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Published byElisabeth Watson Modified over 9 years ago
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1 What School Boards Can Learn From School District Leadership That Works WSSDA – November 2007 Rick Maloney, University Place SD & Director Area 3
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2 Board Response School Board Perspective: Nature of Boards Nature of Board-Supt Relationship Advice for Boards Findings…’translated’ Further Research?
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3 The Nature of Boards How they ‘speak’ How they ‘act’ A board’s composition Elected as individuals Whole is different…it has a ‘life’ of its own
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4 It’s alive! School Board
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5 The Nature of Boards A board is ‘alive’ only when it meets …between meetings… A board ‘acts’ thru others A board ‘speaks’ in writing Policies…Budget…Strategic plan…Annual goals
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6 The Nature of the Board-Supt Relationship Superintendent acts thru the Board School District School CEO Board Board acts thru the Superintendent School Board School District School CEO School District School CEO Superintendent is independent of the Board Board
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7 Advice for Boards “Lead, Follow, or Get out of the way!” - Thomas Paine Effective leaders employ each of the three The trick is to know when to do which
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8 McREL Findings I. I. “District-level leadership matters” II. II. “Effective superintendents focus their efforts on creating goal-oriented districts” III. III. “Superintendent tenure is positively correlated with student achievement” Find and Replace: ‘superintendent’ … ‘school board’
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9 McREL Findings I. I. “District-level leadership matters” Implies: Superintendent leadership matters Implies: School board leadership matters II. II. “Effective superintendents focus their efforts on creating goal-oriented districts” III. III. “Superintendent tenure is positively correlated with student achievement”
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10 McREL Findings I. I. “District-level leadership matters” II. II. “Effective superintendents focus their efforts on creating goal-oriented districts” III. III. “Superintendent tenure is positively correlated with student achievement”
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11 McREL Findings I. I. “District-level leadership matters” II. II. “Effective superintendents focus their efforts on creating goal-oriented districts” 1. 1. Collaborative Goal-Setting 2. 2. Non-negotiable goals for achievement/instr. 3. 3. Board alignment/support of district goals 4. 4. Monitor goals for achievement/instruction 5. 5. Use of resources to support ach/instr goals 6. 6. “Defined autonomy”
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12 McREL Findings I. I. “District-level leadership matters” II. II. “Effective school boards focus their efforts on creating goal-oriented districts” III. III. “Superintendent tenure is positively correlated with student achievement”
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13 1. Collaborative Goal-Setting “Effective superintendents include all relevant stakeholders, including central office staff, building-level administrators, and board members, in establishing goals for their districts.” Creating goal-oriented districts
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14 1. Collaborative Goal-Setting Effective school boards include all relevant stakeholders, including superintendent, staff, and community, in establishing goals for their districts. Creating goal-oriented districts
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15 2. Non-negotiable Goals for Achievement and Instruction “Effective superintendents ensure that the collaborative goal-setting process results in non-negotiable goals… (Ends)…specific achievement targets for schools and students (Means)…consistent use of research-based instructional strategies for all classrooms Creating goal-oriented districts
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16 2. Non-negotiable Goals for Achievement and Instruction “Effective school boards ensure that the collaborative goal-setting process results in non-negotiable goals… (Ends)…specific achievement targets for the district (Means)…consistent use of research-based instructional strategies for the district Creating goal-oriented districts
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17 3. Board Alignment and Support of District Goals Board Work Superintendent Work Goals for Achieve- ment and Instruc- tion
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18 3. Board Alignment and Support of District Goals “The local board of education is aligned with and supportive of the non-negotiable goals for achievement and instruction. “…the primary focus of the district’s efforts…” “…no other initiatives detract attention…” This is more likely if the board… ‘Owns’ district goals Doesn’t just review them Creating goal-oriented districts Author~Publisher Author~Fan Club
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19 4. Monitoring Goals for Achievement and Instruction “Effective superintendents continually monitor district progress toward achievement and instructional goals to ensure that these goals remain the driving force behind a district’s actions.” Creating goal-oriented districts
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20 4. Monitoring Goals for Achievement and Instruction “Effective school boards continually monitor district progress toward achievement and instructional goals to ensure that these goals remain the driving force behind a district’s actions.” Their meetings (where boards are alive) spend considerable board time on this monitoring function Creating goal-oriented districts
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21 5. Use of Resources to Support Achievement and Instruction Goals “Effective superintendents ensure that the necessary resources, including time, money, personnel, and materials, are allocated to accomplish the district’s goals.” Creating goal-oriented districts
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22 5. Use of Resources to Support Achievement and Instruction Goals “Effective school boards ensure that the necessary resources, including time, money, personnel, and materials, are allocated to accomplish the district’s goals.” They do so by speaking thru policy/budget… directing goal-directed allocation of resources They do so by acting…spending board time monitoring allocation and use of resources Creating goal-oriented districts
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23 6. Defined Autonomy Continuum of Autonomy The district sets non-negotiable goals Autonomy in how to meet goals Sets parameters, but does not overprescribe Defined autonomy = “bounded freedom” to act Total District Control Total Building Autonomy Creating goal-oriented districts
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24 6. Defined Autonomy “Effective superintendents may provide principals with ‘defined autonomy’… …clear, non-negotiable goals… …yet provide school leadership teams with… …authority for determining how to meet those goals.” Creating goal-oriented districts
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25 6. Defined Autonomy “Effective school boards may provide superintendents with ‘defined autonomy’… …clear, non-negotiable goals… …yet provide district leadership teams with… …authority for determining how to meet those goals.” Creating goal-oriented districts
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26 McREL Findings I. I. “District-level leadership matters” II. II. “Effective superintendents focus their efforts on creating goal-oriented districts” III. III. “Superintendent tenure is positively correlated with student achievement”
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27 McREL Findings I. I. “District-level leadership matters” II. II. “Effective superintendents focus their efforts on creating goal-oriented districts” III. III. “Superintendent tenure is positively correlated with student achievement” Stability is + correlated w/achievement Can be directly related to board action
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28 McREL Findings - Modified I. I. “School board leadership matters” II. II. “Effective school boards focus their efforts on creating goal-oriented districts” III. III. “Superintendent tenure is positively correlated with student achievement”
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29 Advice for Boards Lead What boards can do – leadership role [e.g. – monitor goal achievement] Follow What boards can do – support role [e.g. – allocate $$ on district goals] Get out of the way What boards can avoid doing [e.g. – inciting political instability]
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30 General Conclusions Inferences/assumptions… Board leadership matters Boards are separate from, yet work thru, their superintendents Board leadership is not defined merely by what the superintendent does Board effectiveness is defined by whether or not district leadership is effective Questions for further research…
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31 Some Research Questions 1. 1. Does board leadership matter? 2. 2. On what do effective boards focus their efforts? On what do effective school boards focus their superintendents’ efforts? How do effective school boards focus their superintendents’ efforts? 3. 3. What ‘board effects’ [on supt leadership] correlate with student achievement? 4. 4. Is there a relationship between defined autonomy of the superintendent and student achievement?
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