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SECC/TXCC Regional Institute State Education Agency Strategies for Promoting Equity: Promoting Reward, Recognition, and Career Advancement through the Opportunity Culture Initiative Atlanta, GA November 5, 2015
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On a scale of 1 to 10….. – Where do you think the quality of your teacher workforce is RIGHT NOW? (10 = all superstars) – How equitably do ALL students in your state have access to excellent teachers RIGHT NOW? (10 = equal access) 2 Reflections
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Policy Levers Educator Preparation and Certification Recruitment, Selection, and Hiring Teacher Assignment and Transfer Induction and Mentoring Evaluation and Professional Learning Compensation Educator Environment 3 Moving Towards Equity
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4 What is an Opportunity Culture? Link to Opportunity Culture Infographic
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Start 1 year behind… Catch up by having excellent teachers 2 years in a row Consistent Excellence Makes the Difference Start 2 years behind… Catch up by having excellent teachers 4 years in a row Start on grade level… Leap further ahead like “gifted” peers every year they have excellent teachers Catch up from behind… Can then leap ahead like “gifted” peers every year they have excellent teachers With excellent teachers, students who… 5 (Sanders and Rivers, 1996)
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Yes, if they: Extend the reach of excellent teachers and their teams to more students Pay teachers more for extending their reach Fund pay within regular budgets Provide protected in-school time and clarity about how to use it for planning, collaboration, and development Match authority and accountability to each person’s responsibilities Could New School Models Help? 6
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Opportunity Culture Principles Teams of teachers and school leaders must choose and tailor models to: 1.Reach more students with excellent teachers and their teams 2.Pay teachers more for extending their reach 3.Fund pay within regular budgets 4.Provide protected in-school time and clarity about how to use it for planning, collaboration, and development 5.Match authority and accountability to each person’s responsibilities 7
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Model: Multi-Classroom Leadership Based on Models for Extending the Reach of Excellent TeachersModels for Extending the Reach of Excellent Teachers The teacher-leader determines how students spend time and tailors teachers’ roles according to strengths. Accountable for the results of all students in her “pod,” she earns far more. Teachers with leadership skills both teach and lead teams of teachers & assistants, sharing strategies and best practices. These 3 teachers serve 100 students with an additional paraprofessional on the team. All teachers earn more, without bigger classes 8
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Model: Elementary Specialization Based on Models for Extending the Reach of Excellent TeachersModels for Extending the Reach of Excellent Teachers Specializing teachers instruct up to three times the students, earn more, and gain time for planning, development, and collaboration. Teammates take care of students the rest of the time and cover administrative paperwork. Excellent teachers specialize in high-priority subjects and the most crucial, challenging roles. 9
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Model: Time-Technology Swaps Based on Models for Extending the Reach of Excellent TeachersModels for Extending the Reach of Excellent Teachers Students spend part of the day engaged in age- and child-appropriate digital learning. Digital instruction and offline skills practice and projects—as an hour daily—replace enough teacher time that they can teach more students, plan more, and earn more. Teachers use face-to-face teaching time for higher-order learning and personalized follow-up. 10
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11 Model: Remote Teaching Based on Models for Extending the Reach of Excellent Teachers © Public Impact 2011Models for Extending the Reach of Excellent Teachers Schools without enough excellent teachers enlist accountable remote teachers down the street—or across the nation. Remote teachers use technology to provide live, but not in-person, instruction. On-site teammates manage administrative duties and keep students engaged.
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12 Career and Pay Progression
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Who is Extending Teachers’ Reach for More Pay? Districts and charters Starting in high-poverty schools Scaling up in diverse schools, too And now a state education agency! Implementation Sites 13
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Designated state grant for turnaround work – Creating Turnaround Educator Pipelines (CTEP) Schools eligible are: – Federally designated “Focus” or “Priority” – State designated “IR” or “FIR” – Part of a district that is designated “IR” – Given funding for transition costs, professional development (and travel and sub costs if needed), stipends of subs for design work Districts and ESCs also receive funding 14 Texas Education Agency and OC
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What support is needed? External assistance to facilitate change process, school design teams, and system redesign Funding for technology ramp up and infrastructure changes, as needed Which districts to support? Key: leader commitment and capacity to manage change. Various selection options, from hand picking early examples to mandating all districts to transition over time. 15 What Can You Do? Establish a transition fund to help districts transition to new staffing models.
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Barriers to reach extension Limits on class size or teacher-student ratios Seat time requirements Line of sight requirements Inability to create new teaching roles Barriers to sustainably- funded supplements Limits on reallocating state funding across budget categories 16 What Else Can You Do? Identify policy barriers that impede a district’s ability to extend the reach of excellent teachers and establish sustainably-funded career pathways.
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Designate turnaround or school improvement funds towards sustainable models that improve equitable access to excellent teachers Advocate for new career ladders for excellent teachers in lieu of performance based pay Work with university partners to include teacher-leadership and blended learning into teacher prep program curriculum 17 Additional Ideas
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Opportunity Culture: http://opportunityculture.org/opportunity- culture-toolkit/ Training Sessions: http://opportunityculture.org/multi-classroom- leader-training-sessions/ Dashboard: http://opportunityculture.org/data-dashboard/ 18 Online Resources
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19 Work Time Reflecting on all the equity initiatives you are working on in your state, how do these initiatives address the issues raised by the Opportunity Culture principles? Do these initiatives….. 1)Create clearly defined teacher leadership roles that allow teacher leaders to reach more students with their excellence? 2)Pay teacher leaders more, sustainably? 3)Provide time for teacher leaders to work effectively with their peers? 4)Make teacher leaders accountable for the performance of the students they reach?
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20 Closing Thoughts
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www.publicimpact.com 21 Thank You!
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