ICASE
Executive Committee Meeting
November 16, 2006 – DOE (Riley Room)
(These minutes are considered a draft until approved at the
next scheduled meeting.)
MEMBERS PRESENT:
Tom Adams (President), Pam Wright (President-elect), Cindy
Pittman (Past-President)Vendetta Gutshall (Treasurer), Gary
Collings (Secretary), Larry Bass (SW), Jim Murray (C),
Cheryl Corning (SE), Patti Kem (NC), Lynn Gosser (E), Pat
Pierce (NW), Mary Beth Hamilton (NE).
OTHERS PRESENT:
Bob Marra, George Batsche
I. Approvals
A. Minutes – Tom Adams called the meeting to
order and requested a motion to approve the October 19, 2006
minutes. MOTION: Lynn Gosser moved for approval. After a
second by Pat Pierce, the motion was approved.
Treasurer’s Report and Claim Docket
– Vendetta Gutshall distributed handouts for the November
Financial Report. The October 2006 Docket was presented in
the amount of $16,634.43. MOTION: Mary Beth Hamilton
moved to approve the Docket as presented. After a second by
Pat Pierce, the motion was approved. The financial
report showed $29,351.92 of the $167,650 budget had been
expended to date.
C. Membership Committee – Since Vendetta Gutshall
had to leave the meeting, the price quotes from Brady
Smekens for the Members Only application and two additional
options were taken under advisement for discussion next
month.
D. Roundtable Topical Proposals – None
presented. Larry Bass reported on Southwest’s successful
topical and recommended the IU IIDC
Collaboration/Co-teaching seminar (Carrie Chapman/Kate
Hart).
E. Strategic Plan – Tom Adams commented on
his intent to convene the overseers for a progress report
session. Members discussed potential members of a fiscal
management task force to be invited by Tom with Cindy
Pittman as the overseer.
II. Reports:
2006-2007
A. Conferences/Activities
1. Fall Conference 2006: Tom Adams
distributed the evaluation summary and an estimated revenue
report of approximately $28,000.
2. Spring Conference 2007: February 15 – 16,
2007 – Pam Wright noted the briefing session with the
lobbyist is planned for Wednesday evening after the Past
President’s dinner and prior to the social. She confirmed
that the Legislative Breakfast is to be held in the State
House prior to the keynote speaker (Wasner) on Thursday
morning at the Radisson. Another keynote speaker (Kukic)
asked to be moved to Friday AM due to his schedule
conflict. Pam commented on the need to realign both the
Division report and Business meeting to Thursday. When the
conference closes at noon on Friday, members of the
executive committee have been invited to join members of the
ISEAS University Forum for a dialogue on personnel shortages
and training issues.
3. Fall Conference 2007: September 26-28, 2007
– The location at French Lick Resort is still pending.
4. CEC/CASE Board Update – Vendetta Gutshall,
Tom Adams, Pam Wright, and Gary Collings were present at the
CASE Board of Directors meeting. They also attended the
CASE Institute along with Connie DeLong (East Allen). Due
to the lack of time, a report from attendees was postponed
until the next meeting.
Tom Adams noted that CASE Winter Board of Directors meeting
will be held on January 17-19, 2007 with CASE paying for the
expenses of Vendetta Gutshall as the ICASE designee and the
ICASE paying expenses for both the President and
President-elect.
In regard to the April 2007 CEC/CASE Convention at
Louisville, members discussed the intent for all to attend
the convention. Tom commented that he had also offered to
match a $1,000 donation with Kentucky CASE to pay for a band
as the entertainment at the CASE social event at the Derby
Museum. MOTION: Cindy Pittman moved that ICASE pay
$1,000 toward the band as entertainment during the CASE
social event at the CEC Convention in April 2007 as well as
the registration fee for all 12 of the ICASE board members.
After a second by Pam Wright, the motion was approved.
Members are to submit their respective CEC membership
numbers to Vendetta who will process a bulk registration
form for all board members.
B. Standing Committee Reports
1.
Porter Scholarship
– The two recipients will be invited by Cheryl Corning to
the Spring Conference to receive their respective plaques
and be recognized by the membership.
2. Recognition/Awards – Pam Wright reported on
the June 2007 retirement of Leonard Burrello, who is a
member and former chair of the Department of Education
Administration at Indiana University. He is a nationally
recognized trainer and leader in special education
administration and former chair of the CEC/CASE Research
Committee. MOTION: Pam Wright moved to acknowledge
Leonard Burrello with the ICASE Career Achievement Award.
After a second by Cheryl Corning, the motion was approved.
3. Past-Presidents’ Council – Cindy Pittman
will invite past presidents and host this dinner meeting on
the evening of February 14, 2007.
4. Nominations – Pam Wright reminded members
to solicit names from their respective round tables to be
considered for President-elect (2007-08) position.
5. Roundtable Activities – Tom Adams asked to
suspend these reports until the next meeting due to the lack
of time.
C. Report: Rule 26 Task Force – Pat Pierce
has compiled the feedback on Learning Disabilities and
Communication Disorders and forwarded it to the Division of
Exceptional Learners.
D. Report: Division of Exceptional Learners –
Members had an opportunity for a dialogue session with
George Batsche, professor and co-director of the Institute
for School Reform in the School Psychology Program at the
University of South Florida (Tampa). Bob Marra commented
about the need to formulate a strategic plan for
Response-to-Intervention (RtI) with consensus from
stakeholders. He wondered about the impact of placing
assessment (RtI) language in the general education
regulations with a cross reference to Article 7. Bob
encouraged directors to begin considering options for using
the 15% of new federal funds to spearhead RtI.
Bob remarked that the DOE is a member of the Balanced Score
Card initiative sponsored by the Wallace Foundation. The
Division of Exceptional Learners (DEL) is pilot testing the
department’s transition from data silos to a data warehouse
platform using student test numbers (STN) and future school
personnel numbers (SPN). The DOE is also restructuring and
Bob is assigned the merger of all the technical assistance
plans into a single plan for school buildings. The single
building plans would be monitored through accreditation and
tied to academic standards. The State Board of Education is
moving away from ISTEP/GQE to a program monitoring model for
the future.
George Batsche reminded members to recognize the challenges
that general education is facing, e.g., more diversity,
differential outcomes, etc. The suggestion of just working
harder will not level the playing field for students. If
special education can provide more solutions to the multiple
problems that face general education, such action will help
to bridge the gap. For example, special education
administrators may provide resources and technical
assistance for Tier 1 and Tier 2 student decisions to be
guided by principals but would be expected to provide
specialists for interventions at Tier 3.
George observed that if building faculty is not keeping
data, the outcome is referrals, which are a general
education strategy. How does building faculty know where to
start if they have no idea how many students are not making
benchmarks? A State’s influence is also limited by lack of
data and lack of alignment of the data; benchmarks must be
tied to standards and outcomes. The score should reflect
the benchmarks achieved or not achieved. In fact, the
scores should be predictable if the school faculty is doing
continuous monitoring.
George remarked that the biggest barrier to RtI is data and
a way to manage it. He proposed as a starting point that we
in Indiana begin with data sources and technology to manage
the data and postpone the pedagogy discussion until we have
a data system in place. We must first get a handle on the
current data at the building and state levels for
decision-making purposes and find the students at risk as
early as possible. Once, however, we have the student data,
we can begin to make pedagogical decisions.
George proposed that special education districts seek to
support tasks with common elements across its member
districts such as the data system. Pedagogy and curriculum
are not tasks common to all corporations and should be
avoided at the district level. He is a member of a national
work group with Cisco Systems through a “think tank” grant
from NCLD to plan software for an open architecture program
(blueprint) for data entry at the building level for
child-based decision-making. If not already in place,
George proposed that Indiana consider a similar work group
to identify an entity to create the structure for school
corporations to have a single data base management system.
He noted the currency of the future will be “growth rates”
not single outcomes.
In reply to a question about the high school setting, George
recommended that every three weeks common assessments could
be tied to syllabus benchmarks for the subject area. With
an open architecture data management program, teachers can
readily input data for gap analysis (rankings, benchmarks,
student descriptors, etc.). Data is critical for building
consensus as well as for strategically targeting academic
instruction.
In reply to a question about professional development,
George commented that many States are going to web-based
modules RtI instruction. He considers the RtI modules from
the IRIS Center (Peabody) as solid information for basic
awareness. [NOTE: These modules are available via a link
from the IDEAL project website <http://ideal.sf.edu>.] He
suggested tying in competency measures on the six basic
instructional areas of RTI, five steps to problem
identification, etc. with Continuing Renewal Units (CRUs).
What we are seeking is whether the module reader can
demonstrate decisions based on data that are both correct
and consistent with standard and customary decisions. In
other words, do the readers make consistent decisions from a
given data set.
George encouraged members to spread CRUs across distributive
requirements such as data decisions, ethics, issues and
trends, etc. in contrast to an open-end requirement, for
example, of 90 points from any areas of the candidates
choosing. He reminded members that teachers must have the
support to develop the skills that they do not have so their
training must be based on data regarding their level of
awareness, knowledge, and skills.
George reminded members about the December 6 (1:00 PM)
NASDSE live satellite webinar titled RtI; Blueprints for
Implementation at the State, District, and Local. Sharon
Knoth reported that the IEP@BSU has paid the statewide
licensing fee ($4500) for all Indiana sites to access the
December 6, March 14 (Reading and Math Strategies), and the
May 9, 2007 (School-based Mental Health and Positive
Behavioral Interventions) web broadcasts. Contact Heather
Neiheisel Neiheisel@bsu.edu to register to receive materials
prior to the broadcast. [NOTE: The power point
presentation and related documents from George Batsche’s
presentation at the RtI seminar of the ISEAS Academy can be
viewed on the ISEAS web site at <http://www.indstate.edu/soe/iseas/>.]
E. Report: Public Policy and Legislative Committee –
Tom Adams presented the request for approval of
projected expenses for the Legislative Breakfast on February
to include the meal, note pads, platform booklets, etc.
MOTION: Patti Kem moved to approve expenses related to the
Legislative Breakfast up to $6,000. After a second by Pat
Pierce, the motion was approved. Tom remarked that the
committee continues its work on a long range plan and
drafting of legislation.
F. Liaisons – Pat Pierce, as liaison to the
IAPSS, reported the following items were discussed at the
November 6 meeting of its Special Education Advisory
Committee: CEEP Cooperative Study, ISTAR (2%), English
Language Learners, Emergency Permits, RtI Best Practices,
NIMAS, and Interim Alternative Education Setting (IAES).
Tom Adams distributed a memo from the COVOH liaison, Steve
Wornhoff, noting the inactive status (not dissolution) of
COVOH and his recommendation to discontinue the liaison
assignment at this time. Members accepted the
recommendation by consensus.
III. NEXT MEETING:
December 13, 2006 (8:30 AM) – DOE Division of Exceptional
Learners