CULTIVATING EQUITY AND EXCELLENCE. Strategic Plan

Similar documents
DRAFT. Denver Plan Every Child Succeeds

Educational Leadership and Policy Studies Ritchie Program for School Leaders & Executive Leadership for Successful Schools (ELSS)

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

Generation Next Leadership Council SPECIAL SESSION

CALIFORNIA PRELIMINARY ADMINISTRATIVE CREDENTIAL EXAMINATION (CPACE)

Arkansas Teaching Standards

Executive Leadership for Successful Schools

North Carolina Professional Technology Facilitator Standards

Clark College. Strategic Plan { }

Multi-Year Communications Plan

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

Program Identity: The EdD in Educational Leadership advances critical inquiry for deliberate intentions.

TOOL KIT for RESIDENT EDUCATOR and MENT OR MOVES

OFF-CAMPUS MASTER S PROGRAMS M.Ed. in Educational Leadership. The Head, Hand, and Heart of School Leadership. Degree Requirements:

Mastery-Based Learning. Guidelines for Implementation June 3, 2015

MILLIKIN TEACHING STANDARDS

Instructional Technology Initiative Task Force: Vision, Mission, & Core Values

Colorado Professional Teaching Standards

NAAS - inacol Standards for Quality Online Programs

Superintendent Effectiveness Rubric*

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

TEACHER CERTIFICATION STUDY GUIDE INFORMATION ACCESS AND DELIVERY IN THE LIBRARY MEDIA PROGRAM

The School Counselor s Role in College and Career Readiness

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

The UCSC Master of Arts in Education and Teacher Credential Program Philosophy of the Master of Arts in Education/ Teacher Credential Program

Oregon Framework for Teacher and Administrator Evaluation and Support Systems

Main Street, 8th Floor Hartford, CT (860)

Position Statement on English Language Arts Education Connecticut State Board of Education December 3, 2008

~Empowering and Motivating for Today and Tomorrow~

WORLD S BEST WORKFORCE PLAN

Strategic Plan Every Student: College and Career Ready. Strong Students Strong Schools Strong Staff Strong System

The Massachusetts Tiered System of Support

Under the Start Your Search Now box, you may search by author, title and key words.

Crosswalk of the New Colorado Principal Standards (proposed by State Council on Educator Effectiveness) with the

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

Appendix: Looking Ahead: Ideas for Future Research

North Carolina School Library Media Coordinators Standards

The Standards for Leadership and Management: supporting leadership and management development December 2012

Supporting English Language Learners

Educational Leadership

Principal Practice Observation Tool

DOCTOR OF EDUCATION (ED.D.) DEGREE EDUCATIONAL TECHNOLOGY LEADERSHIP PROGRAM OVERVIEW. Program Objectives

QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS MassCore Updated October 16, 2015

Community Unit School District 303 s EIGHT STEPS College Readiness A Parent s Resource

The residency school counselor program does not prepare candidates to design, deliver, and

GUIDANCE. Rocky River City School District. Globally Competitive Exceptional Opportunites Caring Environment Successful Students

PACIFIC. Excelling in a. Changing Higher Education environment

Progressive Youth Leadership Development: Strengthening Opportunities for Older Youth in Philadelphia

Masters of Reading Information Booklet. College of Education

Redefining the 21st century classroom. Your solutions. partner

OUR MISSION. The mission of the USC Rossier School of Education is to improve learning in urban education locally, nationally and globally.

New York State Professional Development Standards (PDF/Word) New York State. Professional Development Standards. An Introduction

Setting the Standard for Evaluation and Data-Informed Decision Making

Educational Technology Department Updated Course Descriptions. July 1, 2015

*Performance Expectations, Elements and Indicators

Literacy Education. Master of Science in Education: Program Overview. Program Highlights

DEFIANCE COLLEGE Business Department Strategic Plan Mission Statement

HAMPTON UNIVERSITY ONLINE College of Education and Continuing Studies PhD in Educational Management

School Leadership Concentration

Leadership in public education

Master of Arts in Educational Administration, Principal Endorsement Program Course Sequence and Descriptions

High School STEM Full Implementation

BS Environmental Science ( )

Growing Tomorrow s Leaders Today Preparing Effective School Leaders in New York State

Revisioning Graduate Teacher Education in North Carolina Master of Arts in Elementary Education Appalachian State University

Additional Qualification Course Guideline Special Education, Specialist

Curriculum and Instruction

CPC Certified Professional CoaCh training Program

Share your teaching strategies and ideas that work well with kids.

Section 2: Program Summary Economics (CA): Secondary Major and Minor

Houston Arts Alliance. September 2012

P21 Framework Definitions

PRESERVICE. PROFESSIONAL STANDARDS FOR QUEENSLAND TEACHERS (graduate level): A guide for use with preservice teachers QUEENSLAND COLLEGE OF TEACHERS

North Carolina Professional Teaching Standards

Division of Undergraduate Education Strategic Plan Mission

Career and Technical Education Policy Proposal David W. Gordon, Superintendent Sacramento County Office of Education.

Korn Ferry Leadership Principles. Strengthening your organization's leadership base.

Comprehensive Plan. for. World Class Schools

Agenda for Reform. Summary Briefing December 14, 2009

Individual Learning Plans

***Draft * Draft * Draft * Draft * Draft*** International Society for Technology In Education (ISTE) Technology Coach Program Standards

Rubric for Evaluating North Carolina s School counselors

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

Educational Administration

Framework and Guidelines for Principal Preparation Programs

Utah Educational Leadership Standards, Performance Expectations and Indicators

Rubric for Evaluating North Carolina s Instructional Technology Facilitators

Instructional Management Plan

Design Specifications. Asset Inventory

Korn Ferry Senior Executive Sponsor. Building a stronger organization through sponsorship.

North Carolina New Schools Design Principle 1: Ready for College. Beginning Early Steps Growing Innovations New Paradigms

TEACH PLUS AGENDA FOR TEACHER PREPARATION REFORM

School Counseling Frameworks

SCHOOL LEADERSHIP COMPETENCIES

Executive Summary. Oregon City Service Learning Academy

Candidates will demonstrate ethical attitudes and behaviors.

Executive Summary. Saint Petersburg Collegiate High School. Mrs. Starla Rae Metz, Principal th Ave N Saint Petersburg, FL

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

Wythe County Public Schools Comprehensive Plan

Schools Uniting Neighborhoods: Community Schools Anchoring Local Change

Transcription:

CULTIVATING EQUITY AND EXCELLENCE 2015 2020 Strategic Plan

Dear Hartford Public Schools Community, A strategic plan gives organizations, and communities, permission to believe that great things are possible. It is a canvas for innovation, a blueprint for action, and a framework for accountability. It defines what we will continue to do, where we will course-correct, and where we must embrace change. It is the story of now. The Hartford Public Schools path to achieving great things lies somewhere between continuity and change. Any amount of change has to start with a change in attitude, a change in mindset. In this strategic plan, I propose five bold new changes in mindset that will lead to changes in practice: Personalized learning centered around each and every student Focus on leadership Collaboration among leaders and schools, not competition Commitment to equity Meaningful family and community partnership These five changes in mindset flow throughout the plan. They are anchored by the two big, bold goals I have emphasized since before I arrived in Hartford: every student thrives and every school is high performing. Putting students at the center of their learning and developing leaders to lead for learning are the drivers for achieving these bold goals, and for achieving a series of equity indicators that will measure progress and demonstrate success for ALL of our students, ALL of our schools, and ALL of us as a community. We propose three high leverage actions for putting students at the center of their learning so that every student thrives and three high leverage actions for developing leaders to lead for learning so that every school is highperforming. Our plan is deliberately focused on just these six high leverage actions. Focus conveys clear expectations, a standard for decision-making, and a basis for gauging success, while still leaving plenty of room for creative educators and partners to innovate. The ideas that comprise this plan emerged from a comprehensive engagement process that included students, teachers, administrators, families, community partners, and the Board of Education. Over and over again, we were reminded that to be successful in our work together we must, share a common understanding of our goals, set high expectations for ourselves, just like we do for our students, and measure both outcomes and progress along multiple dimensions. We believe this plan rises to that standard. I look forward to continuing to partner with you to bring new mindsets, bold goals, the right strategies, and focused implementation together to achieve great possibilities for all of our learners. Sincerely, Beth Schiavino-Narvaez, Ed.D. Superintendent of Schools Every student thrives and every school is high performing. 1

VISION HPS students will transform their world. MISSION Inspire and prepare ALL students to create their own success in and beyond school. GUIDING PRINCIPLES ALL STUDENTS: Have their own unique story. Have voices that are valued and elevated. Have the inherent wisdom and capacity to learn and achieve at a high level. Are supported to engage in rigorous content. Respond to deep, meaningful relationships with teachers, principals, counselors and coaches. Benefit from the support of informed and engaged families, caregivers, and community champions. Are active co-creators of our community s future growth and success. LEARNING IS STRONGEST WHEN: High expectations are developed and embraced by students, families, teachers, and community. It is differentiated based on specific needs, interests, strengths, learning styles, backgrounds, and aspirations of individual students. Teaching and systems are culturally responsive. It is connected to the real world. It encompasses the whole person. It occurs in a culture of commitment to adult learning. It is joyful. THE STORY OF NOW OUR 5 E S THEORY OF ACTION If we set and hold all students to high EXPECTATIONS If we ENGAGE all students in meaningful, differentiated ways that match their needs and meet their interests If we focus on the growth of EACH AND EVERY student and school Then, we will achieve EQUITABLE outcomes in which every student thrives and every school is high performing. If we EXPAND the capacity of our leaders, staff, and schools 2

HIGH SCHOOL CENTERS OF INNOVATION ACCELERATION AGENDA EQUITY INDICATORS 100% College Acceptance 90% Graduation Rate 100% Access to College & Career Readiness Opportunities Eliminate Suspensions through Restorative Justice Pass Algebra 1 with a C or better by the end of 9th Grade Each Student has a Success Plan & Connection to a Caring Adult 3rd Grade Reading Proficiency Good Attendance Habits NEW K-2 LITERACY CURRICULUM PUT STUDENTS AT THE CENTER OF THEIR LEARNING Student Success Plans Literacy & Language: Read, Write, Listen, Speak, Think, Lead Customized Experiences DEVELOP LEADERS TO LEAD FOR LEARNING Adult Learning & School Support Networks Family & Community Partnerships Disciplined Use of Data and Teams VISION HPS students will transform their world. THEORY OF ACTION MISSION Inspire and prepare ALL students to create their own success in and beyond school. If we set and hold all students to high EXPECTATIONS If we ENGAGE all students in meaningful, differentiated ways that match their needs and meet their interests If we focus on the growth of EACH AND EVERY student and school + + + If we EXPAND the capacity of our leaders, staff, and schools Then, we will achieve EQUITABLE outcomes in which every student thrives and every school is high performing 3

2020 EQUITY INDICATORS: WHERE ARE WE GOING? WHERE ARE WE NOW? 100% college acceptance All students should have the opportunity and skills to CHOOSE to go to college and succeed. A change in mindset to promote a community-wide expectation that our students will go to college will elevate all students, including those who ultimately for their own reasons choose not to attend college. Where we are now: 72.5% 60% 3rd grade reading at or above 50th percentile MAP Reading proficiently in 3rd grade is a key predictor of high school graduation. Formerly known as the third grade promise, this is a promise worth keeping. We are halfway there and will continue to work until we get all the way there to keep our promise to children and families. Where we are now: 35.5% 80% of students pass Algebra 1 with a C or better by the end of 9th grade Algebra 1 is a gatekeeper skill. Students need to master basic math to succeed in high school, college, and in many careers. They need the problem solving skills math teaches throughout their lives. Where we are now: 55% 90% graduation rate Some of our schools are already at or above a 4-year cohort graduation rate of 90%. It is an equity imperative to bring ALL of our schools and students to this rate and beyond. Where we are now: 71.5% 90% reduction in suspensions Our orientation will be to keep students in school and learning, unless there are safety concerns or significant disruptions to education. We will embrace restorative justice to use discipline to teach, not to exclude. Where we are now: 4,835 out-of-school suspensions 100% access to college and career readiness opportunities Advanced coursework, internship opportunities, and access to college entrance exams will be available at all of our schools. Where we are now: 75.92% Less than 10% chronic absenteeism This represents a 60% reduction over the next five years. Student success can only happen if students are in school. We MUST make progress in this area. Getting and keeping more students in school more often will require the resources of the entire community. Where we are now: 25.1% 100% of students have a Success Plan and a connection to a caring adult Starting in 6th grade, every student will develop a personalized plan addressing academics, transition to high school, social emotional goals, and post-high school options. This plan will evolve as the student advances through middle and high school. Each student s Success Plan will be embraced and monitored by at least one caring adult. Where we are now: 72%

STRATEGY 1: Put Students at the Center of Their Learning STRATEGIES IN ACTION: New HPS Designed K 2 Literacy Curriculum Comprehensive, studentcentered, balanced, grounded by the CT Core Standards. Integrates Next Generation Science Standards and C3 (College, Career, Civic) Social Studies Standards in content aligned topics. Meets developmental needs of early readers through in-depth foundational skills and balanced literacy approach. Culturally responsive literature and informational texts that increase in complexity. STRATEGIES IN ACTION: Centers of Innovation 3 Centers of Innovation partnerships, each with two or three high schools, pairing neighborhood and magnet schools together to cultivate innovation and collaboration. Each partnership has a different focus: blended learning, internships and individualized project-based learning, and a mastery-based diploma as a competencybased approach. Increase students responsibility for their own learning by ensuring student voice and choice. Students will thrive when teaching and learning is responsive to their individual interests, strengths, needs, learning styles, cultures, backgrounds, and aspirations. By understanding each student as an individual, we can provide the skills, knowledge, confidence, voice, and social emotional support that each individual student needs for self-agency and to achieve, contribute, and ultimately succeed as an adult in transforming her or his world. HIGH LEVERAGE ACTION 1: Fully Implement Student Success Plans Starting in 6th grade, through graduation. Ensures every student has a personalized pathway to success. Co-create with students, continuously evolve. Based on individual interests, strengths, needs, learning styles, cultures, backgrounds, and aspirations. Address academics, transition to high school, social emotional goals, and post-high school options. Each student s Success Plan will be embraced and monitored by at least one caring adult. HIGH LEVERAGE ACTION 2: Refocus on Literacy & Language Infuse literacy across every subject area, based on new standards. Create the foundation for helping students read, write, listen, speak, think, and lead. Develop critical thinking and problem solving skills. Teach students how to work, communicate, and collaborate with each other, skills they will need in the world of work. Build student voice, self-efficacy, self-reflection, and change agency skills. Focus on language acquisition skills that are necessary for all students, especially our English Language Learners. HIGH LEVERAGE ACTION 3: Propel Students Through Customized Experiences Assist students with finding, pursuing, and being ready to enter their own individual post-graduation path. Identify, co-create and implement differentiated learning experiences and opportunities in partnership with students, families. 5

Include capstone experiences, advanced coursework and internships, Universal Design for Learning to reach students with special needs within our classrooms, blended learning through our Middlebury Interactive Learning program for our English Language Learners, and school day opportunities for taking college entrance exams. Ensure that customized experiences are available to all students, at all schools, as a matter of equity. STRATEGY 2: Develop Leaders to Lead for Learning Student success depends on high performing schools, which are driven by high performing leaders. Leaders in our district will have a mindset of focusing their leadership on learning. We will liberally provide those leaders with the new learning and a wider array of internal and external resources they need to continuously support their focus on learning. HIGH LEVERAGE ACTION 1: Expand Adult Learning and School Support Networks Share effective school improvement practices among principals, teachers, parents, community leaders to improve student learning. Provide the structures and processes for collaborative adult learning, problem solving, sharing successes within and across schools, and managing partner relationships. Implement an instructional leadership and principal support framework to establish common language and understanding of instructional leadership, to provide support to those who coach principals, and to align resources and create conditions to meet the needs of principals so they can be instructional leaders. Embrace greater cultural responsiveness to understand biases and assumptions, value diversity and develop and implement practices, systems and policies necessary in cross-cultural settings. STRATEGIES IN ACTION: Acceleration Agenda Schools engage in continuous improvement with nested supports at the school, classroom, and student levels to boost performance and outcomes. Focused efforts and resources around improving instruction, leadership and student support practices. Customized, case-management approach to personalize solutions and implement turnaround best practices. Additional time for collaborative practice, dedicated student/ family support services, tailored professional learning opportunities within and outside of the district, dedicated technology resources and network support. HIGH LEVERAGE ACTION 2: Engage Families and Community in Meaningful Partnership Develop Learning-Focused Family and Community Partnerships (Schools, Families, Partners, Central Office), based on a shared understanding of the needs of students and schools, and collaborative implementation and monitoring. Positively impact achievement, attendance, and behavior. Strengthen and contribute to stronger schools and communities. Seek the shared commitment and investment of the entire community. Adopt the Dual Capacity-Building Framework to build capacity for engagement among families AND schools. Increase capacity and effectiveness of School Governance Councils as a cornerstone of engagement. Support Community Engagement Teams to address community challenges that impact students. 6

HIGH LEVERAGE ACTION 3: Broaden Our Use of Data and Teams Redefine instructional leadership so that leaders are leading high functioning teams that are guided by a shared vision, and engage in the planning, implementation and monitoring of school improvement through collaboration, networking, and inquiry to attend to student and adult learning needs. Elevate the importance and practice of collective commitment in high functioning teams no one person can do this work alone. Transform Central Office (menus of services, aligning resources to the needs of schools) to tackle the mismatch between school improvement demands and traditional central office operations by strategically building and aligning the practices, capacities and services of central office to be in direct support of school improvement efforts. Form data literacy and instructional leadership and student support teams. Engage in Cycles of Continuous Improvement through the Data Wise process: adopt and put in practice a consistent and continuous inquiry process that requires us to use various data to identify problems, to make decisions, to understand where we are succeeding and where we need to course correct and to learn from implementation. Disaggregate data by race/ethnicity, socio-economic status, residency, ELL and special education status to ensure that ALL students are making progress to achieve at high levels. CONDITIONS FOR SUCCESS: Change in mindset. Learner needs come first. A safe learning environment. A culture of trust that encourages taking risks. Operational excellence. Adequate and stable resources. City-wide commitment and collaboration. Stay FOCUSED on our goals. 7

Implementing for Equity As several participants in the planning process noted, the measure of a plan s success is in its implementation. Now that we have a plan that defines where we want to go and the strategies for how to get there, we turn to mobilizing everyone in the Hartford Public Schools community to do the work of getting us there. We will operationalize our plan in a way that teachers, administrators, parents, community partners, elected officials, friends, and students know exactly what to do and what resources they can access to implement the plan effectively at the system level, throughout our schools, and in the classroom. Our key implementation principle: Hartford Public Schools is committed to equity. We will differentiate and customize support for schools and students, just as we differentiate teaching and instruction. We will provide more to those schools and students who need more. We will match resources to the needs of schools. We will identify and remove subtle institutional biases that populate all contemporary organizational systems. Intensive Need- Based Supports Individualized plans for student and family support and enrichment. Powerful cycles of datadriven teaching and learning. More time for collaborative practice. Guaranteed High Quality Services for All Schools Need-Based Supports Increased professional learning (i.e., instructional practices, data literacy, coaching). Access to additional tools and instructional resources. Enhanced student support services. Coaching for teachers and for leaders. Access to a national network of schools for learning and problem solving. Optimized community partnerships. Strategic staffing Increased support from Central Office More attention and time 8

Reinventing the mindset and role of Central Office to support leadership is crucial to supporting the strategic plan s call for differentiated support that leads to equity. The emphasis will be on service: developing and providing access to a menu of tools for schools, and to provide perspective and guidance on how to use those tools. Reflecting this strategic plan in individual School Improvement Plans (SIPs) is fundamental. This is where educators will define their role in bringing Student Success Plans to life, understand their students strengths and needs, track student progress, engage more effectively with families and community partners, make better use of data, and participate in their own professional learning related to their instructional focus. We are ready to help all schools, parents, community partners answer the questions what is my responsibility and what are my opportunities? We will help schools build School Improvement Plans that naturally emerge from and align with the Strategic Plan. We will help parents partner with and hold schools accountable to the goals of the plan. We will help partners extend and enrich their services to better achieve our mutual desired outcomes. Together, as a community, we will act with a singular purpose: to enable every student to thrive and for every school to be high performing. Measuring Progress: How will we know schools and the system are high performing? The framework for monitoring our progress toward achieving this plan s goals includes four elements that rely on multiple sources of data. Student outcomes are the ultimate measure of success and correlate to our equity indicators. Leadership is the foundation for driving toward those goals at the system, school, and classroom levels through capacity building and how we change adult practice. Perceptions of students, families, staff, and partners, and implementation data indicate how effectively we are implementing strategies, how our stakeholders experience the changes and impact in culture and practice, and ultimately, how we are in fact leading for learning. 9

Acknowledgements The strategic planning process started with my listening tour when I arrived in the summer of 2014, the publication of a transition report that fall, and input from a 40 person multi-stakeholder Strategic Planning Advisory Team and from community focus groups throughout the winter and spring of 2015. Over the course of almost 12 months, we heard from 2,000 different people, each of whom had a role in shaping the plan that will guide our future. We are very grateful for the time, focus, and insight that so many people brought to this process, and to the children of Hartford who will create the future growth and success of our community.

960 Main Street, 8th Floor, Hartford CT www.hartfordschools.org