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SS 1110 MOD 5 ASSN 2

 

Overview:

For this assignment, you will prepare a creative deliverable that discusses political parties and what they do in American politics. You will be able to choose whichever format you wish for your deliverable.  Please follow the instructions below and be sure to follow AP

Instructions:

In Module 5, we learned about American political parties and what they do. Complete this assignment as follows:

  1. For this assignment, you will create a deliverable of your choice (written document, infographic, PowerPoint, video, etc.) which communicates the information below.
    • Discuss political parties and their role in American politics.
    • Explain the nature and effects of the two-party system in the U.S.

    SS 1100 MOD 5 ASSN 1

     

    Overview:

    For this assignment, you will wri a 2 pagr describing the main functions and history of media in American politics.  Please follow the instructions below and be sure to follow APA

    APA Resources can be found in the "Student Resources" button on our course home page, then click on Academic Support.

    Instructions:

    In Module 5 we learned about the main functions and history of media in American society and politics. Complete this assignment as follows:

    1. For this assignment, you will write a 2pag that communicates the information below.
      • Describe the history and function of the media in American society and politics.

      As a Psychiatric nurse

      Please share a recent workplace or patient encounter where you used (or did not use) integrity and professional accountability in nursing practice, what would you have done differently based on our study this week?

        HCP1

         Analyze the history, structure, and process of health-care-policy and politics in nursing and the health care delivery systems in the United States. 

         Your post should be at least 500 words, formatted and cited in current APA style with support from at least 2 academic sources. 

          EDA 608 Week 1 discussion

           

          Evaluating Teacher Evaluation

          After studying the article Evaluating Teacher Evaluation located on Module 1: Lecture Materials & Resources page, consider the following and answer the questions.

          According to these authors, value-added measures of student achievement are inadequate for evaluating teacher and school effectiveness, but systems of evaluation work well when they’re based on professional teaching standards, observations, and artifacts of practice and involve mentor teachers, teacher collaboration, and professional learning opportunities.

          Module 1: Lecture Materials & Resources

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          icon  Organizational Dimensions and Effective HR Planning

          Read and watch the lecture resources & materials below early in the week to help you respond to the discussion questions and to complete your assignment(s).

          Read

          · Rebore, R. W. (2015).  Human resources administration in education (10th ed.). Pearson.

          · Chapters 1 and 2

          · Evaluating teacher evaluation Download Evaluating teacher evaluation Darling-Hammond, L., Amrein-Beardsley, A., Haertel, E., & Rothstein, J. (2012). Evaluating teacher evaluation.  Phi Delta Kappan, 93(6), 8-15. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/003172171209300603

          · A smart ALEC threatens public education Download A smart ALEC threatens public education Underwood, J., & Mead, J. F. (2012). A smart ALEC threatens public education.  Phi Delta Kappan, 93(6), 51–55. https://doi.org/10.1177/003172171209300612

          Module 1 Discussion

            null

          icon  Evaluating Teacher Evaluation

          After studying the article  Evaluating Teacher Evaluation located on  Module 1: Lecture Materials & Resources  page, consider the following and answer the questions.

          According to these authors, value-added measures of student achievement are inadequate for evaluating teacher and school effectiveness, but systems of evaluation work well when they’re based on professional teaching standards, observations, and artifacts of practice and involve mentor teachers, teacher collaboration, and professional learning opportunities.

          Answer the following questions:

          1. Describe value-added models (VAMs) and discuss the costs and benefits of using them to measure teacher impact on student performance?

          2. What are some alternative approaches to using VAMs and how can they be effectively employed?

          3. How are teachers evaluated in your district (or a district you know well)? To what extent does the evaluation system in this district seem effective to you?

          4. What are the best indicators of teacher effectiveness in your experience? How can these indicators be measured?

          5. Other than teacher effectiveness, what influences student achievement? To what extent can these influences be accounted for so that teacher effectiveness is measurable?

          6. Why might teacher effectiveness differ from class to class as well as from year to year or from test to test?

          7. What kind of performance assessments could teachers use to document their effectiveness? How would these be “scored”?

          8. What might be the role of a coach or mentor in terms of a teacher evaluation system? What might be the role of professional development?

           

          Submission Instructions:

          · Your initial post should be at least 200 words, formatted and cited in current APA style, with support from at least 2 academic sources.  Your initial post is worth 8 points.

          · You should respond to at least two peers by extending, refuting/correcting, or adding additional nuance to their posts. Your reply posts are worth 2 points (1 point per response.) 

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          ,

          V93 N6 kappanmagazine.org 51 Thinkstock/Digital Vision

          A legislative contagion seemed to sweep across the Midwest during the early months of 2011. First, Wisconsin legislators wanted to strip public employees of the right to bargain. Then, Indiana legislators got into the act. Then, it was Ohio. In each case, Republican governors and Republican-controlled state legislatures had in-

          troduced substantially similar bills that sought sweeping changes to each state’s collective bargaining statutes and various school funding provisions.

          A smart ALEC threatens public education

          Coordinated efforts to introduce model legislation aimed at defunding and dismantling public schools is the signature work of this conservative organization.

          By Julie Underwood and Julie F. Mead

          JULIE UNDERWOOD ([email protected]) is professor and dean of the School of Education at the University of Wisconsin-Madison. She previously served as general counsel of the National School Boards Association. JULIE F. MEAD is pro- fessor and chair of the Department of Educational Leadership and Policy Analysis at the University of Wisconsin-Madison. The views expressed here are those of the authors and do not necessarily refl ect those of the University of Wisconsin.

          Comments? Like Kappan at www. facebook.com/pdkintl

          52 Kappan March 2012

          agree — granting considerable power to the corpo- rate side. Elected officials then take the model bills back to their states to introduce them as their own. Only legislators who are members may access the model legislation (http://www.alec.org/wp-content/ uploads/2011_legislative_brochure.pdf). It is a very efficient mechanism for corporations to exercise po- litical power — and they have.

          ALEC in Tennessee

          Recent legislation in Tennessee provides a vivid example. ALEC created and provided members its model Virtual Public Schools Act. Two large for-profit corporate providers of virtual education, Connections Academy and K-12 Inc., had heavy involvement with the model bill’s creation. Mickey Revenaugh, a lob- byist for Connections Academy, was the corporate chair of ALEC’s Education Task Force and Lisa Gil- lis, with K-12 Inc., chaired its special needs education subcommittee that created the bill. Tennessee’s State Rep. Harry Brooks and State Sen. Dolores Gresham, both ALEC Education Task Force members, intro- duced the bill to their respective houses nearly ver- batim, even using the same title. For example, the following passage forms the preamble of the adopted statute. Underlined portions were taken directly from ALEC’s model.

          WHEREAS, meeting the educational needs of children in our state’s schools is of the greatest importance to the future welfare of Tennessee; and

          WHEREAS, closing the achievement gap be- tween high-performing students, including the gap between minority and nonminority stu- dents and between economically disadvantaged students and their more advantaged peers, is a significant and present challenge; and

          WHEREAS, providing a broader range of edu- cational options to parents and utilizing exist- ing resources, along with technology, may help students in our state improve their academic achievement; and

          WHEREAS, many of our school districts cur- rently lack the capacity to provide other public school choices for students whose schools are low performing; now, therefore

          The purpose of this part is to provide an LEA with an alternative choice to offer additional educational resources in an effort to improve academic achievement. (Virtual Public Schools Act, 2011).

          The bill passed both houses on a party-line vote

          What was going on? How could elected officials in multiple states suddenly introduce essentially the same legislation?

          The answer: The American Legislative Exchange Council (ALEC). Its self-described legislative ap- proach to education reads:

          Across the country for the past two decades, education reform efforts have popped up in legislatures at dif- ferent times in different places. As a result, teachers’ unions have been playing something akin to “whack- a-mole” — you know the game — striking down as many education reform efforts as possible. Many times, the unions successfully “whack” the “mole,” i.e., the reform legislation. Sometimes, however, they miss. If all the moles pop up at once, there is no way the person with the mallet can get them all. Introduce comprehensive reform packages. (Ladner, LeFevre, & Lips, 2010, p. 108)

          ALEC’s own “whack-a-mole” strategy also reveals the group’s ultimate goal. Every gardener who has ever had to deal with a mole knows that the animals undermine and ultimately destroy a garden. ALEC’s positions on various education issues make it clear that the organization seeks to undermine public edu- cation by systematically defunding and ultimately destroying public education as we know it.

          What is ALEC?

          Technically, ALEC (www.alec.org) is a nonprofit organization based in Washington, D.C. It describes itself as a nonpartisan membership organization for those who share a common belief in “limited govern- ment, free markets, federalism, and individual lib- erty” (www.alec.org/about-alec). More than 2,000 state lawmakers pay ALEC $100 for a two-year membership. While listed as nonpartisan, ALEC’s members definitely skew to the conservative end of the political spectrum. For example, of the 114 listed members of the group’s Education Task Force, 108 are Republicans, and only six are Democrats.

          Corporations, foundations, and “think tanks” can join ALEC, too. They pay up to $25,000 in yearly dues and can spend more to sponsor the council’s meetings. Corporate members can also donate to each state’s scholarship fund, which reimburses leg- islators who travel to meetings. The scholarships can exceed the amount of a legislator’s dues. Corporate members also can pay from $3,000 to $10,000 for a seat on a task force.

          ALEC operates through nine task forces, each cochaired by a corporate member and a legislative member. Task forces are divided by subject and bring together conservative policy makers with corporate leaders to develop model legislation. In order for a proposal to become model legislation, both the public and private sides of the committee must

          V93 N6 kappanmagazine.org 53

          LeFevre, & Lips, 2010, p. 82) to be carried out through model legislation such as Alternative Certification Act, Great Teachers and Lead- ers Act, National Teacher Certification Fair- ness Act, Public School Union Release Time Act, School Collective Bargaining Agreement Sunshine Act, and Teacher Choice Compensa- tion Act. There’s also a set of proposals (Pub- lic School Financial Transparency Act; School Board Freedom to Contract Act) that encour- age school districts to outsource their auxiliary services.

          Privatize education through vouchers, char- ters, and tax incentives (Ladner, LeFevre, & Lips, 2010, p. 87) to be carried out through model legislation such as Foster Child Scholarship Program Act, Great Schools Tax Credit, Mili- tary Family Scholarship Program Act, Parental Choice Scholarship Accountability Act, Paren- tal Choice Scholarship Program Act (means- tested eligibility), Parental Choice Scholarship Program Act (universal eligibility), Parental Choice Scholarship Program Act (universal eligibility, means-tested scholarship amount), Parental Choice Scholarship Tax Credit Ac- countability Act, Education Enterprise Zone Act, Smart Start Scholarship Program, Special Needs Scholarship Program Act, Family Educa- tion Savings Account Act, Parental Rights Act, Resolution Supporting Private Scholarship Tax Credits, Autism Scholarship Program Act, and Family Education Tax Credit Program Act.

          Increase student testing and reporting (Lad- ner, LeFevre, & Lips, 2010, p. 93) to be carried out through model legislation such as Resolu- tion Supporting the Principles of No Child Left Behind Act, Student Right to Learn Act, Educa- tion Accountability Act, Longitudinal Student Growth Act, One to One Reading Improvement Act, and Resolution on Nonverified Science Curriculum Funding.

          Reduce the influence of or eliminate local school districts and school boards (Ladner, LeFevre, & Lips, 2010, p. 96) to be carried out through model legislation such as Charter Schools Act, Innovation Schools and School Districts Act, Open Enrollment Act, Virtual Public Schools Act, and Next Generation Char- ter Schools Act.

          ALEC’s special interest in privatization

          While ALEC’s forays into education policy are broad, privatization of public education has been a long-standing ALEC objective. As early as 1985,

          on June 16, 2011. Shortly thereafter, K-12 Inc. — one of the creators of the model legislation — won a no-bid contract from Union County School District to create the Tennessee Virtual Academy and will re- ceive about $5,300 per student from the state for the 2011-12 school year (Humphrey, 2011). Connec- tions Academy does not yet offer a virtual school in Tennessee, but its web site reports that it “is actively working with parent groups, education officials, and others to launch a school in this state.”

          The Chattanooga Times Free Press (Sept. 2, 2011) reported that about 2,000 students applied for en- rollment in the Tennessee Virtual Academy for fall 2011. Recent reports raise concerns that the pro- gram’s popularity with home schoolers may “drain taxpayer funds” while enriching the corporation ac- tively and aggressively recruiting students to enroll (Locker, 2011). Locker also reports that “K-12 Inc. compensated its CEO more than $2.6 million last year, its chief financial officer more than $1.7 million, and other top executives several hundred thousand dollars each, according to its latest annual report to shareholders.”

          ALEC on education

          ALEC’s success in Tennessee is by no means its only incursion into state education policy. ALEC’s interest in education is ambitious and multifaceted, and includes promoting dozens of model acts to its legislative members (Ladner, LeFevre, & Lips, 2010). Proposed bills seek to influence teacher cer- tification, teacher evaluation, collective bargaining, curriculum, funding, special education, student as- sessment, and numerous other education and edu- cation-related issues. Common throughout the bills are proposals to decrease local control of schools by democratically elected school boards while increas- ing access to all facets of education by private enti- ties and corporations. ALEC’s outlined agenda is to:

          Introduce market factors into schools, par- ticularly the teaching profession (Ladner,

          Common throughout the bills are proposals

          to decrease local control of schools by

          democratically elected school boards while

          increasing access to all facets of education

          to private entities and corporations.

          54 Kappan March 2012

          1990. Although the Milwaukee voucher program had the backing of leaders from other philosophic camps, including Howard Fuller, a former superin- tendent of Milwaukee Public Schools and current board member of Black Alliance for Educational Op- tions, the legislation was modeled after the rubric ALEC provided in its 1985 Education Source Book. ALEC’s hand in this program continues. In 2011, one of the ultimately defeated amendments to the Milwaukee program proposed removing all income requirements for participating students, a proposal laid out in ALEC’s Parental Choice Scholarship Pro- gram Act (universal eligibility) and a step toward a full-scale state voucher program.

          In fact, to help states advance school choice without running afoul of state constitutional lim- itations, ALEC published School Choice and State Constitutions (Komer & Neily, 2007) to provide a state-by-state analysis and promote programs tai- lored to foster privatization. Since then, a number of states have adopted the ALEC recommenda- tions. For example:

          Arizona: Vouchers for foster children, special ed- ucation vouchers, and tax credits;

          Indiana: Means-tested vouchers, special education vouchers, tax deductions for private school tuition and home-schooling expenses, and tax credits;

          Georgia: Special education vouchers and the newer ALEC proposal — tax incentives for contributions to scholarship-granting organizations;

          ALEC’s motivation for privatization was made clear (Barrett, 1985).

          As schools became larger and society more mobile, teachers and superintendents grew further removed from parents and, all too frequently, from the students themselves. Policies dictated from state capitals and Washington, D.C., placed burdens on public schools to compensate for economic disadvantages in fam- ily backgrounds and overcome centuries-old preju- dices, to confer equality on youngsters with physical or mental handicaps, and to transmit our common culture while preserving each of its diverse elements. As a result, public schools were forced to meet all of the needs of all the people without pleasing anyone. (Barrett, 1985, p. 7)

          In response, ALEC offered model legislation to “foster educational freedom and quality” through privatization (Barrett, 1985, p. 8). Privatization takes multiple forms: vouchers, tax incentives for sending children to private schools, and charter schools oper- ated by for-profit entities.

          Today, ALEC calls this approach “choice” and renames vouchers “scholarships,” but its aim is clear: Defund and dismantle public schools. While many other right-wing organizations support this agenda, ALEC is the mechanism for implementing it through its many pieces of model legislation that propose legislative methods for defunding public schools, particularly low-income, urban schools.

          The motivation for dismantling the public edu- cation system — creating a system where schools do not provide for everyone — is ideological, and it is motivated by profit. The corporate members on ALEC’s education task force include represen- tatives from the Friedman Foundation, Goldwater Institute, Evergreen Education Group, Washington Policy Center, and corporations providing education services such as Sylvan Learning and K-12, Inc. All stand to benefit from public funding sent in their direction.

          The first large-scale voucher program, the Mil- waukee Parental Choice Program, was enacted in

          By elevating parental choice over all other

          values, the ALEC push for privatization

          supports schools that can be segregated by

          academic ability and disability, ethnicity,

          economics, language, and culture.

          “Good night, dear. Text me if you need anything.”

          V93 N6 kappanmagazine.org 55

          Ultimately, however, the most important ques- tion we must all ask is whether ALEC’s influence builds or undermines democracy.

          Certain public institutions — courts, legislatures, fire protection, police departments, and yes, schools — must remain public to serve a democratic society. Through public education we have expressed and ex- panded our shared public values. As Benjamin Barber (1997) states, “Public schools are not merely schools for the public, but schools of publicness: institutions where we learn what it means to be a public and start down the road toward common national and civic identity” (p. 22).

          What happens to our democracy when we return to an educational system where access is defined by corporate interest and divided by class, language, ability, race, and religion? In a push to free-market education, who pays in the end? K

          References

          Barber, B. (1997). Public schooling: Education for democracy.

          In J.I. Goodlad & T.J. McMannon (Eds.), The public purpose

          of education and schooling (pp. 21-32). San Francisco, CA:

          Jossey-Bass.

          Barrett, N. (1985). Education source book: The state

          legislators’ guide for reform. Washington, DC: American

          Legislative Exchange Council.

          Humphrey, T. (2011, August 15). TN Virtual Academy builds

          enrollment controversy. Humphrey on the Hill. (Web log post).

          http://blogs.knoxnews.com/humphrey/2011/08/tn-virtual-

          academy-builds-enro.html

          Komer, R. & Neily, C. (2007). School choice and state

          constitutions: A guide to designing school choice programs.

          Washington, DC: Institute for Justice and American Legislative

          Exchange Council.

          Ladner, M., LeFevre, A., & Lips, D. (2010). Report card on

          American education: Ranking state K-12 performance,

          progress, and reform (16th ed.). Washington, DC: American

          Legislative Exchange Council.

          Locker, R. (2011, September 24). Virtual school in Tennessee

          may drain taxpayer funds. The Commercial Appeal.

          Virtual Public Schools Act, Tennessee House Bill No. 1030.

          (2011).

          Orfield, G. & Lee, C. (2007). Historic reversals, accelerating

          resegregation and the need for new integration strategies. Los

          Angeles, CA: Civil Rights Project.

          Rogers, J. & Dresser, L. (2011, July 12). ALEC exposed:

          Business domination Inc. The Nation.

          “Virtual school” hits enrollment hiccup. (2011, September 2).

          The Chattanooga Times Free Press.

          Louisiana: Tax deductions for private school tuition and home-schooling expenses, means- tested vouchers, special education vouchers; and

          Oklahoma: Tax credits, special education vouchers, and the newer ALEC proposal — the tax incentives for contributions to scholarship- granting organizations.

          By elevating parental choice over all other values, the ALEC push for privatization supports schools that can be segregated by academic ability and dis- ability, ethnicity, economics, language, and culture. They would be the natural outgrowth of parents’ un- fettered choices in a free-market system. Increased racial isolation would likely result, exacerbating cur- rent trends toward resegregation (Orfield & Lee, 2007). In addition, as seen in Tennessee, a fully re- alized ALEC agenda would undoubtedly result in more public education dollars bolstering the balance sheets of for-profit education vendors.

          Identifying ALEC’s influence

          Returning to the protests that rocked our state and others, it became clear that ALEC had sig- nificant influence on the contested provisions. As Rogers and Dresser (2011) document, proposals in Wisconsin and other states were drawn from sev- eral ALEC legislative models, including the “Right to Work Act [that] eliminates employee obligation to pay the costs of collective bargaining; the Public Employee Freedom Act [that] bars almost any action to induce it; the Public Employer Payroll Deduction Act [that] bars automatic dues collection; [and] the Voluntary Contribution Act [that] bars the use of dues for political activity.”

          Does ALEC’s influence build or undermine democracy?

          Whether you believe that ALEC has the issues right or wrong, the organization clearly wields con- siderable power and influence over state educa- tion policy. But perhaps by boldly sending so many “moles” to legislative surfaces all at once, ALEC has permitted those concerned with the influence of cor- porate interests on public education to awaken to its strategy. From now on, champions of public educa- tion have a new set of questions to ask whenever legislation is introduced:

          • Is the sponsor a member of ALEC? • Does the bill borrow from ALEC model

          legislation? • What corporations had a hand in drafting the

          legislation? • What interests would benefit or even profit

          from its passage?

          ,

          8 Kappan March 2012

          LINDA DARLING-HAMMOND ([email protected]) is the Charles Ducommun professor of teaching and teacher education, Stan- ford University, Stanford, Calif. AUDREY AMREIN-BEARDSLEY is an associate professor of education, Arizona State University, Phoenix, Ariz. EDWARD HAERTEL is the Jacks Family professor of education, Stanford University, Stanford, Calif. JESSE ROTH- STEIN is an associate professor of economics and public policy, University of California, Berkeley.

          P ractitioners, researchers, and policy makers agree that most current teacher evaluation sys- tems do little to help teachers improve or to support personnel decision making. There’s also a growing consensus that evidence of teacher contributions to student learning should be part of teacher evaluation systems, along with evidence about the quality of teacher practices. “Value-added models” (VAMs), designed to evaluate student test score gains from one year to

          the next, are often promoted as tools to accomplish this goal. Value-added models enable researchers to use statistical methods to measure changes in student scores

          over time while considering student characteristics and other factors often found to influence achievement. In large-scale studies, these methods have proved valuable for looking at factors affecting achievement and measuring the effects of programs or interventions.

          Using VAMs for individual teacher evaluation is based on the belief that measured achievement gains for a specific teacher’s students reflect that teacher’s “effectiveness.” This attribution, however, assumes that student learning is measured well by a given test, is influenced by the teacher alone, and is independent from the growth of classmates and other aspects of the classroom context. None of these assumptions is well supported by current evidence.

          Most importantly, research reveals that gains in student achievement are influenced by much more than any individual teacher. Others factors include:

          • School factors such as class sizes, curriculum materials, instructional time, availability of specialists and tutors, and resources for learning (books, computers, science labs, and more);

          • Home and community supports or challenges; • Individual student needs and abilities, health, and attendance; • Peer culture and achievement; • Prior teachers and schooling, as well as other current teachers; • Differential summer learning loss, which especially affects low-income children; and • The specific tests used, which emphasize some kinds of learning and not others and which rarely

          measure achievement that is well above or below grade level.

          However, value-added models don’t actually measure most of these factors. VAMs rely on statistical controls for past achievement to parse out the small portion of student gains that is due to other factors,

          Evaluating teacher evaluation Popular modes of evaluating teachers are fraught with inaccuracies and inconsistencies, but the field has identified better approaches.

          By Linda Darling-Hammond, Audrey Amrein-Beardsley, Edward Haertel, and Jesse Rothstein

          V93 N6 kappanmagazine.org 9 Thinkstock/iStockphoto

          Comments? Like Kappan at www. facebook.com/pdkintl

          of which the teacher is only one. As a consequence, researchers have documented a number of problems with VAM models as accurate measures of teachers’ effectiveness.

          1. Value-added models of teacher effectiveness are inconsistent.

          Researchers have found that teacher effectiveness ratings differ substantially from class to class and from year to year, as well as from one statistical model to the next, as Table 1 shows.

          A study examining data from fi ve school districts found, for example, that of teachers who scored in the bottom 20% of rankings in one year, only 20% to 30% had similar ratings the next year, while 25% to 45% of these teachers moved to the top part of the distribution, scoring well above average. (See Figure 1.) The same was true for those who scored at the top of the distribution in one year: A small minority stayed in the same rating band the follow- ing year, while most scores moved to other parts of the distribution.

          Teacher effectiveness also varies signifi cantly when different statistical methods are used (Briggs & Domingue, 2011; Newton et al., 2010; Rothstein, 2007). For example, when researchers used a differ- ent model to recalculate the value-added scores for teachers published in the Los Angeles Times in 2011, they found that from 40% to 55% of them would get noticeably different scores (Briggs & Domingue, 2011).

          Teachers’ value-added scores also differ signifi – cantly when different tests are used, even when these are within the same content area (Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, 2010; Lockwood et al., 2007). This raises concerns both about measurement er-

          TABLE 1.

          Percent of teachers whose effectiveness rankings change

          Across models a

          Across courses b

          Across years b

          Note: a Depending on pair of models compared. b Depending on the model used. Source: Newton, Darling-Hammond, Haertel, & Thomas (2010).

          BY 1 OR MORE DECILES

          56-80%

          85-100%

          74-93%

          BY 2 OR MORE DECILES

          12-33%

          54-92%

          45-63%

          BY 3 OR MORE DECILES

          0-14%

          39-54%

          19-41%

          ror and, when teacher evaluation results are tied to student test scores, the effects of emphasiz- ing “teaching to the test” at the expense of other kinds of learning, especially given the narrowness of most tests in the United States.

          2. Teachers’ value-added performance is affected by the students assigned to them.

          VAMs are designed to identify teachers’ effects

          Teachers’ value-added scores differ signifi cantly when different tests are used, even when these are within the same content area.

          10 Kappan March 2012

          when students are assigned to teachers randomly. However, students aren’t randomly assigned to teachers — and statistical models can’t fully adjust for the fact that some teachers will have a dispropor- tionate number of students who have greater chal- lenges (e.g., students with poor attendance, who are homeless, who have severe problems at home, etc.) and those whose scores on traditional tests may not accurately reflect their learning (e.g., those who have special education needs or who are new English language learners).

          Even when the model includes controls for prior achievement and student demographic variables, teachers are advantaged or disadvantaged based on the students they teach. Several studies have shown this by conducting tests that look at teacher “ef- fects” on students’ prior test scores. Logically, for example, 5th-grade teachers can’t influence their students’ 3rd-grade test scores. So a VAM that iden- tifies teachers’ true effects should show no effect of 5th-grade teachers on students’ 3rd-grade test scores two years earlier. But studies that have looked at this

          have shown large “effects” — which indicates that the VAMs wrongly attribute to teachers other influ- ences on student performance that are present when the teachers have no contact with the students (Roth- stein, 2010).

          One study that found considerable instability in teachers’ value-added scores from class to class and year to year examined changes in student charac- teristics associated with changes in teacher ratings. After controlling for prior student test scores and stu- dent characteristics, the study still found significant correlations between teacher ratings and students’ race/ethnicity, income, language background, and parent education. Figure 2 illustrates this finding for an experienced English teacher whose rating went from the very lowest category in one year to the very highest category the next year (a jump from the 1st to the 10th decile). In the second year, this teacher had many fewer English learners, Hispanic students, and low-income students, and more students with well-educated parents than in the first year.

          This variability raises concerns that using such ratings for evaluating teachers could create disin- centives for teachers to serve high-need students.

          3. Value-added ratings can’t disentangle the many influences on student progress.

          Given all of the other factors operating, it appears

          FIG. 1.

          Changes in VA scores from 2001 to 2002 for low-ranking teachers

          100-

          90-

          80 –

          70-

          60-

          50-

          40-

          30-

          20-

          10-

          0-

          Move to above average (Top

          40%)

          Move up in rankings

          Stay in bottom 20%

          San Diego Duval Co., Hillsborough Co., Orange Co., Palm Beach Co., Calif. Fla. Fla. Fla. Fla.

          School districts

          P e rc

          e n ta

          g e o

          f te

          a c h e rs

          Source: Sass, T. (2008).

          Teachers are advantaged or disadvantaged based on the students they teach.

          V93 N6 kappanmagazine.org 11

          Houston as a result of its Education Value-Added Assessment System (EVAAS) scores was a 10-year veteran who had been voted Teacher of the Month and Teacher of the Year and was rated each year as “exceeding expectations” by her supervisor (Amrein- Beardsley & Collins, in press). She showed positive VA scores on 8 of 16 tests over four years (50% of the total observations), with wide fluctuations from year to year, both across and within subjects. (See Table 2.) It is worth noting that this teacher’s lower value-added in 4th grade, when English learners are mainstreamed in Houston, was also a pattern for many other teachers.

          The wide variability shown in this teacher’s rat- ings from year to year, like that documented in many other studies, wasn’t unusual for Houston teachers in this analysis, regardless of whether the teacher was terminated. Teachers said they couldn’t identify a relationship between their instructional practices and their value-added ratings, which appear unpre- dictable. As one teacher noted:

          I do what I do every year. I teach the way I teach every year. [My] first year got me pats on the back; [my] second year got me kicked in the backside. And for year three, my scores were off the charts. I got a huge bonus, and now I am in the top quartile of all the English teachers. What did I do differently? I have no clue (Amrein-Beardsley & Collins, in press).

          that “teacher effectiveness” is not a stable enough construct to be uniquely identified even under ideal conditions (for example, with random assignment of teachers to schools and students to teachers, and with some means of controlling differences in out- of-school effects). Furthermore, some teachers may be effective at some forms of instruction or in some portions of the curriculum and less effective in oth- ers. If so, their rated effectiveness would depend on whether the student tests used for the VAM empha- size skills and topics for which the teacher is relatively more or relatively less effective.

          Other research indicates that teachers whose students do best on end-of-year tests aren’t always effective at promoting longer-run achievement for their students. Thus, VAM-style measures may be influenced by how much the teacher emphasizes short-run test preparation. One study even found that teachers who raised end-of-course grades most were, on average, less effective than others at prepar- ing students for next year’s course (Carrell & West, 2010).

          Initial research on using value-added methods to dismiss some teachers and award bonuses to oth- ers shows that value-added ratings often don’t agree with ratings from skilled observers and are influ- enced by all of the factors described above.

          For example, one of the teachers dismissed in

          Deepen your understanding of this article with questions and activities in this month’s Kappan Professional Development Discussion Guide by Lois Brown Easton. Download a PDF of the guide at kappan magazine.org.

          FIG. 2.

          Student characteristics in years 1 and 2 for a teacher whose ranking changed from the 1st to the 10th decile

          80 –

          70-

          60-

          50-

          40-

          30-

          20-

          10-

          0-

          Year 1

          Year 2

          % % % Parent ELL Low-income Hispanic education (in years)

          Student characteristics

          P e rc

          e n ta

          g e /y

          e a rs

          58

          4

          42

          26

          75

          36

          20.4

          31.6

          12 Kappan March 2012

          • Ratings change considerably when teachers change grade levels, often from “ineffective” to “effective” and vice versa.

          These kinds of comments from teachers were typical:

          Every year, I have the highest test scores, [and] I have fellow teachers that come up to me when they get their bonuses . . . One recently came up to me [and] literally cried, ‘I’m so sorry.’ . . . I’m like, ‘Don’t be sorry. It’s not your fault.’ Here I am . . . with the highest test scores, and I’m getting $0 in bonuses. It makes no sense year to year how this works. You know, I don’t know what to do. I don’t know how to get higher than 100%.

          I went to a transition classroom, and now there’s a red flag next to my name. I guess now I’m an ineffective teacher? I keep getting letters from the district, saying ‘You’ve been recognized as an outstanding teacher’ . . . this, this, and that. But now because I teach English language learners who ‘transition in,’ my scores drop? And I get a flag next to my name for not teaching them well? (Amrein-Beardsley & Collins, in press).

          A study of Tennessee teachers who volunteered to be evaluated based on VAMs and to have a substan- tial share of their compensation tied to their VAM results, corroborated this evidence: After three years, 85% thought the VAM evaluation ignored impor- tant aspects of their performance that test scores didn’t measure, and two-thirds thought VAM didn’t do a good job of distinguishing effective from inef- fective teachers (Springer et al., 2010).

          Other approaches

          For all of these reasons and more, most research- ers have concluded that value-added modeling is not appropriate as a primary measure for evaluating in- dividual teachers. (See, for example, Braun, 2005; National Research Council, 2009.)

          While value-added models based on test scores

          Another teacher classified her past three years as “bonus, bonus, disaster.” And another noted:

          We had an 8th-grade teacher, a very good teacher, the “real science guy”. . . [but] every year he showed low EVAAS growth. My principal flipped him with the 6th-grade science teacher who was getting the highest EVAAS scores on campus. Huge EVAAS scores. [And] now the 6th-grade teacher [is showing] no growth, but the 8th-grade teacher who was sent down is getting the biggest bonuses on campus.

          This example of two teachers whose value-added ratings flip-flopped when they exchanged assign- ments is an example of a phenomenon found in other studies that document a larger association between the class taught and value-added ratings than the individual teacher effect itself. The notion that there is a stable “teacher effect” that’s a function of the teacher’s teaching ability or effectiveness is called into question if the specific class or grade-level as- signment is a stronger predictor of the value-added rating than the teacher.

          Another Houston teacher whose supervisor con- sistently rated her as “exceeding expectations” or “proficient” and who also was receiving positive VA scores about 50% of the time, had a noticeable drop in her value-added ratings when a large number of English language learners transitioned into her class- room. Overall, the study found that, in this system:

          • Teachers of grades in which English language learners (ELLs) are transitioned into mainstreamed classrooms are the least likely to show “added value.”

          • Teachers of large numbers of special education students in mainstreamed classrooms are also found to have lower “value-added” scores, on average.

          • Teachers of gifted students show little value- added because their students are already near the top of the test score range.

          EVAAS scores (Teacher A)

          TABLE 2.

          2006-2010 EVAAS scores of a teacher dismissed as a result of these scores

          Math

          Reading

          Language arts

          Science

          Social studies

          ASPIRE bonus

          Notes: * The scores with asterisks (*) signify that the scores are not detectably different from the reference gain scores of other teachers across Houston Independent School District within one standard error; however, the scores are still reported to both the teachers and their supervisors as they are here.

          GRADE 5

          2006-2007

          GRADE 4

          2007-2008

          GRADE 3

          2008-2009

          GRADE 3

          2009-2010

          -2.03

          -1.15

          +1.12

          +2.37

          +0.91*

          $3,400

          +0.68*

          -0.96*

          -0.49*

          -3.45

          -2.39

          $700

          +0.16*

          +2.03

          -1.77

          n/a

          n/a

          $3,700

          +03.26

          +1.81

          -0.20*

          n/a

          n/a

          $0

          V93 N6 kappanmagazine.org 13

          ground evaluation in student learning in more stable ways. Typically, performance assessments ask teach- ers to document their plans and teaching for a unit of instruction linked to state standards, adapt them for special education students and English language learners, videotape and critique lessons, and collect and evaluate evidence of student learning.

          Professional standards have also been translated into teacher evaluation instruments at the local level. Cincinnati Public Schools uses an unusually care- ful standards-based system for teacher evaluation that involves multiple classroom observations and detailed written feedback to teachers. This system, like several others in local districts, has been found both to produce ratings that reflect teachers’ effec- tiveness in supporting student learning gains and to improve teachers’ performance and their future ef- fectiveness (Milanowski, Kimball & White, 2004; Milanowski, 2004; Rockoff & Speroni, 2010; Taylor & Tyler, 2011.)

          A Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation initiative is identifying additional tools based on professional standards and validated against student achievement gains to be used in teacher evaluation at the local level. The Measures of Effective Teaching (MET) Project has developed a number of tools, includ- ing observations or videotapes of teachers, supple- mented with other artifacts of practice (lesson plans, assignments, etc.), that can be scored according to standards that reflect practices associated with ef- fective teaching.

          Building better systems

          Systems that help teachers improve and that sup- port timely and efficient personnel decisions have more than good instruments. Successful systems use multiple classroom observations across the year by expert evaluators looking at multiple sources of data, and they provide timely and meaningful feedback to the teacher.

          For example, schools using the Teacher Advance- ment Program, which is based on NBPTS and IN- TASC standards as well as the standards-based as- sessment rubrics developed in Connecticut (Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, 2010; Rothstein, 2011),

          are problematic for making evaluation decisions for individual teachers, they are useful for looking at groups of teachers for research purposes — for ex- ample, to examine how specific teaching practices or measures of teaching influence the learning of large numbers of students. Such analyses provide other in- sights for teacher evaluation because we have a large body of evidence over many decades concerning how specific teaching practices influence student learning gains. For example, we know that effective teachers:

          • Understand subject matter deeply and flexibly; • Connect what is to be learned to students’ prior

          knowledge and experience; • Create effective scaffolds and supports for

          learning; • Use instructional strategies that help students

          draw connections, apply what they’re learning, practice new skills, and monitor their own learning;

          • Assess student learning continuously and adapt teaching to student needs;

          • Provide clear standards, constant feedback, and opportunities for revising work; and

          • Develop and effectively manage a collab- orative classroom in which all students have membership (Darling-Hammond & Bransford, 2005).

          These aspects of effective teaching, supported by research, have been incorporated into professional standards for teaching that offer some useful ap- proaches to teacher evaluation.

          Using professional standards

          The National Board for Professional Teaching Standards (NBPTS) defined accomplished teach- ing to guide assessments for veteran teachers. Sub- sequently, a group of states working together under the auspices of the Council for Chief State School Officers created the Interstate New Teacher Assess- ment and Support Consortium (INTASC), which translated these into standards for beginning teach- ers that have been adopted by over 40 states for initial teacher licensing. Revised INTASC teaching stan- dards have been aligned with the Common Core Standards to reflect the knowledge, skills, and under- standings that teachers need to enact the standards.

          These standards have become the basis for as- sessments of teaching that produce ratings that are much more stable than value-added measures. At the same time, these standards incorporate class- room evidence of student learning, and large-scale studies have shown that they can predict teachers’ value-added effectiveness (National Research Coun- cil, 2008; Wilson et al., 2011), so they have helped

          The notion that there is a stable “teacher effect” that’s a function of the teacher’s teaching ability or effectiveness is called into question if the specific class or grade- level assignment is a stronger predictor of the value-added rating than the teacher.

          14 Kappan March 2012

          surable outcomes in hard-to-quantify areas like art, music, and physical education; and to monitor stu- dent learning growth. They also showed a greater awareness of the importance of sound curriculum development, more alignment of curriculum with district objectives, and increased focus on higher- quality content, skills, and instructional strategies (Packard & Dereshiwsky, 1991).

          Some U.S. districts, along with high-achieving countries like Singapore, emphasize teacher col- laboration in their evaluation systems. This kind of measure is supported by studies finding that students have stronger achievement gains when teachers work together in teams (Jackson & Bruegmann, 2009) and when there is greater teacher collaboration for school improvement (Goddard & Goddard, 2007).

          In conclusion

          New approaches to teacher evaluation should take advantage of research on teacher effectiveness. While there are considerable challenges in using value-added test scores to evaluate individual teach- ers directly, using value-added methods in research can help validate measures that are productive for teacher evaluation.

          Research indicates that value-added measures of student achievement tied to individual teachers should not be used for high-stakes, individual-level decisions, or comparisons across highly dissimilar schools or student populations. Valid interpretations require aggregate-level data and should ensure that background factors — including overall classroom composition — are as similar as possible across groups being compared. In general, such measures should be used only in a low-stakes fashion when they’re part of an integrated analysis of teachers’ practices.

          Standards-based evaluation processes have also been found to be predictive of student learning gains and productive for teacher learning. These include systems like National Board certification and per- formance assessments for beginning teacher licens- ing as well as district and school-level instruments based on professional teaching standards. Effective systems have developed an integrated set of mea- sures that show what teachers do and what happens as a result. These measures may include evidence of student work and learning, as well as evidence of teacher practices derived from observations, video- tapes, artifacts, and even student surveys.

          These tools are most effective when embedded in systems that support evaluation expertise and well- grounded decisions, by ensuring that evaluators are trained, evaluation and feedback are frequent, men- toring and professional development are available, and processes are in place to support due process

          evaluate teachers four to six times a year using mas- ter/mentor teachers or principals certified in a rigor- ous four-day training. The indicators of good teach- ing are practices found to be associated with desired student outcomes. Teachers also study the rubric and its implications for teaching and learning, look at and evaluate videotaped teaching episodes using the rubric, and engage in practice evaluations. After each observation, the evaluator and teacher discuss the findings and plan for ongoing growth. Schools provide professional development, mentoring, and

          classroom support to help teachers meet these stan- dards. TAP teachers say this system, along with the intensive professional development offered, is sub- stantially responsible for improving their practice and for student achievement gains in many TAP schools (Solomon, White, Cohen, & Woo, 2007).

          In districts that use Peer Assistance and Review (PAR) programs, highly expert mentor teachers sup- port novice teachers and veteran teachers who are struggling, and they conduct some aspects of the evaluation. Key features of these systems include not only the evaluation instruments but also the ex- pertise of the consulting teachers or mentors, and a system of due process and review in which a panel of teachers and administrators make recommendations about personnel decisions based on evidence from the evaluations. Many systems using this approach have improved teaching while they have also become more effective in identifying teachers for continua- tion and tenure as well as intensive assistance and, where needed, dismissal (NCTAF, 1996; Van Lier, 2008).

          Some systems ask teachers to assemble evidence of student learning as part of the overall judgment of effectiveness. Such evidence is drawn from class- room and school-level assessments and documenta- tion, including pre- and post-test measures of stu- dent learning in specific courses or curriculum areas, and evidence of student accomplishments in relation to teaching activities. A study of Arizona’s career lad- der program, which requires teachers to use vari- ous methods of student assessment to complement evaluations of teacher practice, found that, over time, participating teachers improved their ability to cre- ate tools to assess student learning gains; to develop and evaluate before and after tests; to define mea-

          Successful systems use multiple classroom observations, expert evaluators, multiple sources of data, are timely, and provide meaningful feedback to the teacher.

          V93 N6 kappanmagazine.org 15

          National Research Council, Board on Testing and Assessment.

          (2008). Assessing accomplished teaching: Advanced-level

          certification programs. Washington, DC: National Academies

          Press.

          National Research Council, Board on Testing and Assessment.

          (2009). Letter report to the U.S. Department of Education.

          Washington, DC: Author.

          Newton, X., Darling-Hammond, L., Haertel, E., & Thomas,

          E. (2010). Value-added modeling of teacher effectiveness:

          An exploration of stability across models and contexts.

          Educational Policy Analysis Archives, 18 (23).

          Packard, R. & Dereshiwsky, M. (1991). Final quantitative

          assessment of the Arizona career ladder pilot-test project.

          Flagstaff, AZ: Northern Arizona University.

          Rockoff, J. & Speroni, C. (2010). Subjective and objective

          evaluations of teacher effectiveness. New York, NY: Columbia

          University.

          Rothstein, J. (2007). Do value-added models add value?

          Tracking, fixed effects, and causal inference. CEPS Working

          Paper No. 159. Cambridge, MA: National Bureau of Economic

          Research.

          Rothstein, J. (2010). Teacher quality in educational production:

          tracking, decay, and student achievement. Quarterly Journal of

          Economics, 125 (1), 175-214.

          Rothstein, J. (2011). Review of “Learning about teaching: Initial

          findings from the Measures of Effective Teaching Project.”

          Boulder, CO: National Education Policy Center.

          Sass, T. (2008). The stability of value-added measures of

          teacher quality and implications for teacher compensation

          policy. Washington DC: CALDER.

          Solomon, L., White, J.T., Cohen, D., & Woo, D. (2007).

          The effectiveness of the Teacher Advancement Program.

          Washington, DC: National Institute for Excellence in Teaching.

          Springer, M., Ballou, D., Hamilton, L., Le, V., Lockwood, V.,

          McCaffrey, D., Pepper, M., & Stecher, B. (2010). Teacher pay

          for performance: Experimental evidence from the Project

          on Incentives in Teaching. Nashville, TN: National Center on

          Performance Incentives.

          Taylor, E. & Tyler, J. (2011, March). The effect of evaluation on

          performance: Evidence of longitudinal student achievement

          data of mid-career teachers. Working Paper No. 16877.

          Cambridge MA: National Bureau of Economic Research.

          Van Lier, P. (2008). Learning from Ohio’s best teachers: A

          homegrown model to improve our schools. Policy Matters

          Ohio. www.policymattersohio.org/learning-from-ohios-best-

          teachers-a-homegrown-model-to-improve-our-schools

          Wilson, M, Hallam, P., Pecheone, R., & Moss, P. (2011).

          Investigating the validity of portfolio assessments of beginning

          teachers: Relationships with student achievement and tests

          of teacher knowledge. Berkeley, CA: Berkeley Evaluation,

          Assessment, and Research Center.

          and timely decision making by an appropriate body. With these features in place, evaluation can be-

          come a more useful part of a productive teaching and learning system, supporting accurate information about teachers, helpful feedback, and well-grounded personnel decisions. K

          References

          Amrein-Beardsley, A. & Collins, C. (In press). The SAS

          education value-added assessment system (EVAAS): Its

          intended and unintended effects in a major urban school

          system. Tempe, AZ: Arizona State University.

          Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation. (2010). Learning about

          teaching: Initial findings from the Measures of Effective

          Teaching Project. Seattle, WA: Author.

          Braun, H. (2005). Using student progress to evaluate teachers:

          A primer on value-added models. Princeton, NJ: Educational

          Testing Service.

          Briggs, D. & Domingue, B. (2011). Due diligence and the

          evaluation of teachers: A review of the value-added analysis

          underlying the effectiveness rankings of Los Angeles Unified

          School District teachers by the Los Angeles Times. Boulder,

          CO: National Education Policy Center.

          Carrell, S. & West, J. (2010). Does professor quality

          matter? Evidence from random assignment of students to

          professors. Journal of Political Economy, 118 (3).

          Darling-Hammond, L. & Bransford, J. (2005). Preparing

          teachers for a changing world: What teachers should learn and

          be able to do. San Francisco, CA: Jossey-Bass.

          Goddard, Y. & Goddard, R.D. (2007). A theoretical and

          empirical investigation of teacher collaboration for school

          improvement and student achievement in public elementary

          schools. Teachers College Record, 109 (4), 877-896.

          Jackson, C.K. & Bruegmann, E. (2009). Teaching students

          and teaching each other: The importance of peer learning

          for teachers. Washington, DC: National Bureau of Economic

          Research.

          Lockwood, J., McCaffrey, D., Hamilton, L., Stetcher, B., Le,

          V.N., & Martinez, J. (2007). The sensitivity of value-added

          teacher effect estimates to different mathematics achievement

          measures. Journal of Educational Measurement, 44 (1), 47-67.

          Milanowski, A. (2004). The relationship between teacher

          performance evaluation scores and student achievement:

          Evidence from Cincinnati. Peabody Journal of Education, 79

          (4), 33-53.

          Milanowski, A., Kimball, S.M., & White, B. (2004). The

          relationship between standards-based teacher evaluation

          scores and student achievement. Madison, WI: University

          of Wisconsin-Madison, Consortium for Policy Research in

          Education.

          National Commission on Teaching and America’s Future.

          (1996). What matters most: Teaching for America’s future.

          New York, NY: Author.

          Feasibility Study

          Competencies
          • Interpret how the components of a balance sheet and income statement communicate the financial position of an organization.
          • Interpret the components of a cash-flow statement to describe the liquidity of an organization.
          • Evaluate financial ratios to differentiate profitability and liquidity across organizations.
          • Analyze leverage and activity ratios to review operating performance across organizations.
          • Determine current values of cash streams utilizing discounted cash flow techniques.
          • Critique organizational investments using forecasting scenarios.
          Student Success Criteria

          View the grading rubric for this deliverable by selecting the "This item is graded with a rubric" link, which is located in the Details & Information pane

          .

          Scenario

          You recently went to a dealership for an oil change on your vehicle, as no independent oil change companies or auto repair shops are within 50 miles of your home. You paid $250 for this oil change on your Chevy Camaro.

          Given your entrepreneurial spirit and frustration with the cost of the oil change, you have an idea for a mobile oil change company. You have completed a marketing survey to determine potential interest in such a company. The marketing survey results suggested that 50% of vehicle owners would entertain using a mobile oil change company for oil changes if such a company existed.

          You live in a town with 30,000 registered vehicles, of which their owners take 15,000 to the dealerships for oil changes. Most owners take their vehicles to the dealership three times a year.

          You will need the following to start this business and to gain funding from investors.:

          • 3 Mobile Oil Change Trucks (General Modifiable Flatbed Commercial Trucks)
          • Oil Changing Supplies (i.e., motor oil, clean cloths, drip pans, and oil filters)
          • Oil Changing Tools (i.e., Motor Oil Tank, Motor oil extractor, and a Fluid Flush Machine Mobile Oil Dispensing Kit)
          • Insurance (i.e., Auto for all three trucks and General Liability Insurance for the Business)
          • Budget for 3 Employees (Hourly Pay)

          Pro forma financial statements, a financial plan, and a business plan are required for all potential investors and creditors. Prepare a 10-15 slide PowerPoint presentation and include financial proforma statements with the above information to present to potential investors and creditors.

          Instructions

          Using PowerPoint (or similar) and this Module 7 Feasibility Calculations Template – 2023, you have been asked to develop a feasibility study presentation to determine the feasibility of this idea for a new company.

          Module 7 Feasibility Calculations Template  - 2023.xlsx

           Your feasibility study presentation should include the following:

          • Develop a conservative forecasted sales budget based on the survey results using the Excel template. Make sure your price is less than what the dealership charges.
          • Within the Excel spreadsheet, Identify fixed and variable costs for each oil change. Using these values, develop an operating budget to determine the contribution margin for an individual oil change and the total amount for the forecasted sales budget.
          • Develop a proforma income statement, balance sheet, and statement of cash flows for the first year of business. The business Tax Rate is 20%.
          • Based on these proforma financial statements, calculate one financial ratio in each category of profitability, liquidity, and solvency ratios.
          • Based on a 40-hour work week, estimate how many oil changes one person can realistically perform. Given the projected sales forecast, develop a capital investment proposition for additional trucks with anticipated useful lives of 5 years. Use the discounted cash flow method at an interest rate of 6%. Develop a 10-15 slide PowerPoint presentation summarizing these figures above and provide a recommendation to invest in this mobile oil-changing business based on the feasibility report provided.

          NOTE – Be sure the documents display proper grammar, spelling, punctuation, and sentence structure.

          Assessment Requirements/Submission Requirement:
          • Submit a 10-15 slide PowerPoint presentation, including attribution for outside sources.
          • Submit the Excel Feasibility Spreadsheet to show all calculations used for the scenario.

          A – 4 – Mastery

          Accurate and appropriately conservative forecasted sales budget based on the survey results.

          A – 4 – Mastery

          Correctly identifies fixed and variable costs for each oil change and develops a realistic operating budget.

          A – 4 – Mastery

          Accurate and complete proforma income statement, balance sheet, and statement of cash flows for the first year of business.

          A – 4 – Mastery

          Accurately calculates all profitability, liquidity, and solvency ratios.

          A – 4 – Mastery

          Accurately develops a capital investment proposition and PowerPoint presentation for potential investors.

          Calculations

          Part 1 – Sales budget
          Quarter 1 Quarter 2 Quarter 3 Quarter 4 Year
          Expected unit sales – 0
          Unit selling price($)
          Total sales – 0 – 0 – 0 – 0 – 0
          Part 2 – Operating budget – Per Oil Change
          Sales revenue
          Variable costs
          Contribution margin per oil change 0
          Fixed costs
          Net income 0
          Part 3 Prepare income statement, balance sheet and cash flows statement
          Proforma Income Statement
          December 31
          Sales revenue – 0
          Cost of goods sold – 0
          Gross profit – 0
          Operating expenses
          Income before interest and tax – 0
          Interest Expense
          Income before tax – 0
          tax expense – 0
          Net income – 0
          Proforma Balance Sheet
          December 31
          Assets
          Current assets
          Cash and equivalents
          Short-term investments
          Receivables
          Merchandise inventories
          Other current assets 0
          Total current assets 0
          Property and equipment
          Less accumulated deprecation Reflect negatively.
          Net property and equipment 0
          Other assets 0
          Total assets 0
          Liabiliities and Stockholders' equity
          Current liabilities
          Accounts payable
          Accrued liabilities
          Accrued income taxes
          Accrued compensation payable
          Other current liabilities
          Total current liabilities 0
          Long-term liabilities
          Long-term debt
          Other long-term liabilities
          Total long-term liabilities 0
          Total liabilities 0
          Stockholders' equity
          Common stock 0
          Retained earnings and other 0
          Total Liabilities and stockholders' equity 0
          Proforma Cash Flows Statement
          December 31
          Cash flows from operating activities
          Cash receipts from operating activities
          Cash payments from operating activities
          Net cash provided by operating activities 0
          Cash flows from investing activities
          Purchased equipment
          Net cash used by investing activities 0
          Cash flows from financing activities
          Issurance of note payable
          Net cash provided by financing activities 0
          Net increase in cash 0
          Cash at beginning of period 0
          Cash at end of period 0
          Part 4 – Calculate ratios
          Ratios formula Ratio name Ratio type Amount
          Liquidity
          Profitability
          Solvency
          Part 5 – Capital Investment Decision
          FV (future value)
          N (number of years or periods)
          I (interest rate)
          PMT (net cash flow) – 0
          PV (present value) $0
          Present value of future cash flows from oil change $0
          Initial investment of equipment
          Net present value 0

          Sales Revenue (selling price per oil change by estimated sales units for the year COGS( Variable cost per oil change + fixed costs per oil change x expected unit sales) Gross Profit (sales – COGS) Operating expenses (estimate additional costs) Ex. 375,000 Income before interest and tax (Gross profit-operating expenses) Interest Expense (estimate) Ex. 27,000 Income before tax (Income before interest + tax-interest expense) Tax Expense (estimate tax rate, it is safe to use a general business rate of 20%) So take income before tax and multiply it by 20% Net Income (income before tax – tax expense)

          All numbers under assets are estimated

          All numbers under liabilities and equity are estimated This is a sole proprietorship so there is no stock of any kind

          Cash receipts from operating activities are estimated Cash payments from operating activities are estimated and reflected negatively. Purchasing of equipment, estimate the total price of equipment to complete oil changes (reflect negatively) Notes Payable: Assume a bank loan for the business

          Future Value is "0" Life of equipment stated in the deliverable Discount Rate Net Cash flows per year (net income from proforma income statement + annual depreciation = yearly net cash flows) Present Value (interest rate x number of periods x net cash flow payments x future value, 0)

          Present value is from previous part Initial Investment (estimate the cost of equipment, could have done this previously in the balance sheet) (reflect negatively) Net Present Value ( present value – initial investment)

          Organizational Health Report

          Competencies

          • Evaluate organizational behavior and leadership on performance.
          • Analyze the impact of employee behavior on engagement.
          • Evaluate leadership practices that support organizational effectiveness.
          • Implement leadership strategies for managing group & team dynamics.
          • Evaluate the relationship among individuals, teams, and culture on organizational performance.
          • Critique the impact of leadership on organizational outcomes.

          Scenario

          You are the new organizational behavior manager for a corporation. Your role is to assess the work environment and improve employee performance and workplace culture. As one of your first projects, you decide to complete a company performance review. Before beginning this company performance review, you need to conduct research. Your research will entail a lot of time and resources, and you need to address some preliminary areas with the board of directors in an upcoming meeting. You will need to create a white paper for the board, stressing the importance of this work and why a company performance review is needed.

          Instructions

          Write a white paper to present to the board of directors that includes the following items to help strengthen the support for the need for a company performance review:

          • Determine organizational behavior and leadership’s role in organizational performance.
          • Discuss the impact individual human behavior has on the organization’s success.
          • Assess effective leadership practices on employee motivation.
          • Discuss one leadership strategy for a group and one leadership strategy for a team that enforces positive relationship building.
          • Explain the impact of diversity, equity, and inclusion initiatives on individuals, teams, and the overall culture.
          • Discuss leadership impact on leading change for continued organizational success.
          • Provide attribution for credible sources used in the white paper.

          A – 4 – Mastery

          Clearly and strongly determined the organizational behavior and leadership’s role on the organizational performance, using clear examples in a well-organized white paper.

          Clearly and strongly discussed effective individual human behavior has on the organization’s success, using clear examples in a well-organized white paper.

          Clearly and strongly assessed effective leadership practices on employee motivation, using clear examples in a well-organized white paper.

          A – 4 – Mastery

          Clearly and strongly discussed a leadership strategy for a group and one for a team that enforce positive relationship building, using clear examples in a well-organized white paper.

          A – 4 – Mastery

          Clearly and strongly explained diversity, equity, and inclusion initiatives on individuals, teams, and the overall culture, using clear examples in a well-organized white paper.

          A – 4 – Mastery

          Clearly and strongly discussed leadership impact on leading change for continued organizational success, using clear examples in a well-organized white paper.

          A – 4 – Mastery

          Used and relied on all credible sources in a well-defined white paper.

            Business decision/decision tree

              

            Apply a business decision model to something you do every day, such as selecting an outfit, ordering lunch, or determining your exercise routine. Be creative in your approach. How did you select the model? 

            Create a decision tree for the scenario you outlined in the topic above. Attach the decision tree to your response and include insights into how you crafted it. How would you apply this decision-making experience to larger scale decisions at an organizational level?

              Platinum Essays