Transcript Document

Effective School Leadership
for
Reading First
Sharon Walpole
University of Delaware
Successful School Reform is …
 Specific
The program is sufficiently detailed.
 Powerful
The program produces results.
 Authoritative
 Consistent
 Stable
Leadership is involved and informed.
The program is uniformly implemented.
The program is not changed without reason.
Desimone, L. (2002). How can comprehensive school reform models be
successfully implemented? Review of Educational Research, 72,433–479.
The Effective RF Principal
Joseph Murphy, in Leadership for
Literacy: Research-Based Practice,
PreK-3 (2003, Corwin Press),
summarizes key qualities possessed
by principals of schools where
achievement is strong.
Setting Goals
The More-Effective Principal
The Less-Effective Principal
Has a more child-centered vision
Has a more adult-centered vision
Sets manageable, realistic goals
Favors broad goals
Sees student performance as central
Likes to see things run smoothly
Expresses goals in measurable terms
Expresses goals vaguely
Uses goals for planning
Refers rarely to goals
Asks parents & staff to help set goals
Limits goal setting input
Communicating Goals
The More-Effective Principal
The Less-Effective Principal
Periodically reviews & discusses
Infrequently discusses goals
Actively clarifies goals
Rarely clarifies goals
Has teachers who know goals
Has teachers unfamiliar with goals
Has teachers who see themselves
as good instructors
Has teachers who see themselves
as good managers & colleagues
Promoting Quality Instruction
The More-Effective Principal
The Less-Effective Principal
Insists on certain teaching strategies
Has less focus on methods
Favors interactive teaching
Is content with less interaction
Assigns teachers on the basis of
improving achievement
Assigns teachers bureaucratically
Supervising Instruction
The More-Effective Principal
The Less-Effective Principal
Relies little on formal observations
Values formal observations
Values informal visits and meetings
Rarely makes informal visits
Often reads about instruction
Seldom reads about instruction
Often provides specific feedback
Seldom provides specific feedback
Counsels and assists poor teachers
Less likely to confront poor teachers
Allocating Instructional Time
The More-Effective Principal
The Less-Effective Principal
Carefully sets time allocations
Less likely to set time allocations
Coordinates time allocations
across teachers
Less likely to have uniform schedule
Schedules more instructional and
fewer non-instructional activities
Less likely to favor instructional over
non-instructional activities
Insists on time for basics
Less likely to ensure their coverage
Protects uninterrupted block
Less likely to preserve block
Coordinating the Curriculum
The More-Effective Principal
The Less-Effective Principal
Is highly involved in curriculum
alignment
Is less involved in curriculum
alignment
Is concerned with the continuity
of curriculum from grade to grade
Tends not to focus on continuity
of curriculum from grade to grade
Monitoring Student Progress
The More-Effective Principal
The Less-Effective Principal
Supports testing programs
Views testing as a necessary evil
Provides test results to teachers
In a timely manner
Is less timely in reporting results
to teachers
Discusses results with groups and
individual teachers
Is less likely to discuss results
Encourages teachers to use test
results to plan instruction
Does not emphasize the connection
between testing and teaching
Setting Expectations
The More-Effective Principal
The Less-Effective Principal
Holds adults accountable for student
learning outcomes
Does not hold others accountable
Requires mastery of grade-level
skills for promotion to next grade
Is more likely to socially promote
students
Being Visible
The More-Effective Principal
The Less-Effective Principal
Is often out of the office
Spends large amounts of time in
the office
Makes an effort to move about
the campus and in and out of
classrooms
Is less mobile
Providing Incentives
The More-Effective Principal
Recognizes teachers with rewards
such as
 distributing leadership
The Less-Effective Principal
Seldom acknowledges teachers
 showing personal interest
 making public acknowledgements
 giving private praise
Ensures that student rewards are
frequent and they they go to a large
percentage of students
Is less concerned about student
rewards
Focuses rewards on achievement
Is less likely to reward achievement
Promoting PD
The More-Effective Principal
The Less-Effective Principal
Is more likely to be directly involved
in PD activities
Often avoids PD sessions
Follows up by ensuring that PD
methods are implemented
Is unlikely to follow up PD
Cobbles temporary coalitions
of teachers to help implement
Is not adept at working with
teacher groups to implement
Encourages professional dialogue
Is indifferent to dialogue
Helps teachers attend conferences
Resists conference attendance
Creating a Safe & Orderly
Learning Environment
The More-Effective Principal
The Less-Effective Principal
Works with teachers to develop
classroom management skills
Is less focused on management skills
Establishes a clear and consistent
disciplinary policy
Fails to set up a clear policy
Enforces discipline fairly and
consistently
May be inconsistent in enforcing
discipline
Involves teachers and students
In setting rules
Sets rules independently
Creating a Safe & Orderly
Learning Environment
The More-Effective Principal
The Less-Effective Principal
Confronts problems quickly and
forcefully
Is tentative and indecisive
Supports teachers with discipline
problems
Is unsympathetic to teachers with
discipline problems
Promoting Collaboration
The More-Effective Principal
The Less-Effective Principal
Encourages teamwork and
collaborative efforts
Allows teachers to function
independently
Gives faculty a formal role in
decision making
Excludes teachers from decision
making
Informally seeks teachers’ ideas
and opinions
Is indifferent to the ideas and
opinions of teachers
Securing Outside Resources
The More-Effective Principal
The Less-Effective Principal
Is skilled at influencing district
decision making about resources
Reacts to district decisions
Actively seeks resources
Is passive about finding resources
Assertively recruits the best
teachers (even from other schools)
Follows standard hiring
procedures
Allocates money based on goals
Makes allocations based on other
factors
Linking Home and School
The More-Effective Principal
The Less-Effective Principal
Communicates with parents on a
regular basis
Infrequently communicates with
parents
Involves parents in school activities
Is more likely to ignore parent
participation
Establishes programs that promote
parent-teacher interaction
Fails to facilitate parent-teacher
interaction
Promotes the school to
community groups
Does not participate in community
groups
Provides ways parents can learn
about school and help their children
Doesn’t
Which qualities of the principal
relate to reading achievement?
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Principal’s race
Principal’s sex
Number of years as a principal
Number of years as a classroom teacher
Knowledge about reading
– Kean et al. (1979), What Works in Reading?
(Federal Reserve Bank Study)
What can a Literacy Coach do to compensate
for a principal’s shortcomings?
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You don’t have to change
everything to change anything.