Learning Together for More Effective Principal Training

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Transcript Learning Together for More Effective Principal Training

Learning Together for More Effective Principal Training: The Charge to the Provider PLC

Will Miller President, The Wallace Foundation Professional Learning Community Principal Pipeline Initiative

April 18, 2013

Our discussion today

 Wallace’s approach to philanthropy  Why your work is essential  The charge to the PLC  Meeting the challenge 2

The Wallace Approach

(Our theory of change)

Understand the Context

(Engage with the external environment to identify knowledge gaps, field interest, and time lines)

Catalyze Broad Impact

(Improve practice and policy nationwide)

Generate Improvements and Insights

(Build promising new approaches and new evidence/knowledge) 3

Our Theory of Leverage

(Tactics) • • •

Probing Dialogue

Listen to / seek to understand key actors and institutions Identify both formal and informal rules Identify environmental conditions, potential leverage points, and time needed for change • • • • • •

Initiative Design

Think about the whole system Identify knowledge gaps Design grants Clear causal connections to desired results Selection of grantees (RFP, other) Metrics • • • • •

Knowledge Development

Knowledge synthesis Effects evaluations Implementation evaluations Cost analysis Other key research topics • • • • • •

Grant Management

High engagement Technical assistance Market research Business planning Formative evaluations Capacity building • • • • • •

Building Networks

Engage leadership Create synergies among grantees Professional learning communities Convenings Collaboration with other funders, communications partners and organizations Fund public/private partnerships; don’t invest in isolated efforts Principle: Wallace’s work combines the skills required by grant makers, industry associations, technical assistance organizations, and think tanks.

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Wallace’s education leadership initiative: 2000-2010

Our strategies:  26 states; 15 main urban districts  Commissioned research to fill knowledge gaps and evaluate across sites  Professional learning communities for states, districts, partners The Wallace Approach (Our theory of change) Catalyze Broad Impact Understand the Context Generate Improvements and Insights Resulting in:  Over 70 research reports  140 sustained, high quality initiatives (including 24 pre-service training programs)  15 new non-profit organizations 5 5

Leadership standards

The Principal Pipeline

High quality aspiring leader training programs Selective hiring Evaluation and on the-job support

 High quality  Aligned  District-wide scale  In support of district reform agenda 6

Our discussion today

 Wallace’s approach to philanthropy  Why your work is essential  The charge to the PLC  Meeting the challenge 7

Leadership key to student learning

“Leadership is second only to classroom instruction among all school-related factors that contribute to what students learn at school.”

- How Leadership Influences Student Learning,

Kenneth Leithwood, et al, University of Minnesota, University of Toronto, 2004 Six years later we are even more confident about this claim.”

-- Learning from Leadership: Investigating the Links to Improved Student Learning,

Louis, et al, 2010 8

Principals key to teaching quality

“It is the leader who both recruits and retains high quality staff. Indeed, the number one reason for teachers’ decisions about whether to stay in a school is the quality of administrative support – and it is the leader who must develop this organization.”

-- Preparing School Leaders for a Changing World,

Linda Darling-Hammond, et al, Stanford University, 2007 9

What effective principals do

 Shape a transformational vision of academic success for all students  Create a hospitable climate  Manage people, data and processes  Improve instruction  Lead the professional learning community  Cultivate leadership in others  Lead the leadership team

Source: The School Principal as Leader: Guiding Schools to Better Teaching and Learning, January 2012

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But: A good leader is hard to find

 There is no shortage of certified principals – but there is a shortage of qualified principals

-- Beyond the Pipeline, 2003

 50% of superintendents around the country report difficulty finding qualified principals. 61% of superintendents in urban areas can’t find the leaders they need

-- Preparing School Leaders for a Changing World, 2007

 There needs to be a match between the district’s needs and the leaders that the programs produce

-- Districts Developing Leaders, 2010

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Training to meet the need: An example from Columbus, IN

Photo credit: Valerie Everett 12

Need for evolution – Columbus, IN

 Opportunity: Keeping 3,000, well-paying, advanced manufacturing jobs in Indiana  Challenge: Local colleges were not preparing graduates qualified to take those jobs Photo credit: Bisgovuk 13

Successful evolution

 The evolution: Colleges and Community Education Coalition developed shared vision, metrics and refined programs  The result:  From 2000 to 2010, the percentage of the county’s population with a high school degree or higher increased from 83.8% to 89.2% a  Percentage with a bachelor’s degree or higher from 22.0% to 26.7%.

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Where we are

 A decade of work has identified the key components of effective training programs  You have used the QM tool to measure your programs against these components  You have developed plans for improvement  The task at hand: Improve the programs 15

Our discussion today

 Wallace’s approach to philanthropy  Why your work is essential  The charge to the PLC  Meeting the challenge 16

Defining a PLC

 A Professional Learning Community (PLC) is a strategy by which lessons are jointly developed among members  through an ongoing series of coordinated learning activities;   for a defined set of members; and with specified purposes and outcomes that meet a strategic objective.

 PLCs employ practices that ensure:  a shared climate of trust and respect;  immediate application of learning to solve common problems;  learning that is responsive to emerging needs.

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Mutual learning, mutual benefit

Benefits for training programs Benefits for graduates Benefits for school districts Benefits for The Wallace Foundation and the nation 18

Purpose of this PLC

 Serve as a resource to you to help you continue to improve your programs through:  Analysis of the Quality Measures™ work  Data-informed discussions with other programs  Ongoing feedback from your alumni 19

Graduates are key

 20 principal graduates are members of this national PLC  Work with your own PLCs at home; engage other graduates in the conversation  Bring what you learn to this national forum  We will provide the resources you need 20

Membership of the PLC

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Membership of the PLC

Research and communication partners: PLC managed by:

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Objectives and outcomes - I

1.

Use Quality Measures™ self-assessment ratings and other data to better understand each program’s needs  Each program develops concrete recommendations to build on its strengths and improve identified areas of need 2.

Begin to develop strategies that address identified needs across programs  An overall project for the PLC is defined 23

Objectives and outcomes - II

3.

Provide guidance and resources for establishing a local PLC for each PLC member program  Programs have everything they need to begin to plan and implement their local PLCs 4.

Develop a shared schedule of activities to accomplish the objectives 24

Our discussion today

 Wallace’s approach to philanthropy  Why your work is essential  The charge to the PLC  Meeting the challenge 25

“The civil rights issue of our times”

“Our challenge is to make sure every child has a fair chance to succeed in life. That is why education is the great civil rights issue of our times.”

President George W. Bush January 19, 2002

Photo credit: whitehouse.gov

“Too many of our kids are dropping out of schools. That’s not a white, black or brown problem. That’s everybody’s problem.”

President Barack Obama April 5, 2011

Photo credit: whitehouse.gov

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A fundamental disadvantage

16,0 14,0 12,0 10,0 8,0 6,0 4,0 2,0 Less than high school High school Some college/Associates degree Bachelors degree or higher 0,0 1992 1994 1996 1998 2000 2002 2004 2006 2008 2010 2012

Source: U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics

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A disadvantage you can address

“There’s no such thing as a high performing school without a great principal. It is impossible. … We’ve never asked so much of them. There’s nothing more important because the stakes have never been higher for our country.”

Secretary of Education Arne Duncan 2010

Photo credit: whitehouse.gov

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Ripples of hope

“It is from numberless diverse acts of courage and belief that human history is shaped. Each time a person stands up for an ideal, or acts to improve the lot of others, or strikes out against injustice, he sends forth a tiny ripple of hope.”

Robert F. Kennedy June 6, 1966

Photo credit: Warren K. Leffler 29

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