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Council of the Great City Schools Annual Fall Conference October 21, 2010 Developing and Measuring Principals’ Ability to Analyze Instruction and Lead for Instructional Improvement
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The Center for Educational Leadership (CEL) is dedicated to eliminating the achievement gap that continues to divide our nation’s children along the lines of race, class and language. CEL believes the nexus for eliminating the gap lies in the development of leadership capacity. More specifically, nurturing the will to act on behalf of the most underserved students while increasing leadership knowledge and skill to dramatically improve the quality of instruction. Mission
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CEL’s Theory of Action Three Foundational Ideas If students are not learning they are not being afforded powerful learning opportunities. If teachers are not offering students powerful learning opportunities then this is ultimately a leadership issue. High quality teaching is a very sophisticated endeavor – it is an issue of expertise.
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Developing the Leadership Expertise to Improve Instruction: A Two-Part Equation 1) Developing a common language and shared vision for high quality instruction – the better we see, the better we are able to lead. 2) Developing greater expertise in leading for instructional improvement – the better we lead, the better we are able to improve teaching practice and thus learning for all students.
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The Newark Public Schools Walk-Through Initiative 2008 – 2010 Dr. Clifford B. Janey, Superintendent Ms. Sadia White, Chief Academic Officer “ Changing Hearts and Minds to Value Education ”
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Context Newark Public Schools is the largest school district in New Jersey: - 72 schools (60 elementary; 12 high schools) - 40,000 students - Ethnic breakdown: 56% Black; 36% Hispanic; 7% White - 79% Free/Reduced Lunch
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District Challenges Informed by data: standardized test scores, graduation rate, drop-out rate, retention rate, and suspension rate Challenges: Build capacity, increase rigor and raise academic achievement levels for all students Ascertain the district’s instructional challenges and trends
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Challenges (continued) Establish a systemic approach to assessing the learning environment of each school Establish the level of support that each school needs Propel change process with sound research-based methodologies
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Intervention: Walk-Through Strategy 2008 - 2009 Means for: - Determining the levels of classroom rigor - Assessing curriculum implementation and best practices - Promoting teacher reflection and discussion - Strengthening learning communities - Determining professional development needs
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Conclusions 2008 - 2009 1,200 classrooms visited Effective Communication, which includes a focus on higher order thinking, was an area that was particularly weak across the district Identified a need for external support with walkthroughs and the need to use a research-based instructional framework
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Newark Public Schools 5D Assessment Overall Average Dimension Scores 115 Participants in total Emerging Novice Developing Expert
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115 Participants in total Newark Public Schools 5D Assessment Overall Average Sub-dimension Scores 1-1.5 = Novice 1.51-2.5 = Emerging 2.51-3.5 = Developing 3.51-4.0 = Expert
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CEL Walk-Through School Visit 2009 - 2010 (full day) Focus on central office instructional leaders 5D Framework anchored all walkthroughs Aimed at calibrating vision and language of high quality instruction and learning the 5D Framework Team led by CEL consultant; supported by a district team leader and alternate Participants came to consensus on next steps for supporting each school
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Conclusions 2009 - 2010 405 classrooms visited Greater calibration among central office instructional leaders Assessment for Student Learning and Curriculum & Pedagogy were the relative weaknesses in the district Student Engagement and Classroom Environment & Culture were the relative strengths
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5D Walkthrough Average Scores Districtwide Average Index Value for Each Dimension Districtwide 1 = Low; 2 = Medium; 3 = High
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Walk-Through Initiative Executive Summary 2009 – 2010 Recommendations Share “Results” with Exec. Staff, Principals, and the OAS Continue consultation (CEL) to focus on building capacity of the district’s instructional leaders Initial CEL Experience: -Building principals -High school department chairpersons -Elementary school-based coaches -Newark Teachers Union representatives Enhanced CEL Experience: -Offices of Academic Services members -Executive staff (Instructional)
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Seattle Public Schools Leading for Transformation 2009 - 2011 Dr. Maria Goodloe-Johnson, Superintendent Dr. Susan Enfield, Chief Academic Officer “Every Student Achieving, Everyone Accountable”
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Context Seattle Public Schools is the largest school district in Washington State: – 87 schools (55 elementary; 9 middle; 10 K-8; 14 high) – 47,000 students – Ethnic breakdown: 45% White; 21% Asian; 21% Black; 11% Latino; 2% Native American – 40% Free/Reduced Lunch – 13.4% Limited English – 12.3% Special Education
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Academic Vision
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1.School Performance Framework 2.Math 3.Early Learning 4.College and Career Readiness 5.Evaluations 6.Family Engagement 2010 - 11 District Priorities
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Our Challenges No shared, common language or vision for high quality instruction Lack of focus: too many tools and protocols with no coherent strategy No through-line of accountability from central office to building to classroom Lack of professional development to strengthen central office staff and principals’ instructional leadership practice
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Our Strategies 1.Superintendent’s Initiative for Leadership Development Investing in leaders at central office and at building level Building a professional learning community 2.Creating a Teaching & Learning Leadership Team (TLLT) 3.Focusing Executive Directors of Schools on supporting principals as instructional leaders 4.Organizing schools in geographical PreK-12 regions
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Our Strategies 5.Systemic Curriculum Alignment Framework Aligning courses to standards Identifying required professional development by grade level and content area
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Our Strategies (continued) 6.Performance Management : a Framework for School Improvement Segmenting schools based on absolute performance and growth Differentiating supports to schools based on need and achievement gaps
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Seattle Public Schools 5D Assessment Overall Average Dimension Scores 142 Participants in total Emerging Novice Developing Expert
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142 Participants in total Seattle Public Schools 5D Assessment Overall Average Sub-dimension Scores 1-1.5 = Novice 1.51-2.5 = Emerging 2.51-3.5 = Developing 3.51-4.0 = Expert
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A Two-Pronged, Multi-Year Approach Principals/Assistant PrincipalsCentral Office Leaders Year 1PLCs Calibrate vision of high quality instruction using: problems of practice 5D Framework Chief Academic Officer & Leadership Team Introduction to Central Office Transformation (COT) Calibrate vision of high quality instruction using: problems of practice 5D Framework Year 2PLCs Continue to calibrate vision of high quality instruction Push into leading for common instructional practice Chief Academic Officer & Leadership Team COT focused on: instructional improvement principal instructional leadership
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Principals/Assistant Principals Work in Professional Learning Community (PLC’s) Based on Problems of Practice 5D Framework as Guide for Calibrated Walkthroughs Move from Common Vision to Leading for Common Practice
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All Participating Districts Cumulative Overall Average – Dimension Scores 1,797 participants; 29 school districts Emerging Novice Developing Expert
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All Participating Districts Cumulative Overall Average – Sub-Dimension Scores 1,797 participants; 29 school districts 1-1.5 = Novice 1.51-2.5 = Emerging 2.51-3.5 = Developing 3.51-4.0 = Expert
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What We Are Learning Efforts must include Central Office and School-Based Instructional Leaders Central Office rationale, vision and voice is essential Calibrating vision and language in conjunction with leadership work is essential Don’t reinvent the wheel (or framework) – use a research-based tool that is already available Be intentional and strategic in utilizing the expertise of external partners to build internal capacity
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Questions for Panel
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www.k-12leadership.org
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