Pathways to Effective Schools Ellen Goldring Department of Leadership, Policy & Organizations Peabody College, Vanderbilt University.

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Transcript Pathways to Effective Schools Ellen Goldring Department of Leadership, Policy & Organizations Peabody College, Vanderbilt University.

Pathways to Effective Schools
Ellen Goldring
Department of Leadership, Policy & Organizations
Peabody College, Vanderbilt University
How to Approach School
Improvement?
Agenda
•
•
•
•
What are effective school correlates?
What are specific examples?
Why are they important?
What can I do about them as a school
leader?
Correlates of Effective Schools
Safe and Orderly
Environment
Home-School
Relations
Climate of High
Expectations
Clear and Focused
Mission
Frequent
Monitoring
of Student
Learning
Progress
Instructional
Leadership
Opportunity to
Learn
Time on Task
The Journey Towards Effective
Schools
•
1960’s era of social inequality
– Students of color and children in poverty
– Wide gap in educational attainment and drop
out
• Coleman report: Equality of Educational
Opportunity
–
–
School resources and conditions do not
explain the gap
Family circumstances strongest predictor of
student achievement
Response to Coleman: What does
explain student achievement?
• Open the window (black box) into
schooling
– School processes and features that consistently
lead to high student achievement for students
at –risk
– Compared high achieving and low achieving
schools with students from similar family
backgrounds: outliers
• THE RESULT: Effective School Correlates
or Pathways to School Improvement
School Improvement and
Effectiveness Correlates
• Factors or correlates work together
• School is the unit of improvement: schools
matter!
• Continue to evolve to meet current context,
expectations, and needs of students
• The principal can influence all the factors
• Research has continued to inform practices
School Effect?
• Classroom?
• Teacher?
• The Student?
• Consistent-Coherent-Planed
• School-wide priorities, culture, practices,
procedures, programs –everywhere, everyplace
everyone
• NOT pockets of excellence
Correlates of Effective Schools
Safe and Orderly
Environment
Home-School
Relations
Climate of High
Expectations
Clear and Focused
Mission
Frequent
Monitoring
of Student
Learning
Progress
Instructional
Leadership
Opportunity to
Learn
Time on Task
1. Clear and Focused
Mission
• Original: Articulated, common mission; Focus on
academic mission
• Current: Clearly guides and drives actions and
decisions
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
High standards for all students
Rigorous learning goals
Accountability
Involvement of the whole school community
Measurable goals for student learning and academic progress.
Guides the daily practices and decisions of all stakeholders
Unity and clarity of purpose
Learning focus for all –teachers too
Example of Clear and Focused
Mission
Respect All, Value All
2. Safe and Orderly Environment
(Supportive Culture)
• Initial: Discipline, physical and emotional safety,
school climate that allowed learning—absence of
behaviors not-conducive to learning
• Current: Culture of support and responsiveness
– Collaborative cultures, community of learners
– Professional communities focused on student learning,
de-privatized practice and reflective dialogue
– Effective professional communities are deeply
rooted in the academic and social learning goals
of the schools
Examples of Safe and Orderly
Climate (Supportive Culture)
1. Learning Communities: Question and challenge
teaching practices
– Respect but question creative contributions and
passions of individuals; Learn from each other
2. Positive Behavior Support
3. Climate of High
Expectations
• Original: All students can learn and reach mastery; staff
have sense of efficacy that they can help all students reach
mastery (focus on basic skills); focus on beliefs and
attitudes
• Current: Urgency for learning for all
– Focus on actions and strategies (differentiated
instruction, flexible grouping and reteaching)
– Rigorous academic content standards
• Provide depth and specificity
• High cognitive demand
• Coherence and alignment across grade levels and
subjects
• Coordination
• Do not adopt any program or idea—focus on
strategies and interventions that connect and are
consistent
Examples: High Expectations
1.Rigourous, Visible Academic Standards
Analyze problems by identifying relationships, telling relevant from
irrelevant information, identifying missing information, sequencing
and prioritizing information, and observing patterns.
Example: Solve the problem: “Develop a method for finding all the
prime numbers up to 100.” Notice that any numbers that 4, 6, 8, …
divide into also divide exactly by 2, and so you do not need to test 4, 6,
8, …(Grade 6; Mathematics-Indiana)
2. Standards for All Students
Examples: Teacher High
Expectations
Teacher /
Team
Member
Annual Professional
Development Goals
Focus of PD Activity
Smith
1.
2.
3.
___ Linked to Student Learning Outcomes
___ Job-embedded
___ On-going and Sustained, with Follow-up
___ Incorporates Authentic, Active Learning
___ Includes Subject-Matter Content
___ Encourages Reflection
___ Incorporates Collaboration w/Colleagues
___ Measures Impact on Student Achievement
Jones
1.
2.
3.
___ Linked to Student Learning Outcomes
___ Job-embedded
___ On-going and Sustained, with Follow-up
___ Incorporates Authentic, Active Learning
___ Includes Subject-Matter Content
___ Encourages Reflection
___ Incorporates Collaboration w/Colleagues
___ Measures Impact on Student Achievement
Correlates of Effective PD
4. Instructional Leadership
• Original: Focus on improving instruction rather
than management; strong principal leadership;
focus on student achievement as the mission
• Current: Learning–centered leadership
–
–
–
–
Distributed leadership
Support teacher professional development
Data –based decisions
Culture of collaboration
Example: Instructional Leadership
Strategic
Goal
1. Goal #1
Strategy
1.1 What is
your idea for
reaching your
goal?
Action Step
1.1.A Action
required while
implementing
Strategy #1.1
Responsibility
Who’s going to
accomplish the
action?
Timeline
When will
he/she start and
accomplish the
action?
Resources
Needed
Measuremen
t of Goal
Attainment
What
resources will
the person
need?
How will you
measure if
you are
reaching your
goal? At what
intervals?
Examples: Instructional Leadership
Percentage of Rosemont School Students Scoring at Different
Proficiency Levels in Mathematics,
2004-2005 through 2006-2007
100%
90%
80%
Percentage
70%
Level IV
60%
Level III
50%
Level II
40%
Level I
30%
20%
10%
0%
2004-2005
2005-2006
School Year
2006-2007
5. Opportunity to Learn and
Time on Task
• Original: Focus and protect instructional time;
– Give all students opportunity to learn
• Current: Quality Instruction and Time
– Support teachers and provide feedback to improve
instruction
– Ensure all students have access to high quality
instruction
– Extended and ongoing learning opportunities (after
school, Saturday, tutoring)
Examples: Opportunity to Learn
High Quality Teachers
High Quality Curriculum
High Quality Instruction
6. Frequent Monitoring
of Student Progress
• Original: Teachers monitor student learning
• Current: ACCOUNTABILITY for ALL
STUDENTS-focus on outcomes
There is individual and collective
responsibility among leadership, faculty, and
students for achieving the rigorous student
academic and social learning goals.
Examples: Frequent Monitoring of
Student Learning
• Multiple types and sources of data : teacher
record-keeping, formative assessments, student
work products, criterion-referenced tests, and
standardized measures of student performance.
• Direct observations in classrooms.
• Disaggregate information on the important
conditions and outcomes of schooling (e.g.,
program placement of students, test results) by
relevant characteristics of students (e.g., gender,
race, social class).
• Tight alignment between local school-based and
external assessments
Examples: Frequent Monitoring
Formative Assessment
System Vision
• To validate and ensure that the goals of instruction are
being achieved and to improve instruction when necessary
• To monitor our students’ learning and our own teaching
practices
• To identify student’s individual growth, classroom
instructional outcomes, school collaborative planning
needs, and district professional development focus
• To promote consistency and alignment of the district
curricula as well as the state blueprint
Examples: Actions of Frequent
Monitoring
• Identify individual students who need remedial assistance,
• Tailor instruction to individual students’ needs, identify
and correct gaps in the curriculum,
• Improve or increase the involvement of parents in student
learning,
• Assign or reassign students to classes or groups.
• Use data to help teachers identify areas where they need to
strengthen content knowledge or teaching skills. In other
words, monitoring is used to focus professional
development.
• What do students need to know and be able to do: (what)
• How will we know when they know it: Formative
assessments and student work
7. Home-School Relations
• Original: Parents support the school and help achieve
the mission
• Current: Expanded role for parents, families and the
community
–
–
–
–
Authentic engagement and involvement
Focus on academic and learning
Open and increased two-way communication
Collaboration and partnerships
(Center on Family, School, and Community Partnerships,
John Hopkins University)
Parenting
Assist families with parenting skills
and setting home conditions to
support children as students. Also,
assist schools to better understand
families.
Examples: Home-School Relationships
Communicating
Conduct effective communications
from school-to-home and from hometo-school about school programs and
student progress.
Volunteering
Organize volunteers and audiences to
support the school and students.
Provide volunteer opportunities in
various locations and at various
times.
Learning at Home
Involve families with their children
on homework and other curriculumrelated activities and decisions.
Decision Making
Include families as participants in
school decisions, and develop parent
leaders and representatives.
Collaborating with the Community
Coordinate resources and services from
the community for families, students,
and the school, and provide services to
Why?
• Each correlate is a pathway for school
improvement: together they are powerful forces
• Schools can directly influence and change each
of the correlates
• Powerful leavers for change
• Leaders are key to facilitating this change
• Impact Student achievement and learning
How?
• Shared understanding and learning: Professional
learning community
• Collect Data: Where are we? How are we doing?
• School improvement processes and strategic
planning around each
• NOT A CHRISTMAS TREE APPROACH
• Pervasive practices
• Consistent, unwavering focus
For Each Correlate:
First Step: Learning to Identify and
Recognize
The Activity:
Going on an Archeological
Dig!