Overview of the State Performance Plan Development
See
Overview of the State Performance Plan Development preceding Indicator
1.
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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: Measurement for youth with IEPs is the same measurement as for all youth. The calculation is explained below. New York State’s Measurement: Percent of “graduation-rate cohort*” of students with disabilities who drop out of school. Definition of dropout: School principals must report as dropouts students who complete a school year and do not re-enroll (appear on the attendance register) the following school year unless the student can be documented to have graduated, transferred to another educational program leading to a high school diploma or a high school equivalency diploma, left the United States, or died. These students should be counted as dropouts in the year in which they did not re-enroll. Any student who, on the last day of required attendance for the school year, has been absent for twenty (20) consecutive, unexcused days and has not resumed attendance should be counted as a dropout. This definition of “dropout” may be found on page 159-160 of the STEP Reporting Manual at: http://www.emsc.nysed.gov/irts/STEP/2005/downloads/STEPManual.doc When the Department computes the total number of dropouts and dropout rate, any student who was reported as a dropout in a previous year is not counted again as a dropout. Schools with grade seven or higher who do not grant diplomas are responsible for ensuring that students completing their programs enroll in a diploma-granting school to complete their secondary education. They must report students who complete their program and who do not enroll in and attend a diploma-granting secondary school as dropouts. These students are reported in the school year in which they fail to enroll and to attend the diploma-granting program. Also see “Change in definition of Graduation-Rate Cohort in 2008” described in Indicator #1. NYS has adjusted its baseline data and targets for this indicator based on data for the 2000 and 2001 total cohorts for the same reasons as described in Indicator #1. See Indicator #1 for definition of the total cohort. |
NYS Education Law section 3202 does not permit any student over the compulsory attendance age in his or her school district to be dropped from enrollment unless he or she has been absent 20 consecutive school days and the following procedure is complied with: The principal or superintendent must schedule and notify, in writing and at the last known address, both the student and the person in parental relationship to the student of an informal conference. At the conference the principal or superintendent must determine both the reasons for the student’s absence and whether reasonable changes in the student’s educational program would encourage and facilitate his or her re-entry or continuance of study. The student and the person in parental relationship must be informed orally and in writing of the student’s right to re-enroll at any time in the public school maintained in the school district where he or she resides. If the student and the person in parental relationship fail, after reasonable notice, to attend the informal conference, the student may be dropped from enrollment provided that he or she and the person in parental relationship are notified in writing of the right to re-enter at any time. No student may be dropped from enrollment in NYS prior to the end of the school year in which the student turns age 16.
The drop-out rate of students with disabilities in the 2001 total cohort as of June 30, 2004 was 18.9 percent. The drop-out rate for all students in the same cohort was 10.9 percent.
As the data provided in the table below indicate, the drop-out rate of students with disabilities in the 2001 total cohort (18.9 percent) was higher than the drop-out rate of the 2000 total cohort of students with disabilities (13.0 percent). Also, the drop-out rate of students with disabilities in the 2001 total cohort (18.9 percent) is 8 percentage points or 73 percent higher than the drop-out rate for all students (10.9 percent).
Total Cohort, As of June 30, Four Years Later
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Cohort Year |
All Students |
Students with Disabilities |
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# in Cohort |
Drop Out Rate |
# in Cohort |
Drop-Out Rate |
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2000 |
199,312 |
11.9% |
21,262 |
13.0% |
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2001 |
214,494 |
10.9% |
26,702 |
18.9% |
We have adjusted our baseline data and targets for this indicator based on data for the 2000 and 2001 total cohorts. Once the definition of the graduation-rate cohort is revised to be similar to the definition of the total cohort, we will use the new graduation-rate cohort as the basis for calculating the State’s and school district’s drop-out rates.
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FFY |
Measurable and Rigorous Target |
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2005 2005-06 (2002 total cohort) |
No more than 19 percent of students with disabilities will drop out of school. |
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2006 2006-07 (2003 total cohort) |
No more than 19 percent of students with disabilities will drop out of school. |
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2007 2007-08 (2004 total cohort) |
No more than 19 percent of students with disabilities will drop out of school. |
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2008 2008-09 (2005 total cohort) |
No more than 18 percent of students with disabilities will drop out of school. |
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2009 2009-10 (2006 total cohort) |
No more than 16 percent of students with disabilities will drop out of school. |
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2010 2010-11 (2007 total cohort) |
No more than 15 percent of students with disabilities will drop out of school. |
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Activity |
Timeline |
Resources |
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Beginning in 2006-07: School districts with drop-out rates for students with disabilities of at least 20 percent but less than 33 percent were identified as districts “in need of assistance.” School districts with drop-out rates of 33 percent or higher were identified as “districts in need of intervention.” Each school district, as a result of this designation, was required to engage in one or more of the following activities to improve its graduation rates:
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2006-11 |
SEQA Regional Offices 42 SETRC TCSs For schools also identified under NCLB: 7 RSSC - RSSC includes a full-time special education specialist on staff funded by IDEA discretionary funds |
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Implement Model Transition Programs in 60 school districts throughout the State |
2007-11 |
Competitive contracts with 60 school districts in collaboration with VESID Vocational Rehabilitation District Offices |
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Expand opportunities for CTE for students with disabilities.
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2005-11
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“High Schools that Work” implemented in four school districts and seven BOCES to integrate academic and technical skills. A CTERC has been established at the Questar III BOCES to increase graduation rates and to support low performing schools. CTERC will provide training and technical assistance in CTE and academic integration.
See
http://www.emsc.nysed.gov/workforce/
TCSs |
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Use products from the National Dropout Prevention Center for Students with Disabilities and disseminate to school districts. |
2007-11 |
National Dropout Prevention Center for Students with Disabilities http://www.dropoutprevention.org/ |