 [If applicable]
See indicator 1.
Overview of the Annual Performance Report Development:
See Overview of the Development of the Annual Performance Report in the Introduction section, page 1.
|
Monitoring Priority: FAPE in the LRE |
Indicator 3: Participation and performance of children with disabilities on statewide assessments:
A. Percent of districts that have a disability subgroup that meets the State’s minimum “n” size meeting the State’s AYP objectives for progress for disability subgroup.
B. Participation rate for children with IEPs in a regular assessment with no accommodations; regular assessment with accommodations; alternate assessment against grade level standards; alternate assessment against alternate achievement standards.
C. Proficiency rate for children with IEPs against grade level standards and alternate achievement standards.
(20 U.S.C. 1416 (a)(3)(A))
|
Measurement: A. Percent = [(# of districts meeting the State’s AYP objectives for progress for the disability subgroup (children with IEPs)) divided by the (total # of districts that have a disability subgroup that meets the State’s minimum “n” size in the State)] times 100. B. Participation rate = a. # of children with IEPs in assessed grades; b. # of children with IEPs in regular assessment with no accommodations (percent = [(b) divided by (a)] times 100); c. # of children with IEPs in regular assessment with accommodations (percent = [(c) divided by (a)] times 100); d. # of children with IEPs in alternate assessment against grade level achievement standards (percent = [(d) divided by (a)] times 100); and e. # of children with IEPs in alternate assessment against alternate achievement standards (percent = [(e) divided by (a)] times 100). Account for any children included in a but not included in b, c, d, or e above. Overall Percent = [(b + c + d + e) divided by (a)]. C. Proficiency rate = a. # of children with IEPs in assessed grades; b. # of children with IEPs in assessed grades who are proficient or above as measured by the regular assessment with no accommodations (percent = [(b) divided by (a)] times 100); c. # of children with IEPs in assessed grades who are proficient or above as measured by the regular assessment with accommodations (percent = [(c) divided by (a)] times 100); d. # of children with IEPs in assessed grades who are proficient or above as measured by the alternate assessment against grade level achievement standards (percent = [(d) divided by (a)] times 100); and e. # of children with IEPs in assessed grades who are proficient or above as measured against alternate achievement standards (percent = [(e) divided by (a)] times 100). Account for any children included in a but not included in b, c, d, or e above. Overall Percent = [(b + c + d + e) divided by (a)]. New York State Notes:
NYS does not currently administer an “alternate assessment against grade level standards” as described in measurement d. NYS has an alternate assessment against alternate achievement standards that is aligned to grade level standards. |
|
FFY |
Measurable and Rigorous Target |
|
FFY 2006 |
AYP: 57 percent of school districts that are required to make AYP for the students with disabilities subgroup will make AYP in grades 3-8 ELA, grades 3-8 math, high school ELA and high school math. Participation: 95 percent in grades 3-8 and high school in ELA and math. Performance: The State’s average performance on the performance indices (PI) which represent the percent of students with disabilities performing at Level 2 (basic proficiency) and above plus the percent of students with disabilities performing at Level 3 (proficiency) and above will be as follows: Grades 3-8 ELA: 96 |
Actual Target Data for FFY 2006:
AYP
75.5 percent of school districts (including Charter Schools) that were required to make AYP made AYP in every grade and subject in which they had sufficient number of students with disabilities. The State exceeded its 2006-07 target of 57 percent of school districts making AYP.
Participation Rate
The participation rate of students with disabilities in 2006-07 school year was as follows:
The State met its target of 95 percent participation rate for students with disabilities in grades 3-8 ELA and math, but not in high school ELA and math.
Performance
The State’s has four PIs. The PIs represent the percent of students scoring at Levels 3-4 plus the percent of students scoring at Levels 2-4. In the 2006-07 school year, the State average performance for the students with disabilities subgroup on these indices was as follows:
The State exceeded
its 2006 targets on performance indices for grades 3-8 ELA and math, but fell
short on high school ELA and math.
|
AYP for Students with Disabilities Subgroup |
||
|
FFY |
Number of School Districts Required to Make AYP (had minimum of 40 students for participation and 30 students for performance |
Percent of School Districts that made AYP in all the Subjects they were Required to. |
|
2004 |
290 |
48.3% |
|
2005 |
675 (includes 5 Charter Schools) |
57.2% |
|
2006 |
648 (includes 12 Charter Schools) |
75.5% |
|
AYP for Students with Disabilities Subgroup by Need/Resource Capacity Category of School Districts in 2006-07 |
||
|
Need/Resource Capacity Category of School Districts |
Number of School Districts Required to Make AYP (had minimum of 40 students for participation and 30 students for performance |
Percent of School Districts that made AYP in all the Subjects they were Required to |
|
New York City |
32 |
3.1% |
|
Large Four Cities |
4 |
0.0% |
|
Urban-Suburban High Need Districts |
44 |
45.5% |
|
Rural High Need Districts |
133 |
79.7% |
|
Average Need Districts |
309 |
79.6% |
|
Low Need Districts |
114 |
92.1% |
|
Charter Schools |
12 |
91.7% |
|
Participation Rate for Students with Disabilities Subgroup |
||||
|
Assessment |
2005-06 |
2006-07 |
||
|
Enrollment |
Participation Rate |
Enrollment |
Participation Rate |
|
|
Grade 3-8 ELA |
198,410 |
95% |
196,434 |
96.8% |
|
Grade 3-8 Math |
198,074 |
96% |
196,252 |
96.9% |
|
High School ELA (seniors) |
17,321 |
90% |
16,262 |
92.7% |
|
High School Math (seniors) |
17,321 |
91% |
16,262 |
94.0% |
|
Performance Index for the Students with Disabilities Subgroup |
|||||||
|
Assessment |
2006-07 Performance |
2006-07 Standard |
Students with Disabilities Made AYP in 2006-07 |
2007-08 Safe- Harbor Target |
|||
|
Continuously Enrolled Students with Disabilities in Grades 3-8 and in 2002 Accountability Cohort in High School (HS) |
NYS PI |
Effective AMO |
Safe- Harbor Target |
Met Third Indicator for Safe Harbor |
|||
|
Grades 3-8 ELA |
185,224 |
103 |
122 |
102 |
Yes |
Yes |
113 |
|
Grades 3-8 Math |
183,397 |
115 |
86 |
NA |
NA |
Yes |
102 |
|
HS Eng. 2003 accountability cohort |
20,351 |
117 |
159 |
123 |
No |
No |
125 |
|
HS Math 2003 accountability cohort |
20,351 |
127 |
152 |
132 |
No |
No |
134 |
Discussion of Improvement Activities Completed and Explanation of Progress or Slippage that occurred for FFY 2006:
Explanation of Progress or Slippage
The State far exceeded its 2006 target for the percentage of school districts that would make AYP in all subjects in which they were required to. In the 2005-06 school year, 57.2 percent of the required school districts (including Charter Schools) made AYP and in 2006-07 school year, 75.5% of school districts (including Charter Schools) made AYP. The target for 2006-07 school year was 57 percent.
The State exceeded the participation target of 95 percent in grades 3-8 ELA and math, but did not achieve the same target in high school ELA and math. Compared to 2005, the 2006 participation rate improved in all subjects and grades.
The State exceeded its performance target in 2006 in grades 3-8 ELA and math by improving by more than five points on the PI. In grades 3-8 ELA, the score on the PI improved by 12 points and by 15 points in grades 3-8 math. The State did not meet its target to improve by five points in high school ELA and math. Instead, the scores on the PIs in high school ELA and math each improved by 3 points.
The data provided above indicates a significant difference in the percent of school districts that made AYP for the students with disabilities subgroup in the Big Five Cities and the urban-suburban high need school districts compared with other school districts in the State. For example, only one community school district in NYC made AYP, none of the large four cities made AYP, and only 46 percent of the urban-suburban high need districts made AYP compared to 80 percent of rural high need, 80 percent of average need school districts and 92 percent of low need school districts and 92 percent of Charter schools.
Improvement Activities Completed during 2006-07
Revisions, with Justification, to Proposed Targets / Improvement Activities / Timelines / Resources for FFY 2006 [If applicable]
None at this time.
Overview of the Annual Performance Report Development:
See Overview of the Development
of the Annual Performance Report in the Introduction section, page 1.
|
Monitoring Priority: FAPE in the LRE |
Indicator 4: Rates of suspension and expulsion:
A. Percent of districts identified by the State as having a significant discrepancy in the rates of suspensions and expulsions of children with disabilities for greater than 10 days in a school year; and
B. Percent of districts identified by the State as having a significant discrepancy in the rates of suspensions and expulsions of greater than 10 days in a school year of children with disabilities by race and ethnicity.
(20 U.S.C. 1416(a)(3)(A); 1412(a)(22))
|
Measurement: A. Percent = [(# of districts identified by the State as having significant discrepancies in the rates of suspensions and expulsions of children with disabilities for greater than 10 days in a school year) divided by the (# of districts in the State)] times 100. B. Percent = [(# of districts identified by the State as having significant discrepancies in the rates of suspensions and expulsions for greater than 10 days in a school year of children with disabilities by race ethnicity) divided by the (# of districts in the State)] times 100. Include State’s definition of “significant discrepancy.” New York State Notes: NYS collects data on the number of students with disabilities suspended or expelled out of school for more than 10 days in a school year on the PD-8 report. This report is available at http://www.vesid.nysed.gov/sedcar/0607pdrpts.htm . Section 618 data was used to analyze the discrepancy in the rates of out-of-school suspensions of students with disabilities for greater than 10 days in a school year among school districts. Suspension rates were calculated for all school districts. The rates were computed by dividing the number of students with disabilities suspended out-of-school for more than 10 days during the school year by the December 1 count of school-age students with disabilities and the result expressed as a percent. The 2004-05 baseline statewide average suspension rate was 1.34 percent. School districts with at least 75 school-age students with disabilities that had a suspension rate of 4.0 percent or higher were identified as having significant discrepancy in their rate among school districts. (A minimum number of 75 students with disabilities was used, since small numbers of students with disabilities may distort percentages.) New York State’s Definition of Significant Discrepancy in Suspension Rate:
|
|
FFY |
Measurable and Rigorous Target |
|
FFY 2006 (School Year 2006-07) |
4.A. No more than 0 percent of the school districts in the State will suspend students with disabilities for more than 10 days at a rate of 4.0 percent or higher. (This rate is three times the baseline average.) 4.B. Reporting this indicator by race and ethnicity is not required for the FFY 2006 APR due February 1, 2008. |
Actual Target Data for FFY 2006:
|
State Average Suspension Rates of Students with Disabilities for Greater Than 10 Days in a School Year |
|||||
|
School Year |
Number of Students with Disabilities Suspended for More than 10 Days in the School Year |
Number of School-Age Students with Disabilities Receiving Special Education Services on December 1 |
Suspension Rate |
Significant Discrepancy in Suspension Rate |
Percent of School Districts with Significant Discrepancy in Suspension Rate |
|
2004-05 (baseline data) |
5,502 |
409,791 |
1.34% |
Three times the State baseline average |
2.9% |
|
2005-06 |
5,294 |
407,000 |
1.30% |
Three times the State baseline average. |
2.5% |
|
2006-07 |
5,622 |
409,149 |
1.37% |
Three times the State baseline average |
2.3% |
|
Number of School Districts with their Suspension Rates and Percent of all Suspensions in the 2006-07 School Year |
||||
|
# of districts in 2006-07 School Year |
% of 684 districts |
% of students with disabilities suspended for greater than 10 days |
Comparison to statewide baseline average |
% of total 10-day out-of-school suspensions |
|
100 |
14.6% |
Not applicable |
These districts each had less than 75 students with disabilities enrolled on December 1, 2006. |
0.8% |
|
415 |
60.7% |
0% to < 1.3% |
Below the baseline Statewide average |
43.1% |
|
109 |
15.9% |
≥ 1.3% < 2.7% |
Between baseline and 2 times the baseline statewide average |
14.6% |
|
44 |
6.4% |
≥ 2.7%< 4.0% |
Between 2 and 3 times the baseline statewide average |
15.2% |
|
16 |
2.3% |
≥ 4.0% |
Three time or more than the baseline statewide average |
26.4% |
Discussion of Improvement Activities Completed and Explanation of Progress or Slippage that occurred for FFY 2006:
Explanation of Progress or Slippage
The average suspension rate of students with disabilities in the 2004-05 school year was 1.34 percent, in 2005-06 it was 1.30 percent, and in 2006-07 it was 1.37 percent. Preliminary data analysis of 2006-07 suspension data indicates that the State will identify 16 school districts that had a suspension rate of 4.0 percent or higher compared to 20 school districts that were initially identified based on 2004-05 school year data (two were subsequently removed from identification). While the State did not meet its 2006-07 school year target of having 0 percent of school districts with a suspension rate of 4.0 percent or higher, there was a decrease from 2.9 percent of school districts identified based on 2004-05 data to 2.3 percent of school districts that will be identified based on 2006-07 data.
All 18 school districts that were required to review their policies, practices and procedures related to discipline based on 2004-05 school year data reported some noncompliance with one or more regulatory citations related to discipline of students with disabilities. They were required to correct noncompliance as soon as possible but no later than one year from identification. The Table below provides information on the number of school districts that reported compliance within one year and those that reported compliance after the one year time frame. The State is providing additional technical assistance and corrective action with the school districts reflected in the last column below that are still pending correction of noncompliance.
|
Data Year |
Notification Year |
Number of Districts Identified |
Number of Districts Reporting Non- compliance |
Number of Districts Correcting Non- compliance Within one Year |
Number of Districts Correcting Non-compliance After one Year |
Number of Districts that have not Corrected Non-compliance to Date |
|
2004-05 |
2005-06 |
18 |
18 |
0 |
13 |
5* |
|
2005-06 |
2006-07 |
17 (4 of these were identified during the previous year) |
11 (possibly up to two more after verification review) |
|||
|
2006-07 |
2007-08 |
16 (7 of these identified in a previous year) |
||||
|
*Of the 5 school districts, three made progress and reported corrections to some issues of noncompliance, even though they are still not in compliance with all regulatory citations. |
||||||
During the 2006-07 school year, based on 2005-06 school year data, 17 school districts were notified that they had a suspension rate that was significantly greater than the suspension rate in other school districts. Four of the 17 school districts were also identified during the 2004-05 school year and completed the State-developed self-review monitoring protocol during the 2005-06 school year to evaluate their compliance with selected regulatory requirements, policies, practices and procedures related to discipline procedures for students with disabilities. Thirteen school districts completed the same review during the 2006-07 school year. The chart below provides the statewide results for the percent of identified school districts reporting compliance with each regulatory requirement. Eleven of the 13 school districts reported some noncompliance and will need to revise their policies, practices and procedures and become compliant within one year from notification. Two districts that reported being in full compliance will have a verification of their results completed by the State.
The Statewide results of compliance with regulatory citations provided below were disaggregated by the SEQA Regional Offices and technical assistance network regions to enable staff to provide required technical assistance to school districts based on the regional profile of results on the self-review monitoring protocol.
|
Results of 2006-07 Suspension Self-Reviews |
Number out of 13 School Districts Reporting Compliance |
Percent of 13 School Districts Reporting Compliance |
|
|
Regulatory Citation |
|||
|
§200 | |||