Tuesday, July 30, 2019

Contents

New Items

ESL Reminders and Announcements – for All Administrators
Print Shop Ordering of Standard Response Protocol Extended (SRP-X) Posters – for All Administrators
SIT Coordinators – for All Principals

Previous Items

The Standard Response Protocol K-12 Extended

New Items

ESL Reminders and Announcements

from Kristen Scott
This is just a friendly reminder that the quiz all building administrators should complete is due July 30. As of today, only 14 have submitted. Principals, please follow up with your assistant principals as well to ensure all have completed; the link was sent to you through an email on July 16th. I will be following up individually with those who need feedback.

We are hoping to get the zip drive containing all ESL September 20th tasks to you by the middle of this week. We are just waiting on some information pertaining to schedules.

All ESL staff, teachers and aides, will be at Northwest Middle on Friday, August 2nd for our ESL Professional Learning. Middle and high school principals, if you have sheltered teachers, they will report to their content session instead of ESL. In our PL one announcement will be made pertaining to each building creating goals for performance on the 2020 KELPA assessment. Your staff will be informed that they are to work with you to create and monitor these goals.

As a reminder, I am here to support each and everyone of you in all things related to ESL and Migrant. Please do not hesitate to reach out to me if you have any questions or concerns.

Print Shop Ordering of Standard Response Protocol Extended (SRP-X) Posters

from Henry Horn
When ordering these posters from the print shop the following shall be followed:

Know the number of Classrooms and other areas where these posters are needed for your buildings so to place order with the Print Shop accurately.
No lamination???see preferred method below. Most of our buildings are doing this now (uniformity is key).
Standard Response Protocol Extended (SRP-X) 8.5???X11??? Card Stock for Classrooms/Offices.
Standard Response Protocol Extended (SRP-X) 11???X17??? Card Stock for Other areas with lager volume of individuals.

Clear Acrylic sign holders are the preferred professional image in our buildings. These items are available for purchased via our Staples contract:

Azar Sign Holder 8.5???X11???, Clear Acrylic (Staples #083649 / MFR Item #122021)
Azar Sign Holder 11???X17″, Clear Acrylic (Staples #082768 / MFR Item #122037)
Staples Sample PDF
SRP K-12 Poster PDF
SRP K-12 11″ x 17″ Poster PDF

SIT Coordinators

from Sean DeMaree
The SIT process is part of our tiered approach for ensuring that all students have access to the supports they need to meet our high expectations. As teachers track and monitor student progress, they are able to identify students who may need support beyond the classroom, and this is where the SIT process becomes needed. A SIT Coordinator is the leader for each school???s SIT process, and will be the main contact for training, data collection and support to the classroom teachers. For the 2019-2020 school year, the SIT Coordinator will continue to be an instructional leader from the classroom who has a strong grasp on interventions and student support. Each school will be allotted the same number of Coordinators as they had in the 2018-2019 school year. For questions, support or planning, contact Sean DeMaree, sean.demaree@kckps.org.

Please utilize this link to submit your SIT Coordinator Names, no later than August 30, 2019.

 

Previous Items

The Standard Response Protocol K-12 Extended

from Henry Horn
School Safety
A critical ingredient in the safe school recipe is the uniform classroom response to any incident. Weather events, fires, accidents, intruders and other threats to student safety are scenarios that are planned and trained for by school and district administration and staff.

SRP Is Action Based
The Standard Response Protocol (SRP) is based not on individual scenarios but on the response to any given situation. Like the Incident Command System (ICS), SRP demands a specific vocabulary but also allows for great flexibility.

Benefits
The benefits of SRP become quickly apparent. By standardizing the vocabulary, all stakeholders can understand the response and status of the event. For students, this provides continuity of expectations and actions throughout their educational career. For teachers, this becomes a simpler process to train and drill. For first responders, the common vocabulary and protocols establish a greater predictability that persists through the duration of an incident. Parents can easily understand the practices and can reinforce the protocol. Additionally, this protocol enables rapid response determination when an unforeseen event occurs.

Lockout Vs. Lockdown
The differentiation between Lockout and Lockdown is a critical element in SRP. A Lockout recovers all students from outside the building, secures the building perimeter and locks all outside doors. This would be implemented when there is a threat or hazard outside of the building. Criminal activity, dangerous events in the community, or even a vicious dog on the playground would be examples of a Lockout response. While the Lockout response encourages greater staff situational awareness, it allows for educational practices to continue with little classroom interruption or distraction.

Lockdown is a classroom-based protocol that requires locking the classroom door, turning off the lights and placing students out of sight of any corridor windows. Student action during Lockdown is to remain quiet. It does not mandate locking outside doors. There are several reasons for not locking perimeter doors during a Lockdown. Risk is increased to students or staff in exposed areas attempting to lock outside doors. Locking outside doors inhibits entry of first responders and increases risk as responders attempt to breach doors.

There may be situations where both Lockdown and Lockout need to be performed, but in this case they are identified individually. “Lockout! Secure the Perimeter. Lockdown! Locks, Lights, out of Sight.” would be announced on public address. We are in “Lockdown and Lockout” would be conveyed to emergency services or 911.

Administrators and Principals – All Training Materials Are Available At The This Link For You and Your Staff.

Forward Any Questions to My Email.