STRENGTHENING SCHOOL LEADERSHIP

Size: px
Start display at page:

Download "STRENGTHENING SCHOOL LEADERSHIP"

Transcription

1 STRENGTHENING SCHOOL LEADERSHIP by Tyler Whitmire A White Paper from Stand for Children Leadership Center June 2012

2 Why Principals Matter Effective principals are critical to developing and ensuring effective teaching, improving student achievement, and turning around low-performing schools. Researchers find that about 60 percent of a school s impact on student learning is attributable to educators: 25 percent to principals and 33 percent to teachers. 1 These figures actually understate the role of principals, because principals are responsible for hiring, developing, and retaining effective teachers. While an individual effective teacher can boost student learning in any given year, only the principal can ensure effective teaching in every classroom, across all grades. Unless students have multiple effective teachers in a row, nearly all the gains they make in one effective teacher s classroom are erased in two years with less-effective teachers. 2 While all schools need effective principals, strong principal leadership is particularly important for low-performing schools in need of rapid improvement and may be the deciding factor between success and failure. Researchers have not found a single example of a turnaround school without an effective principal at the helm. 3 Defining Effective Principals Principals succeed by focusing attention on three key areas: learning and teaching; creating an effective, aligned staff; and school culture. Undergirding these three areas must be strong personal leadership and systems that support the end goal of student achievement. 4 Effective principals focus on classroom learning and instruction as the core driver behind improved outcomes. They participate in designing curriculum and instruction and ensure that their teachers are using curricula, lesson plans, and materials that are aligned to standards and student achievement goals. Effective principals spend significant amounts of time in classrooms observing and providing feedback to educators. 5 They constantly collect and analyze data both at the school-wide level and with teachers individually or in teams to monitor school and student progress and drive improvement in instruction. Executing this type of instructional leadership requires principals to have deep instructional expertise, as well as the skills to translate that expertise into useful guidance and feedback for educators. Effective principals also build an effective and aligned teaching staff. They recruit and select top-notch candidates, evaluate staff against agreed-upon metrics, and provide them with coaching and professional development to build their skills and knowledge and grow as professionals and, when necessary, fire low-performing teachers. Effective principals also protect teachers from noise (non-teaching issues) to free them up to focus on teaching Stand for Children Leadership Center. All rights reserved. 2

3 Effective principals also recognize that high-performing teacher teams require not just effective individuals, but also the development of cohesive teams aligned around a common vision and goals. Ensuring an aligned teaching staff requires soliciting real input from teachers, recognizing the importance of personal relationships, and rewarding individual accomplishments. To assist in developing teachers and supporting effective instruction across the entire school, effective principals build strong leadership teams that share responsibility for instructional and culture leadership in the school. 7 Executing these responsibilities requires principals to possess skills in managing and developing adults. Finally, but just as importantly, effective principals build a strong school culture and mission based on high expectations of success for all students. All the staff must embody this culture and adopt behavioral expectations accordingly, and students and their families must internalize the culture. Strong principal leadership is essential to develop a clear mission and school culture, as well as to build buy-in to the mission and culture among staff, students, and families. 8 To build a strong culture and aligned staff, principals must demonstrate strong personal leadership that combines an uncompromising focus on school mission and results, and strong relationships with staff, students, and families. To foster relationships with teachers, students, and families, principals must communicate clearly and regularly with all stakeholders and demonstrate cultural competency. 9 Finally, strong principals must be flexible and resilient, innovating to adapt to changing circumstances and challenges. They must seek to continually improve their own approach and skills, and demonstrate self-awareness and the ability to respond constructively to dissent. 10 Effective principals also realign time, staffing, and other resources within the school to advance student achievement goals. They identify which systems need to change to allow staff and students to better reach goals, and implement those changes accordingly. 11 Beyond reallocating and aligning existing resources, principals also leverage additional resources through relationships with external partnerships, district leaders, and other stakeholders. Current Principal Effectiveness While there is little research quantifying principal effectiveness, the evidence that exists is not promising. A study found that 59 percent of superintendents didn t feel their principals had effective leadership skills, and 71 percent weren t happy with principals communication of vision and mission. 12 Although the nation s principal-preparation programs produce far more graduates than there are vacancies, many of these graduates have no intention of becoming principals, but simply want to gain a bump in pay by securing an administrative license leading to a dearth of qualified principal candidates. 13 Principals with the skills turnaround or improve 2012 Stand for Children Leadership Center. All rights reserved. 3

4 struggling schools are in particularly short supply in part because of the lackluster preparation programs and in part because many principals are not supported to grow and succeed once in the profession Three Major Factors in Principal Effectiveness To improve principal effectiveness and thus student achievement, districts and states need to make three major changes: overhaul principal-preparation programs, improve development for existing principals, and revamp the current practices and rules that impede principal autonomy. The following paragraphs explain the current need in each area, give examples of organizations or districts that are showing progress, and provide several recommendations for what states and districts can do to improve in these areas. 1. Principal Preparation Overhauling principal preparation is a critical step to building a cadre of principals prepared to improve student achievement. Traditional principal-preparation programs, which graduate 95 percent of principals, do not equip their graduates with the skills and knowledge to carry out all their responsibilities effectively. More than two-thirds of principals reported that typical leadership programs in graduate schools of education are out of touch with the realities of what it takes to run today s school districts. 16 Current preparation programs focus on inputs (number of hours in the classroom, number of credits, one exam that doesn t measure ability to manage others) rather than outputs (any information that indicates graduates are ready to lead a school). These programs have little in the way of entrance or exit criteria for principal candidates most do not require applicants to demonstrate any of the proficiencies described above as necessary attributes of effective school leaders. Principal-preparation coursework is not aligned with the skills principals need to succeed. An analysis of syllabi and coursework in principal-prep programs found that they failed to properly prepare principals in any of the following key competencies: managing for results, managing personnel, technical knowledge, external leadership, norms and values, managing classroom instruction, and leadership and school culture. 17 Neither are aspiring principals given sufficient opportunities to apply their learning in real-world schools and scenarios, a crucial step for adult learning. 18 States and universities exert relatively little quality control over the quality of principal preparation. They do not analyze the effectiveness of programs graduates or hold programs accountable for quality. Many programs themselves do not even track if their students become principals, much less how they do. An improved principal-preparation pipeline starts with strategic, aggressive recruitment and selection. While most districts wait for individuals to self-select as principals, high-performing districts recruit internally and externally. High-performing districts are also crystal clear on their definition of a strong principal candidate, so their entire recruitment staff knows what attributes, 2012 Stand for Children Leadership Center. All rights reserved. 4

5 knowledge, and skills principal candidates need to have or need to be able to rapidly develop. Recruitment must be matched with a rigorous selection process, including intensive candidate interviews. Rigorous principal-training programs look very different from the traditional, classroom-based preparation programs that currently train almost all school leaders. Rigorous programs focus on experiential learning and development based on the original definitions of what an effective principal has to look like. Course content focuses on personal leadership, systems and operations, teaching and learning, ensuring an aligned staff, and school culture (the areas in which principals must excel). Content must be applied and allow principals to develop their skills through simulations and role-playing. In addition, through district or school partnerships, future principals apprentice in a school for at least six months to practice their learning on the ground and to be mentored by an experienced principal. 19 Examples of Effective Principal Preparation Programs New Leaders, a nonprofit organization, is an example of a strong principal-preparation program. New Leaders focuses on recruiting and training high-quality principals for low-income districts, from New York to the Bay Area to Memphis and Charlotte. By implementing rigorous recruitment, selection, training, and support systems, New Leaders has seen results. An external evaluation found that students in elementary and middle schools led by a New Leaders-trained principal perform significantly better than students in a control school. These results exist only when the principal has been in the school for three or more years. 20 Gwinnett County Public Schools in Georgia has seen impressive student achievement gains in recent years, in part due to a sustained focus on principal effectiveness. 21 Gwinnett provides examples of how to improve the preparation and the ongoing development of principals. There is a district-wide acceptance of the importance of quality principals on student achievement, and an unrelenting focus on driving improvements in the major areas that lead to improved principal quality: improved principal recruitment and preparation, ongoing support, and autonomy. The best example of Gwinnett s commitment to leadership is its Quality-Plus Leader Academy Aspiring Principals Program. The academy, taught by senior administrators in the district, is aligned with the district s goals and needs and required for individuals planning to become principals in the district. The academy s residency model ensures that participants have real-life experience and mentoring prior to assuming control of a school, and each principal academy student, receives support from a team comprised of fellow administrators. 22 Once principals are in their jobs, Gwinnett also support two years of mentoring from fellow principals (who must have a proven track record of success and a commitment to growing others and to the vision and mission of Gwinnett PS). Gwinnett also hosts a yearly summer leadership academy for all principals and administrators to share new research and information, develop skills, and set goals for the coming year Stand for Children Leadership Center. All rights reserved. 5

6 State policies ultimately control who is in the principal pipeline, meaning that state policymakers must do more to increase the supply of high-quality principals. 24 To do so, they need to thoroughly review the existing principal-preparation programs in their state against state standards of principal excellence. States must invest in tracking each program s graduates to gain information on which programs are most effective. They must invest in qualified reviewers and a consistent evaluation process to examine each program s curriculum. Programs that do not meet goals should be shut down. Rather than focusing on what types of organizations operate principal-preparation programs i.e., universities, districts, or independent nonprofits states should allow a variety of organizations to prepare principals, but hold all providers accountable for their ability to produce high-quality graduates Principal Development Once principals are on the job, districts and charter management organizations must ensure ongoing support and comprehensive evaluations for all leaders. Currently, the support and development principals receive on the job are weak. A survey of almost 1,000 principals found that more than half of them believe they would be more effective if they had better ongoing development (specifically more facilitated networks of fellow principals as opposed to lectures). 26 Current principal evaluations also leave much room for improvement: Many principals are not evaluated regularly, and many evaluations are out-of-date, not aligned around a principal s core competencies, and do not include information on student learning. The nonprofit School Leaders Network builds networks of principals who, with a skilled facilitator, engage in action research, determine ways to improve outcomes at their schools, and hold each other mutually accountable for results. Eighty-six percent of principals participating in the SLN program showed improvements in student academic achievement. 27 On the evaluation side of development, principal evaluations should strive to measure the principal s impact on improving teaching and learning; building an aligned, effective staff; and fostering a healthy, equitable, and high-standard school culture. But measuring these components can be difficult. 28 One promising evaluation tool out of Vanderbilt University is the VAL-ED model, which includes six major components: high standards for student learning, rigorous curriculum, quality instruction, culture of learning and professional behavior, connections to external communities, and performance accountability. The evaluation tool lays out key processes to break down how the leader does (or doesn t) achieve those competencies. The tool has proven to accurately identify learning-centered leadership and accurately differentiate principals based on strength. 29 Illinois, Louisiana, Georgia, and other states are also experimenting with implementing improved evaluation systems that include measures of student progress. 30 As states move to adopt new teacher evaluation policies that take into account teachers impact on student learning, they must also ensure that they are putting in place principal evaluation policies based on the same principles Stand for Children Leadership Center. All rights reserved. 6

7 Districts and states can do several things to improve ongoing principal development. First, more districts need to implement professional development programs to ensure that principals receive relevant support and learning. These programs can be led by outside organizations, like School Leaders, or by the district itself, like in Gwinnett. Second, districts must collect and analyze data on how principals perform over time. Principals should know what is expected of them and how they measure up. 31 Third, districts and states must ensure that the standards used by administrators responsible for evaluating principals are aligned with and complement standards and competencies for principals. Districts must also ensure that the positions with responsibility for overseeing and evaluating principals are staffed with high-capacity individuals who understand the district s vision and goals for effective school leadership. Without supervisors who are aligned on core issues, principals cannot perform to the best of their ability. 32 Districts and principal administrators must also be willing to dismiss poor-performing principals, an act that is not possible in some districts because principals are unionized and receive tenure after three years on the job Autonomy For principals to fulfill their obligations to improve teaching and learning, hire and support an excellent teaching staff, and establish a healthy school culture, they must be empowered to make the basic school-based decisions. Currently, many principals lack the autonomy to make key decisions or to reallocate resources to improve student performance. In many districts, principals are forced to hire teachers they don t want, are forbidden from using student-achievement data in a formal teacher evaluation, and are basically unable to fire low-performing teachers. 34 Professional development programs are often run by the district, limiting principals ability to provide development opportunities matched to school goals and needs. 35 All of these factors limit principals ability to be successful. It follows then, that the principals most committed to being successful are forced to break the rules to get the outcomes they want for their kids Stand for Children Leadership Center. All rights reserved. 7

8 Giving Principals Autonomy to Lead Dramatic Improvement in Struggling Schools The Charlotte-Mecklenburg Schools district has taken steps to give principals greater support, flexibility, and autonomy. In 2008 the district implemented a strategic staffing initiative in their lowest-performing schools. It identified strong principals (who were eligible only if they had shown significant gains in student achievement in previous schools) and encouraged them to apply to lead one of the district s lowest-performing schools. Part of the offer included a raise, as well as autonomy over staffing and the flexibility to try new, instruction-related practices they think might work in their school. The principals were able to hire two or three fellow administrators and five proven teachers. They were supported by the district through informal principal-mentoring programs as well as a formal training program to teach them turnaround strategies and to give them context about their new school. The superintendent met with the principals every other month, and the principals felt supported in their (often difficult) choices. Early data shows the schools within this strategic staffing initiative are making significant improvements in student achievement. 36 To improve school autonomy and to enable principals to be successful, districts and states need to make several key changes. On the most basic level, effective principals need the autonomy to hire, evaluate, train, and fire their teaching staff. It s difficult to hold principals accountable when they do not have control of who works in the schools they lead. Moving to a more autonomous principal model will require changes in many districts teacher contracts, including changes to hiring, transfer, and dismissal provisions, as well as shifting district-level human resources policy and practices to better support principals. In some states, these changes may require changes to due process requirements or employment law. 37 Second, principals need autonomy over their schools staffing, time, program, and budget to be successful. Principals need to be able to reallocate resources to support instructional excellence. Districts must give principals greater control over schedule and resource allocation decisions, as well as a say in district policies that affect their goals. 38 On a more general level, administrators who oversee principals must truly support them, by securing the right kind of professional development opportunities and by freeing them up from non-crucial tasks (in the same way principals shield their teachers from noise ). District superintendents also need to make it clear that they will back their principals personnel and management decisions. 39 Lastly, states and districts must invest in data collection and evaluation to build the knowledge base about how to ensure effective school leadership in all three of these key areas. The research is very clear about the importance of principals, but the overall body of research on the subject 2012 Stand for Children Leadership Center. All rights reserved. 8

9 particularly related to policy interventions has many gaps. Districts, states, and CMOs striving to improve principal practices are often operating based on conjecture and preliminary data, rather than on robust evidence. By collecting more data (such as data on variations in principal effectiveness across preparation programs and districts), states, districts, and preparation programs can help to create a more robust knowledge base to support effective principal preparation and supervision to scale. 1 Robert Marzano, Brian McNulty, and Tim Waters, What 30 Years of Research Tells Us About the Effect of Leadership on Student Achievement (Denver, CO: Mid-Continent Regional Educational Lab, 2003). 2 T.K. Kane and D.O. Staigler, Estimating Teacher Impacts on Student Achievement: An Experimental Evaluation (Cambridge, MA: National Bureau of Economic Research, 2008). 3 Susan Gates, Laura Hamilton, Paul Heaton, and Francisco Martorell, Preliminary Findings from the New Leaders for New Schools Evaluation (Rand Corporation, 2010). 4 New Leaders, New Leaders Urban Excellence Framework (New York: New Leaders, 2011). 5 Kenneth Leithwood, Karen Louis, Stephen Anderson, and Kyla Wahlstrom, How Leadership Influences Student Learning (Minneapolis, MN, and Toronto: University of Minnesota and University of Toronto and Wallace Foundation, 2004). 6 Marzano, et al., New Leaders Urban Excellence Framework, Leithwood, et al., New Leaders Urban Excellence Framework, Marzano, et al., Leithwood, et al., S. Farkas, J. Johnson, et al., Trying to stay ahead of the game. Superintendents and principals talk about school leadership: A report from Public Agenda (New York: Public Agenda, 2001). 13 Gretchen Rhines Cheney and Jacquelyn Davis, Gateway to the Principalship: State Power to Improve the Quality of School Leaders (Washington, DC: Center for American Progress, 2011) Interview of Jacqueline Davis, November 21, Mariah Cone, Developing Principal Instructional leadership Through Collaborative Networking, University of California, Los Angeles, dissertation, S. Farkas, et al., Trying to stay ahead of the game ; Quoted in dissertation: Cone, Developing Principal Instructional Leadership Through Collaborative Networking. 17 Frederick Hess and Andrew Kelly, "Learning to Lead: What Gets Taught in Principal-Preparation Programs (Teachers College Record 109, no. 1, 2007) Cheney and Davis, Gateway to the Principalship. 19 Gretchen Rhines Cheney, Jacquelyn Davis, Kelly Garrett, and Jennifer Holleran, A New Approach to Principal Preparation: Innovative Programs Share Their Practices and Lessons Learned (Fort Worth, TX: Rainwater Leadership Alliance, 2010), Gates, et al., Preliminary Findings. 21 Information on Gwinnett performance available from the Broad Foundation: tbp%202010%20gwinnett%20fact%20sheet.pdf. 22 More information on the program available at 23 Ibid. 24 Sarah Shelton, Strong Leaders Strong Schools: 2010 School Leadership Laws (Washington, DC: Wallace Foundation, 2011) Cheney, et al., A New Approach. 26 National Center for Educational Statistics, Percentage of public school districts and private 2012 Stand for Children Leadership Center. All rights reserved. 9

10 schools that provided professional development opportunities for school or district administrators, by selected public school district and private school characteristics ( ). Quoted in Mariah Cone Dissertation New Leaders, Evaluating Principals: Balancing Accountability with Professional Growth (New York: New Leaders, 2010) For more information, see 30 Cheney, et al., A New Approach. 31 Ibid. 32 Steven Adamowski, Susan Bowles Therriault, Anthony P. Cavanna, The Autonomy Gap: Barriers to Effective School Leadership (Washington, DC: Thomas B. Fordham Institute, 2007) Cheney and Davis, Gateway to the Principalship. 34 Adamowski, et al., The Autonomy Gap. 35 To exemplify the general difficulty principals face in building an effective, cohesive team of professionals: The Portland, Oregon, union sent its teachers a note at the beginning of the school year explaining that, during the annual teacher-principal goal-setting meeting, the teacher is not required to write anything down. The principal should be the one physically writing the goals on paper. 36 Jonathan Travers and Barbara Christiansen, Strategic Staffing for Successful Schools: Breaking the Cycle of Failure in the Charlotte-Mecklenburg Schools (Washington, DC: Aspen Institute and ERS, April 2010). 37 Adamowski, et al., The Autonomy Gap. 38 Ibid 39 Ibid Stand for Children Leadership Center. All rights reserved. 10

11 ABOUT TYLER WHITMIRE Tyler Whitmire is currently developing and managing Stand for Children Leadership Center s new family engagement program: Stand University for Parents. She recently contributed a chapter on family engagement to the book The Achievable Dream: College Board Lessons on Creating Great Schools. ABOUT STAND FOR CHILDREN LEADERSHIP CENTER Stand for Children Leadership Center is a 501(c)(3) nonprofit that provides leadership development and training to everyday citizens. Our mission is to ensure that all children, regardless of their background, graduate from high school prepared for, and with access to, college and career training. To make that happen, we: Educate and empower parents, teachers, and community members to demand excellent public schools. Advocate for effective local, state and national education policies and investments. Ensure the policies and funding we advocate for reach classrooms and help students. Learn more at

Gwinnett County Public Schools, Ga.

Gwinnett County Public Schools, Ga. , Ga. District Profile*: Rank among U.S. school districts (by size): 14 Number of schools: 123 Number of students: 159,298 Number of teachers: 11,000 Per pupil expenditures**: $8,859 Superintendent: J.

More information

DRAFT. Denver Plan 2014. Every Child Succeeds

DRAFT. Denver Plan 2014. Every Child Succeeds Denver Plan 2014 Every Child Succeeds 100 80 Introduction Every child takes that first step into their first day of school with butterflies and talent, potential and dreams. It s the day that the door

More information

Playmakers: Build and lead great

Playmakers: Build and lead great Playmakers: HOW GREAT PRINCIPALS Build and lead great teams of teachers Executive summary November 2012 LEADERSHIP ON THE FIELD: THE DIFFERENCE A PRINCIPAL CAN MAKE On leadership It s getting the best

More information

A Blueprint for Transforming Philadelphia s Public Schools. Safe, high-quality schools. Fiscal sustainability.

A Blueprint for Transforming Philadelphia s Public Schools. Safe, high-quality schools. Fiscal sustainability. A Blueprint for Transforming Philadelphia s Public Schools Safe, high-quality schools. Fiscal sustainability. 1 Four Guiding Questions 1 What s the problem? 2 What can we do about it? 3 4 How long will

More information

Recruitment & Hiring. How a disciplined hiring process can help schools choose the right team.

Recruitment & Hiring. How a disciplined hiring process can help schools choose the right team. Recruitment & Hiring How a disciplined hiring process can help schools choose the right team. MARCH 2012 The first step is choosing the right team. Recruitment and hiring can bring in strong teachers and

More information

Gwinnett County Public Schools, Ga.

Gwinnett County Public Schools, Ga. Gwinnett County Public Schools, Ga. District Profile: Rank among U.S. school districts (by size): 15 Number of schools: 110 Number of students: 155,618 Number of teachers: 11,760 Budget: $1.59 billion

More information

JUST THE FACTS. Memphis, Tennessee

JUST THE FACTS. Memphis, Tennessee JUST THE FACTS Memphis, Tennessee The Institute for a Competitive Workforce (ICW) is a nonprofit, nonpartisan, 501(c)(3) affiliate of the U.S. Chamber of Commerce. ICW promotes the rigorous educational

More information

TEACHERS HELP KIDS LEARN.

TEACHERS HELP KIDS LEARN. TEACHERS HELP KIDS LEARN. BUT TEACHERS ALSO NEED HELP TO DO A GOOD JOB. THIS IS THE STORY OF A TEACHER WHO TRIES HARD BUT DOESN T GET THE HELP SHE NEEDS, AND HOW THAT HURTS HER KIDS. TEACHER QUALITY: WHAT

More information

Approved by the Virginia Board of Education on September 27, 2012. Virginia Department of Education P. O. Box 2120 Richmond, Virginia 23218-2120

Approved by the Virginia Board of Education on September 27, 2012. Virginia Department of Education P. O. Box 2120 Richmond, Virginia 23218-2120 Advancing Virginia's Leadership Agenda Guidance Document: Standards and Indicators for School Leaders and Documentation for the Principal of Distinction (Level II) Administration and Supervision Endorsement

More information

Your Career At CREC. Imagining Your Professional Future

Your Career At CREC. Imagining Your Professional Future Your Career At CREC Imagining Your Professional Future Welcome to CREC Welcome to the CREC family! CREC is made up of dreamers, builders, protectors, and doers. As a CREC employee, your work will be filled

More information

EXECUTIVE SUMMARY CREATING DISTRICT CONDITIONS THAT ENABLE ALL PRINCIPALS TO BE EFFECTIVE J U N E - 2014

EXECUTIVE SUMMARY CREATING DISTRICT CONDITIONS THAT ENABLE ALL PRINCIPALS TO BE EFFECTIVE J U N E - 2014 EXECUTIVE SUMMARY CREATING DISTRICT CONDITIONS THAT ENABLE ALL PRINCIPALS TO BE EFFECTIVE J U N E - 2014 Gina Ikemoto, Lori Taliaferro and Benjamin Fenton New Leaders Jacquelyn Davis George W. Bush Institute,

More information

The School Leadership Pipeline Series: Promising Leadership for School Turnarounds PART2. By Kim Knous Dolan

The School Leadership Pipeline Series: Promising Leadership for School Turnarounds PART2. By Kim Knous Dolan The School Leadership Pipeline Series: Promising Leadership for School Turnarounds PART2 By Kim Knous Dolan Table of Contents Recognizing the central role that school leadership plays in advancing student

More information

TEACH PLUS AGENDA FOR TEACHER PREPARATION REFORM

TEACH PLUS AGENDA FOR TEACHER PREPARATION REFORM TEACH PLUS AGENDA FOR TEACHER PREPARATION REFORM This agenda for teacher preparation reform was developed by a group of current and former Teach Plus Policy Fellows. We are public schools teachers in six

More information

Illinois Center for School Improvement Framework: Core Functions, Indicators, and Key Questions

Illinois Center for School Improvement Framework: Core Functions, Indicators, and Key Questions Framework: Core Functions, Indicators, and Key Questions The Core Functions and Indicators, which form the structure for the delivery and execution of (Illinois CSI) services, describe the big ideas or

More information

The Power of Effective Leadership in Schools

The Power of Effective Leadership in Schools The Power of Effective Leadership in Schools Rosalind Guerrie, M.ED., 2014 How important is leadership to the success of a school? Can a school leader make a significant difference in the performance of

More information

Job Title: Executive Director of Organizational and Professional Learning

Job Title: Executive Director of Organizational and Professional Learning Equal Opportunity Employer Job Description Job Title: Executive Director of Organizational and Professional Learning Reports to: Chief Academic Officer Department: Teaching and Learning Number of Days:

More information

Boosting Teacher Effectiveness and Student Achievement

Boosting Teacher Effectiveness and Student Achievement Teacher Leaders Boosting Teacher Effectiveness and Student Achievement What are Teacher Leaders and Teacher Leadership? Teacher leaders and teacher leadership are not new concepts. Some of us may remember

More information

Utah Educational Leadership Standards, Performance Expectations and Indicators

Utah Educational Leadership Standards, Performance Expectations and Indicators Utah Educational Leadership Standards, Performance Expectations and Indicators Standard 1: Visionary Leadership An educational leader promotes the success of every student by facilitating the development,

More information

100-Day Plan. A Report for the Boston School Committee By Dr. Tommy Chang, Superintendent of Schools. July 15

100-Day Plan. A Report for the Boston School Committee By Dr. Tommy Chang, Superintendent of Schools. July 15 July 15 2015 100-Day Plan A Report for the Boston School Committee By Dr. Tommy Chang, Superintendent of Schools Boston Public Schools, 2300 Washington Street, Boston, MA 02119 About this plan Over the

More information

Testimony of the New Jersey Principals & Supervisors Association on Proposed Changes to N.J.A.C.

Testimony of the New Jersey Principals & Supervisors Association on Proposed Changes to N.J.A.C. Testimony of the New Jersey Principals & Supervisors Association on Proposed Changes to N.J.A.C. 6A:9 (Certification of State District Chief School Administrators) May 4, 2011 Thank you for the opportunity

More information

2015 Javits Gifted and Talented Students Education Act Grants Project Abstracts from the U.S. Department of Education

2015 Javits Gifted and Talented Students Education Act Grants Project Abstracts from the U.S. Department of Education 2015 Javits Gifted and Talented Students Education Act Grants Project Abstracts from the U.S. Department of Education Statewide Grants (8) The Arizona Department of Education, $410,202. The overarching

More information

Frequently Asked Questions Contact us: [email protected]

Frequently Asked Questions Contact us: RAC@doe.state.nj.us Frequently Asked Questions Contact us: [email protected] 1 P a g e Contents Identification of a Priority, Focus, or Reward School... 4 Is a list of all Priority, Focus, and Reward Schools available to

More information

Submitted for Review and Approval Florida Department of Education 5/1/2012

Submitted for Review and Approval Florida Department of Education 5/1/2012 2012 INSERT DISTRICT NAME HERE SCHOOL LEADER EVALUATION SYSTEM Observation and Evaluation Forms and Procedures for Leadership Practice Effective July 1, 2012 A Comprehensive System for Professional Development

More information

Self-Assessment Duval County School System. Level 3. Level 3. Level 3. Level 4

Self-Assessment Duval County School System. Level 3. Level 3. Level 3. Level 4 Standard 1: Purpose and Direction 1.1 The system engages in a systematic, inclusive, and comprehensive process to review, revise, and communicate a system-wide propose for the student success. The system

More information

MARZANO SCHOOL LEADERSHIP EVALUATION MODEL

MARZANO SCHOOL LEADERSHIP EVALUATION MODEL TEACHER & LEADERSHIP EVALUATION MARZANO SCHOOL LEADERSHIP EVALUATION MODEL Prepared by Learning Sciences Marzano Center Center for Teacher and Leadership Evaluation April 2012 1 TEACHER & LEADERSHIP EVALUATION

More information

School Board Candidate Questionnaire

School Board Candidate Questionnaire School Board Candidate Questionnaire The National Chamber Foundation (NCF), a non-profit affiliate of the U.S. Chamber of Commerce, is dedicated to identifying and fostering public debate on emerging critical

More information

2014/15 Strategic Update for the Community

2014/15 Strategic Update for the Community An update to last year s Unparalleled Altitude To realize our goal of being a world-class district, we have several years of climbing to complete. This update is the climb for the 2014/15 school year.

More information

The 20 Non-Negotiable Characteristics of Higher Performing School Systems

The 20 Non-Negotiable Characteristics of Higher Performing School Systems The 20 Non-Negotiable Characteristics of Higher Performing School Systems Aligning District Practices to Support High-Quality Instruction Report Published: April 2011 Authored by: National Center for Educational

More information

Holland Elementary School Local Stakeholder Group Recommendations to the Commissioner Submitted January 6, 2014

Holland Elementary School Local Stakeholder Group Recommendations to the Commissioner Submitted January 6, 2014 Holland Elementary School Local Stakeholder Group Recommendations to the Commissioner Submitted January 6, 2014 Holland Elementary School was designated by Commissioner Chester as chronically underperforming

More information

Profile: Academy for Urban School Leadership (AUSL)

Profile: Academy for Urban School Leadership (AUSL) Profile: Academy for Urban School Leadership (AUSL) OVERVIEW The Academy for Urban School Leadership (AUSL) is both an Educational Management Organization focused on turnaround schools and a teachertraining

More information

nga paper Leading for Early Success: Building School Principals Capacity to Lead High-Quality Early Education

nga paper Leading for Early Success: Building School Principals Capacity to Lead High-Quality Early Education Leading for Early Success: Building School Principals Capacity to Lead High-Quality Early Education nga paper Executive Summary Decades of research find that effective school leadership and access to high-quality

More information

TEACHER PREPARATION:

TEACHER PREPARATION: The California State University TEACHER PREPARATION: Helping to Close the Achievement Gap www.calstate.edu Office of the Chancellor 401 Golden Shore Long Beach, CA 90802-4210 Partnership for Success The

More information

Getting an Education Schools Leaders Need Specialized Development

Getting an Education Schools Leaders Need Specialized Development Getting an Education Schools Leaders Need Specialized Development The unique elements in the public school setting in the United States demand a more customized approach to the development of its leaders.

More information

Broward County Public Schools

Broward County Public Schools District Profile*: Rank among U.S. school districts (by size)**: 6 Number of schools: 298 Number of students: 256,872 Number of teachers: 15,870 Per pupil expenditures***: $9,037 *2010/11 data, unless

More information

Rhode Island Department of Education 255 Westminster Street Providence, Rhode Island 02903

Rhode Island Department of Education 255 Westminster Street Providence, Rhode Island 02903 Standards for Educational Leadership in Rhode Island Rhode Island Department of Education 255 Westminster Street Providence, Rhode Island 02903 1 December, 2008 2 Table of Contents Workgroup Members...

More information

Setting the Standard for Evaluation and Data-Informed Decision Making

Setting the Standard for Evaluation and Data-Informed Decision Making Elev8 Chicago: Demonstrating the Power and Potential of Community Schools Communities across the country are grappling with the challenge of preparing young people for a bright future, in an era of extremely

More information

PERFORMANCE EXPECTATION 1: Vision, Mission, and Goals

PERFORMANCE EXPECTATION 1: Vision, Mission, and Goals PERFORMANCE EXPECTATION 1: Vision, Mission, and Goals PERFORMANCE EXPECTATION 1: Vision, Mission, and Goals Education leaders ensure the achievement of all students by guiding the development and implementation

More information

A Guide to Implementing Principal Performance Evaluation in Illinois

A Guide to Implementing Principal Performance Evaluation in Illinois A Guide to Implementing Principal Performance Evaluation in Illinois Prepared by the Illinois Principals Association & Illinois Association of School Administrators Why This Guide? Implementing a new principal

More information

Designing Career Ladder Programs for Teachers and Principals June 2013

Designing Career Ladder Programs for Teachers and Principals June 2013 Designing Career Ladder Programs for Teachers and Principals June 2013 EngageNY.org Webinar Topics Designing a career ladder program Examples of career ladder programs Getting started on a career ladder

More information

The School Leadership Pipeline Series: Meeting Colorado's Demand for Excellent Leaders PART1. By Kim Knous Dolan

The School Leadership Pipeline Series: Meeting Colorado's Demand for Excellent Leaders PART1. By Kim Knous Dolan The School Leadership Pipeline Series: Meeting Colorado's Demand for Excellent Leaders PART1 By Kim Knous Dolan Table of Contents Recognizing the central role that school leadership plays in advancing

More information

The Historic Opportunity to Get College Readiness Right: The Race to the Top Fund and Postsecondary Education

The Historic Opportunity to Get College Readiness Right: The Race to the Top Fund and Postsecondary Education The Historic Opportunity to Get College Readiness Right: The Race to the Top Fund and Postsecondary Education Passage of the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act (ARRA) and the creation of the Race to

More information

Leadership Development

Leadership Development Leadership Development Leadership Development The ultimate test of a firm s leadership strength comes from its overall capacity to produce leadership that delivers stakeholder confidence in future results.

More information

Bridging Theory and Practice: Lessons from Clinical Teacher Education programs in the U.S. Jesse Solomon Executive Director BPE

Bridging Theory and Practice: Lessons from Clinical Teacher Education programs in the U.S. Jesse Solomon Executive Director BPE Bridging Theory and Practice: Lessons from Clinical Teacher Education programs in the U.S. Jesse Solomon Executive Director BPE United States Context Teacher Education facing significant criticism Teach

More information

Section Three: Ohio Standards for Principals

Section Three: Ohio Standards for Principals Section Three: Ohio Standards for Principals 1 Principals help create a shared vision and clear goals for their schools and ensure continuous progress toward achieving the goals. Principals lead the process

More information

Sustaining the Race to the Top Reforms

Sustaining the Race to the Top Reforms Sustaining the Race to the Top Reforms Race to the Top (RTTT) presents states with a unique opportunity to accelerate their efforts to graduate all high school students prepared for college, careers and

More information

T3: Turnaround Teacher Teams

T3: Turnaround Teacher Teams T3: Turnaround Teacher Teams T3 Program History The T3 Initiative began in 2009 as a policy proposal from Teach Plus s first cohort of 16 Teaching Policy Fellows, all teachers in urban public schools in

More information

Hiawatha Academies School District #4170

Hiawatha Academies School District #4170 Hiawatha Academies School District #4170 World s Best Workforce Plan All Hiawatha Academies scholars will be empowered with the knowledge, character and leadership skills to graduate from college and serve

More information

HHS MENTORING PROGRAM. Partnering for Excellence MENTORING PROGRAM GUIDE

HHS MENTORING PROGRAM. Partnering for Excellence MENTORING PROGRAM GUIDE HHS MENTORING PROGRAM Partnering for Excellence MENTORING PROGRAM GUIDE November 17, 2008 TABLE OF CONTENTS Page I. VISION STATEMENT.... 2 II. MISSION STATEMENT. 2 III. INTRODUCTION...2 IV. PROGRAM OBJECTIVES.

More information

Core Qualities For Successful Early Childhood Education Programs. Overview

Core Qualities For Successful Early Childhood Education Programs. Overview Core Qualities For Successful Early Childhood Education Programs Overview The National Council of La Raza (NCLR) the largest national Hispanic civil rights and advocacy organization in the United States

More information

Terry College of Business Strategic Plan

Terry College of Business Strategic Plan Terry College of Business Strategic Plan The mission of the University of Georgia s Terry College of Business is the pursuit and dissemination of knowledge for the effective and ethical practice of business.

More information

Masters Comprehensive Exam and Rubric (Rev. July 17, 2014)

Masters Comprehensive Exam and Rubric (Rev. July 17, 2014) 1 Educational Leadership & Policy Studies Masters Comprehensive Exam and Rubric (Rev. July 17, 2014) The comprehensive exam is intended as a final assessment of a student s ability to integrate important

More information

Rubric for Evaluating North Carolina s School counselors

Rubric for Evaluating North Carolina s School counselors Rubric for Evaluating North Carolina s School counselors Rubric for Evaluating North Carolina s School Counselors Standard 1: school counselors demonstrate leadership, advocacy, and collaboration. Professional

More information

DRAFT For use in 2012-13 validation process only Rubric for Evaluating North Carolina s School counselors

DRAFT For use in 2012-13 validation process only Rubric for Evaluating North Carolina s School counselors Rubric for Evaluating North Carolina s School counselors Rubric for Evaluating North Carolina s School Counselors Standard 1: school counselors demonstrate leadership, advocacy, and collaboration. Professional

More information

1 REVISOR 8710.4925. C. show verification of completing a Board of Teaching preparation program

1 REVISOR 8710.4925. C. show verification of completing a Board of Teaching preparation program 1 REVISOR 8710.4925 8710.4925 READING LEADER. Subpart 1. Scope of practice. A reading leader is authorized to facilitate and provide site-based or districtwide leadership for kindergarten through grade

More information

SCIENCE, TECHNOLOGY, ENGINEERING & MATHEMATICS (STEM)

SCIENCE, TECHNOLOGY, ENGINEERING & MATHEMATICS (STEM) GENERAL POSITION PAPER STRENGTHENING PRE-COLLEGE SCIENCE, TECHNOLOGY, ENGINEERING & MATHEMATICS (STEM) EDUCATION IN THE U.S. PS14-23 SEPTEMBER 2014 GOVERNMENT RELATIONS 1828 L STREET NW, SUITE 810, WASHINGTON

More information

Metropolitan Nashville Public Schools Office of Innovation

Metropolitan Nashville Public Schools Office of Innovation Metropolitan Nashville Public Schools Office of Innovation Charter School Application Recommendation Report Rocketship Education Tennessee Submitted By Rocketship Education Tennessee Evaluation Team Art

More information

POSITION NARRATIVE Vice President of Policy & Strategy First 5 LA

POSITION NARRATIVE Vice President of Policy & Strategy First 5 LA BACKGROUND POSITION NARRATIVE Vice President of Policy & Strategy First 5 LA First 5 LA is a leading early childhood advocate organization created by California voters to invest Proposition 10 tobacco

More information

Highlights of Race to the Top State Efforts to Develop Effective Leaders for Turnaround Schools

Highlights of Race to the Top State Efforts to Develop Effective Leaders for Turnaround Schools Reform Support Network The Principal Pipeline Highlights of Race to the Top State Efforts to Develop Effective Leaders for Turnaround Schools The goal of this document is to provide a snapshot of some

More information

Possible Guiding Questions: Strategic Discussions between Supervising Administrators and Curriculum & Instruction Supervisors

Possible Guiding Questions: Strategic Discussions between Supervising Administrators and Curriculum & Instruction Supervisors Strategic Discussions between Supervising Administrators and Curriculum & Instruction Supervisors This document utilizes the components within the Framework for Leadership to provide possible guiding questions

More information

CALIFORNIA PRELIMINARY ADMINISTRATIVE CREDENTIAL EXAMINATION (CPACE)

CALIFORNIA PRELIMINARY ADMINISTRATIVE CREDENTIAL EXAMINATION (CPACE) Education Code section 44270.5 allows an examination alternative to the Administrative Services preparation program as long as the examination is aligned with the current Administrative Services Program

More information

BUILDING AND SUSTAINING TALENT. Creating Conditions in High-Poverty Schools That Support Effective Teaching and Learning

BUILDING AND SUSTAINING TALENT. Creating Conditions in High-Poverty Schools That Support Effective Teaching and Learning BUILDING AND SUSTAINING TALENT Creating Conditions in High-Poverty Schools That Support Effective Teaching and Learning EXECUTIVE SUMMARY The following is an excerpt from a 2012 Education Trust report.

More information

NORTH CAROLINA PROFESSIONAL SCHOOL SOCIAL WORK STANDARDS

NORTH CAROLINA PROFESSIONAL SCHOOL SOCIAL WORK STANDARDS NORTH CAROLINA PROFESSIONAL SCHOOL SOCIAL WORK STANDARDS Every public school student will graduate from high school globally competitive for work and postsecondary education and prepared for life in the

More information

Retaining High Performers. How recognition, rewards and growth opportunities can help schools keep their best teachers.

Retaining High Performers. How recognition, rewards and growth opportunities can help schools keep their best teachers. Retaining High Performers How recognition, rewards and growth opportunities can help schools keep their best teachers. MARCH 2012 For schools to thrive over time, they must retain top teachers and put

More information

Principles to Actions

Principles to Actions Principles to Actions Executive Summary In 1989 the National Council of Teachers of Mathematics (NCTM) launched the standards-based education movement in North America with the release of Curriculum and

More information

Generation Next Leadership Council SPECIAL SESSION

Generation Next Leadership Council SPECIAL SESSION Generation Next Leadership Council SPECIAL SESSION AGENDA June 11, 2014 9:00 9:45am Minneapolis Public Schools 1250 W. Broadway, Minneapolis Assembly Room S1-404, 1st Floor 9:00 AM Introduction R.T. Rybak

More information

A second year progress report on. Florida s Race to the Top

A second year progress report on. Florida s Race to the Top Florida s Race to the Top A second year progress report on Florida s Race to the Top January 2013 Florida s Race to the Top Florida has a strong history of reform, establishing a solid foundation that

More information

Superintendent Effectiveness Rubric*

Superintendent Effectiveness Rubric* Public Document 3 Purpose: Outlines the standards that are the foundation for the evaluation. Name of Superintendent: Date: Performance Rating Scale: Distinguished (4) Accomplished (3) standards for most

More information

North Carolina TEACHER. evaluation process. Public Schools of North Carolina State Board of Education Department of Public Instruction

North Carolina TEACHER. evaluation process. Public Schools of North Carolina State Board of Education Department of Public Instruction North Carolina TEACHER evaluation process Public Schools of North Carolina State Board of Education Department of Public Instruction Rubric for Evaluating North Carolina Teachers ( This form should be

More information

Public Education Leadership Project

Public Education Leadership Project Public Education Leadership Project Extending and Expanding the Impact into the Second Decade Copyright President & Fellows of Harvard College Executive Summary In 2003, Harvard Business School (HBS) and

More information

Agenda for Reform. Summary Briefing December 14, 2009

Agenda for Reform. Summary Briefing December 14, 2009 Summary Briefing December 14, 2009 The Vision The Board of Regents envisions a New York where all students are prepared for college, the global economy, 21 st century citizenship, and continued learning

More information

The North Carolina Principal Fellows Program: A Comprehensive Evaluation

The North Carolina Principal Fellows Program: A Comprehensive Evaluation The North Carolina Principal Fellows Program: A Comprehensive Evaluation In this policy brief, we report on our comprehensive evaluation of the North Carolina Principal Fellows program. We find that: (1)

More information

Leadership Through Strategic Discussions Between Supervising Administrator and Principals

Leadership Through Strategic Discussions Between Supervising Administrator and Principals Possible Guiding Questions Strategic Discussions Between Supervising Administrators and Principals This document utilizes the components within the Framework for Leadership to provide possible guiding

More information

Principal & Teacher Evaluation in Illinois: Past, Present & Future 10/18/2011 1

Principal & Teacher Evaluation in Illinois: Past, Present & Future 10/18/2011 1 Principal & Teacher Evaluation in Illinois: Past, Present & Future 10/18/2011 1 Principal Evaluation: Why does it matter? Leadership is second only to classroom instruction among all school-related factors

More information

Handbook of the Educational Leadership Program

Handbook of the Educational Leadership Program Handbook of the Educational Leadership Program Department of Education and Human Services College of Education Lehigh University 111 Research Drive Bethlehem, PA 18105 ([email protected] or 610/758-3250)

More information

Using Data to Improve Teacher Induction Programs

Using Data to Improve Teacher Induction Programs Summer 2002 No. 4 THE NEA FOUNDATION FOR THE IMPROVEMENT of EDUCATION Establishing High-Quality Professional Development Using Data to Improve Teacher Induction Programs Introduction: Teacher Retention

More information

NExT Common Metrics TTS Last updated January 27, 2014

NExT Common Metrics TTS Last updated January 27, 2014 2014 Transition to Teaching Survey Which communication method most prompted you to complete this survey today? (Select one only.) Email message(s) from Hezel Associates Mailed letter from Hezel Associates

More information

www.thinkcollegenow.org

www.thinkcollegenow.org A Small, Public, College-Prep Elementary School in the Oakland Unified School District Vision: All Think College Now students will have the tools to choose their life s path and desired occupation with

More information

AchieveMpls Strategic Plan FY 2014 FY 2016

AchieveMpls Strategic Plan FY 2014 FY 2016 AchieveMpls Strategic Plan FY 2014 FY 2016 Approved unanimously by the AchieveMpls Board of Directors September 12, 2013 I. Mission As the strategic nonprofit partner of the Minneapolis Public Schools,

More information

Partners in. Preparation. A Survey

Partners in. Preparation. A Survey Partners in : A Survey of Educators & Education Programs Teacher training and school systems must join together to fully prepare aspiring for their first day on the job. Louisiana students are just as

More information

Research over the past twenty

Research over the past twenty Human Capital Management: A New Approach for Districts David Sigler and Marla Ucelli Kashyap Developing human capital strengthening the talent level of the teaching workforce will require districts to

More information

Andrew M. Cole Senior Consultant to The Wallace Foundation

Andrew M. Cole Senior Consultant to The Wallace Foundation How Effective Principals Lead Change: Lessons From Great School Leaders Presentation to the 12 th convention of the International Confederation of Principals Helsinki, Finland Andrew M. Cole Senior Consultant

More information

Executive Leadership for Successful Schools

Executive Leadership for Successful Schools Program Contact: Susan Korach Email: [email protected] Morgridge Office of Admissions: [email protected] http://www.du.edu/education Executive Leadership for Successful Schools at DPS A Partnership between

More information