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www.nchealthyschools.org Health is Academic! Collaborative Conference on Student Achievement Conference April 19, 2011

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Four-Year Cohort Graduation Rates by Student Subgroup (DPI 2010) All Students74.2% Asian85.2 % White79.6 % Female78.9% Multi-Racial71.2 % Male69.6% American Indian67.9% Black66.9 % Economically Disadvantaged66.3% Hispanic61.4 % Students with Disabilities57.5% Limited English Proficient48.3% *U.S. Department of Education, National Center for Education Statistics, Common Core of Data (CCD), “Local Education Agency Universe Dropout and Completion Data File: School Year 2000–01 +$10K per Year = +$99.2 Million per Year +$10K per Year =$40.7 Million per Year Up from 63% ’01* =12,599 more grads Up from 55% ’01* =4,065 more grads

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Page 1: Www.nchealthyschools.org Health is Academic! Collaborative Conference on Student Achievement Conference April 19, 2011

www.nchealthyschools.org

Health is Academic!

Collaborative Conference on Student Achievement Conference

April 19, 2011

Page 2: Www.nchealthyschools.org Health is Academic! Collaborative Conference on Student Achievement Conference April 19, 2011

www.nchealthyschools.org

21st Century Coordinated School Health

EducationHealth

Wealth

Eliminate Health Disparities& Achievement Disparities

Page 3: Www.nchealthyschools.org Health is Academic! Collaborative Conference on Student Achievement Conference April 19, 2011

www.nchealthyschools.org

2010 Four-Year Cohort Graduation Rates by Student Subgroup (DPI 2010)

All Students 74.2%Asian 85.2 %White 79.6 %Female 78.9%Multi-Racial 71.2 %Male 69.6%American Indian 67.9%Black 66.9 %Economically Disadvantaged 66.3%Hispanic 61.4 %Students with Disabilities 57.5%Limited English Proficient 48.3%

*U.S. Department of Education, National Center for Education Statistics, Common Core of Data (CCD), “Local Education Agency Universe Dropout and Completion Data File: School Year 2000–01

12,599 @ +$10K per Year= +$99.2 Million per Year

4,065 @ +$10K per Year=$40.7 Million per Year

Up from 63% ’01*=12,599 more grads

Up from 55% ’01*=4,065 more grads

http://ayp.ncpublicschools.org

Page 4: Www.nchealthyschools.org Health is Academic! Collaborative Conference on Student Achievement Conference April 19, 2011

www.nchealthyschools.org

Addressing Teen Pregnancy• Nationally 31-33% of pregnant teens

graduate on time.• NC Adolescent Parenting Program in ’06-’07

enrolled 785 teens from 31 Counties.• Only 35 (4%) of them dropped out of school. Expected Dropouts = 526 Actual Dropouts = 35 Additional graduates 491

491 X $10K = $4.9M

http://tppi.its.state.nc.us/info/tppi.htm

Page 5: Www.nchealthyschools.org Health is Academic! Collaborative Conference on Student Achievement Conference April 19, 2011

www.nchealthyschools.org

Educationally Relevant Health Disparities

• Vision• Asthma• Teen Pregnancy • Aggression and

Violence• Physical Activity • Breakfast• Inattention and

Hyperactivity

Page 6: Www.nchealthyschools.org Health is Academic! Collaborative Conference on Student Achievement Conference April 19, 2011

www.nchealthyschools.org

Health Risk Behaviors & Academic Grades NC High Schools 2007 YRBS

25

13

37

28

13

36

18

52

36

19

42

26

31

47

68

4844

61

50

70

0

20

40

60

80

Weapon carried inpast 30 days

Cigarette use(current)

Alcohol use (current) Ever had sex Watched TV morethan 3 hrs/day

% o

f stu

dent

s

Mostly A'sMostly B'sMostly C'sMostly D/F's

Page 7: Www.nchealthyschools.org Health is Academic! Collaborative Conference on Student Achievement Conference April 19, 2011

www.nchealthyschools.org

Health Risk Behaviors & Academic Grades NC Middle Schools 2007 YRBS

22

37

29

1114

8

23

45

17 1818

38

28

4140

2527

18

30

5248

3233

23

0

20

40

60

80

Ever carried aweapon

Cigarette use(current)

Alcohol use(current)

Ever Fasted tocontrol weight

Watched TV morethan 3 hrs/day

Other screen timemore than 2

hrs/day

% o

f stu

dent

s

Mostly A'sMostly B'sMostly C'sMostly D/F's

Page 8: Www.nchealthyschools.org Health is Academic! Collaborative Conference on Student Achievement Conference April 19, 2011

www.nchealthyschools.org

School Success and Healthy Weight- NC High School YRBS 2007

14

1011.3

18

21

14.9

25

22.5

0

10

20

30

Overweight* Obese**

% o

f stu

dent

s

Mostly A'sMostly B'sMostly C'sMostly D/F's

BMI>85th Percentile <95th >=95th Percentile

Page 9: Www.nchealthyschools.org Health is Academic! Collaborative Conference on Student Achievement Conference April 19, 2011

www.nchealthyschools.org

2009 DPI Interns’ Study

Exploring the Relationship between Healthful Living and Graduation Rates, July 2009http://www.ncpublicschools.org/docs/intern-research/reports/healthstudy.pdf

• Finding– Significant inverse relationship between a

student’s BMI and performance on Algebra I End-of-Course exam.

Page 10: Www.nchealthyschools.org Health is Academic! Collaborative Conference on Student Achievement Conference April 19, 2011

www.nchealthyschools.org

8 Components

of a Coordinated

School Health Approach

Family &CommunityInvolvement

PhysicalEducation &

PhysicalActivity

Nutrition Services

Counseling, Psychological & Social Services

ComprehensiveSchoolHealth

Education

HealthySchool

Environment

School-site Health

Promotion forStaff

School Health

Services

Page 11: Www.nchealthyschools.org Health is Academic! Collaborative Conference on Student Achievement Conference April 19, 2011

www.nchealthyschools.org

School Health Profiles Survey• Middle & High Schools 2002-2010• Elementary Schools beginning

2012• Principals and Lead Health

Education Teachers• Tracks Policies, Programs and

Practices in the 8 Component Areas of Coordinated School Health

Page 12: Www.nchealthyschools.org Health is Academic! Collaborative Conference on Student Achievement Conference April 19, 2011

www.nchealthyschools.org

School Level Impact Measures (SLIMs)• Common national measures of

school health progress in each of 8 components.

• 46 measures derived from School Health Profiles Survey.

• 10 NC Priority SLIMs.

Page 13: Www.nchealthyschools.org Health is Academic! Collaborative Conference on Student Achievement Conference April 19, 2011

www.nchealthyschools.org

Making A Difference inYour Schools

Page 14: Www.nchealthyschools.org Health is Academic! Collaborative Conference on Student Achievement Conference April 19, 2011

www.nchealthyschools.org

NC Healthy SchoolsPartnership Priorities

• Positive trends in Youth Risk Factor Behavior Measures

• Positive trends in School Level Impact Measures

• Increase public schools’ Adequate Yearly Progress (AYP) Measures–Includes 4Yr Graduation Rate

Page 15: Www.nchealthyschools.org Health is Academic! Collaborative Conference on Student Achievement Conference April 19, 2011

www.nchealthyschools.org

21st Century Coordinated School Health

Education

Health WealthEliminate Health Disparitiesand Achievement Disparities

Page 16: Www.nchealthyschools.org Health is Academic! Collaborative Conference on Student Achievement Conference April 19, 2011

www.nchealthyschools.org

Coordinated Approach To Quality School Health

Injury & Violence

Nutrition

Physical Act

Sexual Risk

Tobacco Use

Alcohol/DrugInjury & Violence

Hth & Human Services

Public Instruction

Transition to HighQuality

Independent LifeIn A

Diverse Global

Economy

21st CenturySchools:

Academic Achievemen

t&

Optimal Health

Nutrition

Mental Hlth

Environment

StaffWellness

Health SCOS*

Phys Ed SCOSPhys ActivityHealth Services

Family &Community

Cur

ricul

um, I

nstr

uctio

n, &

Sup

port

Se

rvic

esTe

n Es

sent

ial P

ublic

Hea

lth S

ervi

ces

Profiles/SLIMsSuccess Stories

YRBSSuccess Stories

Academic &Health Outcomes

Economic & SocialOutcomes