Transcript Slide 1
Evaluating School
Principal Effectiveness
Why We Need to Evaluate Principals and Use
Principal Evaluation as a Tool for
Professional Improvement
October 4, 2011
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Welcome
Janice Poda, CCSSO
Initiative Director Education Workforce
4
Moderator
Mary Canole
School Leadership Consultant, Council of
Chief State School Officers
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Purpose
To provide an objective,
research-based overview
of what an effective
principal evaluation system
should include.
To provide SCEE Teams a
Framework for Principal
Evaluation Tool.
Framework for Principal Evaluation
Framework for Principal Evaluation: Key evaluation elements and considerations
Developed by Margaret Terry Orr, Bank Street College of Education, New York ([email protected]), October 4, 2011
Elements
Who is assessed
Considerations
Principals only, or to include other
school and district leaders
Differentiation based on years of
experience, level and responsibilities
Differentiated based on context
Leadership development for growth
and improved practice
Organizational change
Student outcomes
What sources of
evidence are used
Documents and other evidence
How the assessment
is conducted
The purposes of
assessment
What is assessed
Current state policy
Decisions to be made
Personnel management to make
consequential decisions
Leadership practices
Teacher effectiveness and
organizational conditions
Context
Judgments
Observations, classroom visits and site
visits
Portfolios and artifacts
Frequency and timing
Use of surveys, interviews or focus
groups
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Presenters
Margaret Terry Orr
Bank Street College of Education
Jean Satterfield
Assistant State Superintendent for the Maryland
Division of Certification and Accreditation
Sarah Brown Wessling
National Teacher of the Year 2010, English Teacher,
Johnston High School, Johnston, Iowa
Research on conventional practice
for principal evaluation
Wide variation in principal evaluation
scope, instruments, and practices
Few psychometrically rigorous
evaluation rubrics or rating systems
Movement:
away from assessing leadership traits
toward use standards
toward the relationship between
leadership practices and student
achievement
Essential content elements of
principal evaluation system:
Who is assessed
The purposes of assessment
What is assessed
What sources of evidence are used
Essential organizational elements
of principal evaluation system:
How the assessment is conducted
How evidence is valued
Psychometric qualities
Implementation, organization, and support of
evaluation
Evaluation of the system’s effectiveness
Considerations of who is assessed
How “principal” is defined
To include all school building leaders, or just
principals
To include district leaders or not
To differentiate based on years of
experience, time in current building
assignment, and levels of responsibility
Purposes of the evaluation
Summative—for consequential decisions
Formative—for professional growth
Organizational change—cohesive system
Evaluation systems differ based on which
purposes are incorporated and to what
degree.
Poll
How much emphasis does your state give to
each of the 3 purposes of leader evaluation?
Summative
a)
b)
c)
d)
No emphasis
Minimal emphasis
Moderate emphasis
Great emphasis
Formative
a)
b)
c)
d)
No emphasis
Minimal emphasis
Moderate emphasis
Great emphasis
Organizational change
a)
b)
c)
d)
No emphasis
Minimal emphasis
Moderate emphasis
Great emphasis
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Poll Results
Summative
a)
b)
c)
d)
No emphasis
(0%)
Minimal emphasis (5%)
Moderate emphasis (13%)
Great emphasis
(16%)
Formative
a)
b)
c)
d)
No emphasis
(0%)
Minimal emphasis (5%)
Moderate emphasis (16%)
Great emphasis
(13%)
Organizational change
a)
b)
c)
d)
No emphasis
(0%)
Minimal emphasis (16%)
Moderate emphasis (13%)
Great emphasis
(5%)
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What is assessed?
Leadership
Development
Teacher
capacity and
effectiveness
Leadership
practices
Organizational
capacity and
effectiveness
School, community, district and state context
Student
achievement
gains
Other student
outcomes
Other school
outcomes
Leadership practices
National standards
District priorities for practice (e.g. teacher
evaluation practices)
Span of authority and control in whether
leaders can perform the practices
Teacher and organizational
capacity and effectiveness
Indirect influence on student achievement through
influence on:
teacher instructional practices
distributed leadership
school culture and climate
teacher and school use of data
community engagement
working conditions
school wide improvement goals
Student and other outcomes
Student achievement progress
Progress on other student outcomes, such as
graduation rates and reduced dropout rates
Progress on other broader school effectiveness
goals, such as improved learning for ELLs and
special education students
Improved safety and security
Context
Resources
Challenges
Parent and community expectations
Other district and state policies
What types of evidence is
collected?
Observations
Documentation
Principal reports
Perceptions of actions and behaviors
Perceptions of working conditions, school
climate
Student performance data
Whose judgments?
Principal
Subordinate staff (teachers, other
professionals, support staff)
Peers (other principals)
Supervisors (central office and superintendent)
Students
Families
Community partners
Considerations in selecting types of
evidence to include
Psychometric considerations
Validity of measures
Validity of combining measures
Representation of scope and depth of principal work
Reliability
Balance between direct observation of principal
practice, evidence and impact
Evaluator skill
Time
When measures are made and how
interpreted?
How often is measurement made?
Initial-interim-final? or
Annual only?
How are results interpreted?
What is used to make judgments? Rubrics
and rating forms?
Are results disaggregated?
Who makes the judgments in reviewing the
evidence?
How measures are valued:
See: Principal Score Card (Milanowski, 2009)
Dimension
Rating
Weight
Score
Development
3
20%
.60
Behavior
4
20%
.80
Intermediate
outcomes
3
30%
.90
School
outcomes
2
30%
.60
Total
2.90
Evaluating the evaluation system
New field
Test out:
Measures
Tools
Processes
Implementation
Evaluate the underlying theory of action
Theory of action of principal
evaluation as a lever of change
Leader
practices
• Principal
Evaluation
System
Teacher and
organizational
effectiveness
Student
and
school
outcomes
Making evaluation system design
decisions
Start with purpose
Build in an evaluation of the system from the
start
Involve critical stakeholders to engage,
educate and create buy-in
Keep it simple, easy to use, and easy to
understand
Framework for Principal Evaluation:
Key evaluation elements and
considerations
Elements
Considerations
Current state
policy
Decisions to be
made
The purposes of
assessment
Who is assessed
What is assessed
What sources of evidence
are used
How the assessment is
conducted
How evidence is valued
What psychometric
qualities are maintained
How the assessment
system is implemented and
operates
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Jean Satterfield
Assistant State Superintendent
for the Maryland Division of
Certification and Accreditation
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7 MD Pilots Model Teacher &
Principal Evaluation System
2011-2012: 7 Districts run pilot to identify ways
to measure student growth in all subject
areas and for all teachers
Student growth will account for 50% of a
teacher and principal evaluations
2012-2013: Statewide pilot using results and
feedback from pilot year to inform the nofault, statewide pilot.
Fall 2013: Mode fully operational statewide
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Pilots Underway…
Baltimore City
8 principal volunteers with
300+ teachers in 8
schools begin 1st cycle in
December
Baltimore County
Instrument aligns to the Danielson Model
11 principals self selected to participate [with 80+ teachers]
Data systems and measures in place
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MD District Pilots
Charles County: 7 pilot school principals &
56 teachers now working with teacher
leaders to complete a pilot evaluation tool.
Kent County: All 7 schools (2 teachers per
school)
Completed internal restructuring
Migrated to a new student data management
system
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Pilots (continued)
Prince Georges County: Aligned with the
Danielson model – All principals & 100
teachers in 38 schools. Data systems and
measures are progressing.
Queen Anne’s County: 7 principals & 126
teachers are exploring cost effective
methods for aligning data, validating student
growth measures and delivering PD.
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Pilots (continued)
St. Mary’s County:
Five principals,11 assistant principals, 235
teachers
Implemented the Danielson model for the
past 10 years
Data collection system
in place to identify PD
needs of teachers,
principals and the
system
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Sarah Brown Wessling
National Teacher of the Year 2010
English Teacher, Johnston High School,
Johnston, Iowa
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Evaluation Discussion Group
Join the Evaluation Discussion Group
http://scee.groupsite.com/page/teacherevaluation
On the Collaboration Site Home Page select
Evaluation
If you are not already a member, request an
invitation
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Upcoming Webinars
NEW DATE: November 1, 2:00 EDT
Continuing the Conversation About Educator
Evaluation: Next Steps After the SCEE
Topical Meeting
Save the date for our December webinar
December 13, 2:00 EDT
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30 Minute Q&A
Participants respond to questions regarding the
framework tool—we’ll pose three questions
Participants ask questions of the experts
We will post the Q&A on the webinars page at
the conclusion of this event
http://scee.groupsite.com/page/webinars
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click on Circe Stumbo’s name in the list of Chat
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For technical assistance find William Bentgen in the
Chat box or email him at [email protected].
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Chat with other SCEE members…
1. Which elements of the Framework for
Principal Evaluation generated the most
discussion with your team?
Example:
In Maryland, framework elements most
discussed: The difference between how to
measure highly effective and effective.
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Chat with other SCEE members…
2. If you have a Principal Evaluation Model in
place, who are you evaluating (“Who is
assessed”)?
Example:
In Maryland, principals are included in the
evaluation/assessment – We are discussing
whether the same model could be used for
all levels of administrators, e.g., assistant
principals and supervisors.
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Chat with other SCEE members…
3. Which elements of the Framework for
Principal Evaluation should be the highest
priority for SCEE to attend to with future
technical assistance (TA)?
Example:
In MD, we would like TA to address validity,
reliability, and how to use student growth
data.
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Thank You
Please complete the webinar
evaluation that you will receive
by email.
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Resources
Brown-Sims, M. (2010). Evaluating School Principals. Tips & Tools. Washington, DC: National
Comprehensive Center for Teacher Quality.
Calabrese, R. L., & Zepeda, S. J. (1999). Decision-making assessment: Improving principal
performance. The International Journal of Educational Management, 13(1), 6.
Catano, N., & Stronge, J. H. (2006). What are principals expected to do? congruence between
principal evaluation and performance standards. NASSP Bulletin, 90(3), 221-237.
Goldring, E., Porter, A. C., Murphy, J., Elliot, S. N., & Cravens, X. (2007). Assessing learnercentered leadership: Connections to research, professional standards and current practices.
Nashville, TN: Vanderbilt University.
Hessel, K., & Holloway, J. (2001). School leaders and standards: a vision for leadership. Princeton,
NJ: Educational Testing Service.
Leithwood, K., & Jantzi, D. (2008). Linking leadership to student learning: The contributions of leader
efficacy. Educational administration quarterly, 44(4), 496-528.
Marzano, R. J., Waters, T., & McNulty, B. A. (2005). School leadership that works: From research to
results. Alexandria, VA: Association for Supervison and Curriculum Development.
Resources (cont.)
McREL. (2010). McREL's Principal Evaluation System.
Milanowski, A., & Schuermann, P. (2009). Principal evaluation (powerpoint slides), Teacher Incentive Fund
Grantee Meeting. Bethesda, MD: Center for Educator Compensation Reform.
Murphy, J., Elliott, S. N., Goldring, E., & Porter, A. C. (2006). Learning-centered leadership: A conceptual
foundation. Nashville, TN: Vanderbilt University.
Porter, A. C., Goldring, E., Murphy, J., Elliot, S. N., & Cravens, X. (2006). A framework for the assessment
of learning-centered leadership. Nashville, TN: Vanderbilt University.
Portin, B., Feldman, S., & Knapp, M. S. (2006). Purposes, Uses, and Practices of Leadership Assessment in
Education Seattle, WA: Center for the Study of Teaching and Policy, University of Washington.
Reeves, D. B. (2004). Assessing educational leaders. Thousand Oaks, CA.: Corwin Press.
Rhode Island Department of Education. (November 9, 2010 ). Working draft. Rhode Island Model. building
administrator professional practice framework. Providence, RI: Rhode Island Department of Education.
Robinson, V. M. J., Lloyd, C. A., & Rowe, K. J. (2008). The impact of leadership on student outcomes: An
analysis of the differential effects of leadership types. Educational administration quarterly, 44(5), 635-674.