dell foundation - denver case study
TRANSCRIPT
-
8/7/2019 Dell Foundation - Denver Case Study
1/16
DenverPublicSchoolsThe Impact of School-BasedPerformance Managementon Student Achievement
-
8/7/2019 Dell Foundation - Denver Case Study
2/16Denver Public Schools / Michael & Susan Dell Foundation
Performance management gives educators insight into what is working
to improve student performance and what is not, including relevant,
timely information at the district, school, classroom, and student levels
A school-based performance management culture is created by rst having strong leadershi
dedicated to positively affecting student achievement. Schools must then put timely,
relevant, and actionable data and useful tools and reports into the hands of well-trained
teachers and principals for use in a regular, structured process of data analysis, goal setting,
planning differentiated instruction and interventions, and follow-up with students. But
performance management is about more than just data and information. Its about the
studentsand helping them graduate from high school and get to and through college
and ready for lifes many challenges.
For the past three years, the educators of Denver Public Schools (DPS) have worked diligently
to build a performance management culture on their 152 campuses. The tools and processes
DPS has used provide any school that is pursuing a data-driven culture with valuable insight
The denition of performance management helps schools understand what must be done
to create a performance-driven culture. Denver Public Schools efforts show us how it can
be done.
David Suppes, Chief Operating Ofcer of Denver Public Schools, says that moving forward,
DPS will emphasize the work that is having the most impact on the districts ability to outpa
the state in student achievement. We will focus on the classroom and what happens in clas
There will continue to be an instructional focus. How do we achieve excellence and consisten
in the classroom? What tools need to be available? What processes need to be in place to u
those tools?"
"We have some excellent schools and every school has some excellent classrooms, but itsnot consistent. Weve got to use the data we have to understand what excellent teachers do
and then give them the tools and information they need and train them on how to improve,
he said.
At the highest level, the
challenge in public education is
moving away from a monopoly
away from being internallyfocused, resistant to change,
and a sense of entitlement to
what you have instead of proving
your worth. This approach
doesnt mean people in these
environments dont work hard
or dont care. But theres just
no accountability in a culture
like that.
David SuppsCOO, Dnvr Pubic Schoos
-
8/7/2019 Dell Foundation - Denver Case Study
3/16
-
8/7/2019 Dell Foundation - Denver Case Study
4/16Denver Public Schools / Michael & Susan Dell Foundation
When a school district commits to implementing performance management and using
data-driven instruction, they take a major step toward building a culture of responsibility
and driving their students and faculty toward excellence.
Goals, strategies and strong leadership are critical cornerstones in a performance
management culture. Using a new approach to utilize data in the district and the classroom
performance management allows educators to put action plans in place to inuence studen
achievement and graduation rates before the child fails the grade level or the district fails to
serve the needs of the child. But performance management cant be considered just another
initiative. The success of the performance management implementation begins and largely
depends on the strength of the schools leaders and the expectations they build for data-
driven decision making culture. Everyonefrom the school board to the custodiansmust
share the same mission and focus on changing behaviors for the betterment of the students
If the performance management goals relate to student-centered work, they create a comm
thread among all employees.
In Denver Public Schools, the performance management rollout included:
ThSchoolPrformancFramwork(SPF)is an accountability tool that allows for the
measurement of achievement growth, instead of merely status, with principals receiving extr
compensation for the rst time for outstanding student performance as tracked by the SPF.
For the lowest-performing schools on the SPF, interventions were targeted.
Anonlinportal(with all data refreshed at least nightly and some data updated even in
real time) that allows single sign-on access to district data (a portal called Digital Doorsfor administrators (principals, data coaches, and instructional superintendents) and for
teachers instead of using spreadsheets, a ruler, and a highlighter.
Arqustforproposal(RFP)procss for a comprehensive instructional management syste
that links data analysis and reporting to assessments, curriculum, and district portals.
Mtricsforightoprationaldpartmnts in the central ofce, where previous metrics
were incomplete and the focus was on volume rather than efciency and cycle time.
BUILDING AN ENVIRONMENT FORPERFORMANCE MANAGEMENT
PeRFRMAeMAAeMeT
AcademicProjects
SchoolPerformanceFramework
Data SchoolImprovement
Administrators
Parent/Student/Staff Surveys
Administrator/Teacher Portal
EmployeePerformanceManagement
Process
Service andPerformanceManagement
Training
DataGovernance
PrincipalSurvey
Central OfceMetrics
OperationsProjects
Communications
-
8/7/2019 Dell Foundation - Denver Case Study
5/16Denver Public Schools / Michael & Susan Dell Foundation
Businssprocssimprovmntpracticsto boost productivity, improve customer service,
enhance accountability, and correlate metrics in the central ofce to overall
student performance.
Anwmployvaluationprocsssandtoolsto align with district metrics and develop
new annual review cycle for all salaried central ofce employees.
Trainingforcntralofcdpartmnts and selected school-based staff in concepts of
customer service and change management to help develop a service culture that links
staff jobs to student outcomes.
Acommunicationsplanthat includes videos and/or other visual media to communicate
performance management goals and updates.
DPS didnt achieve their current success overnight. The district started slowly with manual
processes based on the work of Doug Reeves and cycles of inquiry. Educators need to realize
that, like DPS, schools must acknowledge the imperatives of a culture of data and ensure
the leadership is willing and able to support it before structural changes that support the
automation of data access and processes can occur.
David Suppes acknowledges that building a data-driven culture meant years of vision with
supportand the acceptance among leaders that the process must continue to advance to
guarantee the best outcomes for the students.
Since beginning to institute performance management, DPS has revised its strategic plan.
In the rst version, I dont think performance management was called out signicantly. We
built the plan around accomplishing three cultural goals: have an outstanding leader in every
building, have an outstanding teacher in every classroom, and provide a safe and productive
learning environment, explains COO Suppes.
The Denver Public Schools transformation started with a strategic plan focused onthree key areas:
1. Popl: Denver needed to attract, retain, develop, incent and, if necessary, remove peop
based on performance. They needed the data to show how performance is occurring in
the classroom and use those experiences to help their educators build a performance
management culture.
2. PrformancandAccountability:Denver is measuring outcomes, measuring against
goals, and keeping track of whether people are doing what they say they are going to do
3. BuildingaSrvicultur: Denver looked at who their customers were for each
department or person in their organization and focused on how to meet their needs
and wants.
In just a few years, performance management has become central to how we try to change
and improve the district. The new strategic plan doesnt have one section dedicated to
performance management. Instead, weve incorporated performance management into
several sections on instructional core strategies and how schools should be using performan
data and using the assessments to guide instruction in the classroom, explains COO Suppes
While building a culture of
data and transparency at DPS,
of course weve encountered
obstacles. Things in all parts of
the organization have evolved.Initially, there was organizational
resistance to change. We had
to manage the expectations of
staff, balance the demands the
teachers unions with the need to
implement cultural changes with
real signicance, and try to align
nancial performance-based
incentives for teachers with
goals of the district."
It took time to look at the
data objectively and rely less
on anecdotes from single
classrooms. We had to provide
information into the hands of
decision-makers, create a sense
of accountability for the districts
goals, and provide transparency
into how we were measuringsuccess and whether we were
achieving it.
David SuppsCOO, Dnvr Pubic Schoos
-
8/7/2019 Dell Foundation - Denver Case Study
6/16Denver Public Schools / Michael & Susan Dell Foundation
BUILDING COMMITMENT THROUGH CULTUREAND LEADERSHIP
As a culture and standard of measurement, performance management does more than provid
reams of data to teachers and administrators. It simplies the data and makes the information
actionable. It gives the data and information purpose. It answers key questions that change
behaviors. It empowers districts with information that helps predict and manage performance
rather than just track it.
It is one thing to generate excitement among teachers, but it is another challenge to empower
faculty across the complete education spectrum. As tools and technology are implemented
to deliver the data and information to teachers, school leaders should expect many questions
to be asked and opponents to emerge. It will be necessary for leaders to remain focused on
their vision, while having access to comprehensive data and welcoming feedback from their
peers. They will be effective if they concentrate on developing and monitoring the performance
management implementation and continually seek to improve the data and the processes tha
make it actionable.
Denver Public Schools Director of Strategy Jason Martinez remembers fondly the way he
and his colleagues in Denver approached the task of building support and enthusiasm for
performance management.
Getting the word out was actually fun. Within any large organization an informal
communication network exists its called a gossip system. Ours is highly robust. Within that
gossip system there are some individuals who are very inuential. Our strategy was to share
with them the initial concept of performance management and ask their opinion about it. One
they value that theyve been asked. And two, they value the fact that theyre getting informatio
and then they share that information with others.
Even before people had access to the Administrator Portal, there was a tremendous amount o
buzz among the principals who were ultimately the end users. They were all eager and wantin
to use the tool. That was extremely helpful. Then we went around and did demonstrations.
If they had a task to do, we showed them how they could do that task inside the portal.
It was a very effective way to get early buy-in.
-
8/7/2019 Dell Foundation - Denver Case Study
7/16Denver Public Schools / Michael & Susan Dell Foundation
ReSUlTS
Monthly
AdministrativePortal Usage inDenver PublicSchools
Built for school administrators by school administrators, the Administrator Portal (website)
is meant to be a one-stop shop for school administrators to access important applications,
essential student achievement data, managerial data and reports. The Portal allows school-based
administrators to spend less time gathering data and more time taking action, increasing the
opportunity to close the achievement gap between higher and lower performing students.
For principals, it is an essential and core source for school data for school improvement planning,
stafng, recruitment and budgeting.
In February 2010, the number of page views per day per staff member remained at. However,
the percentage of users increased by 7 percent with the assistant principals showing the biggest
increase of 11 percent to 81 percent using the portal. The percentage of principals using the
portal reached an all-time high of 87 percent, a 4 percent increase over January. Average usage
for principals was 1.16 page views per day per person.
The principals in Network 2a cluster of schools from across the district--had the highest usage of
2.51 average page views per day per person. One power user skews the data. However, 100% of the
principals in Network 2 used the administrator dashboard at least once in the month of February.
Once leaders can educate faculty and model a belief in the potential of performance
management, the task of collecting, analyzing and utilizing the data can begin.
DPS administrators lead teachers toward a belief in performance management by showing the
how the performance management tool would help them help their students. We knew it had
to be of such immediate value that they would want to use it, said Martinez. Our strategicapproach was to teach them what was possible not convince them. If you can teach someone
a way of doing their business more effectively, more efciently and easier, why wouldnt they
want to use it? And thats what happened in Denver.
-
8/7/2019 Dell Foundation - Denver Case Study
8/16Denver Public Schools / Michael & Susan Dell Foundation
COMPONENTS OF PERFORMANCE MANAGEMENT:DATA & METRICS
A classroom has 30 different
individuals, each with his or her
own unique story. With performance
management, those stories - as
found within the data can be
accurately told and readily available
to a teacher. Those stories tell
where the student has been,
gives insight into ways to help the
student improve performance, andhelps determine the effectiveness
of the teachers themselves.
Every school keeps attendance records, standardized testing results, achievement data and
biographical information. But teachers looking at individual pieces of data cant be expected
to draw impactful conclusions. Examining a students previous years test scores doesnt
provide insight into the students letter grades or attendance records that might have
impacted the childs performance. Schools cant determine a teachers effectiveness without
mapping student performance on standardized tests and classroom assessments to lessons
taught. The data must be aggregated and presented in a format that will expose trends in
a students performance and help guide the teachers improvement efforts.
The importance of data quality and data frequency cannot be underestimated. Data must
be correct and must be delivered in regular increments for effective action planning and
follow-up to occur.
Performance management also requires a school to establish SMART goals, and the
benchmarks can be based on a number of elements the performance management tools
are designed to identify. When clear metrics are established, teachers can rely on their
performance management dashboard to ag areas that need to be addressed for a specic
student and to group students based on common needs. When teachers are able to compare
a students scores and data to other students at his or her grade level, they can determine
performance based on metrics such as student participation, academic performance, growth
or student progress, academic rigor and college and career readiness. This could evolve to ea
student having a portal with his or her goals, performance, curricular resources, and access
to help in one place.
The data tells the story and the tool packages the story in an easy way to use andcomprehend, said Martinez. Then comes the really important, second half of the equation:
What does knowing the story mean for my kids and me? What am I going to do differently
tomorrow, now that I know their stories, to help my students? Helping teachers gure this
out was a big part of our strategic plan.
-
8/7/2019 Dell Foundation - Denver Case Study
9/16Denver Public Schools / Michael & Susan Dell Foundation
In an academic sense, school-based performance management provides a trajectory of what
student is able or unable to do. Without data, I dont know what a student knows or needs
know in relation to state standards, said Martinez. With the data, I can build on what you d
know and I can address what you dont know. The data tells me that."
So if I have the ability to look at data, I am not being random and capricious with myinstruction. What ends up happening without data is that we end up teaching to a mean
sort of middle of the road with the expectation that those who are accelerated will get what
they need because they are independent and they will do well, and that those who are behin
will likely never catch up.
For Lake Middle School Principal Alex Magana, performance management hits home litera
Yesterday I did three home visits to families of kids with attendance issues, all because we
have real time data through one access point.
Dnvrs adminstrativ porta
incuds th foowing masurs
and mtrics:
Student attendance over thelast ve days
Bottom 10 student attendance
Tardy Rate Top 10 students
YTD Teacher Attendance
by Reason
Substitute teacher ll rate
Colorado Student Assessment
Program (CSAP) data by subject
and year
English Learner prociency
Colorado ACT performance
3rd grade reading prociency
Student performance growth
Advanced placement
enrollment and passing
Graduating students
College enrollment Budget to actual expenses
COMPONENTS OF PERFORMANCE MANAGEMENT:
PROCESSES & PROTOCOLS
Most districts and Charter Management Organizations (CMOs) initially focused their efforts
on making data more readily available to principals and teachers through technology and ar
now turning their attention to building more intentional processes around how and when to
use the data and how to capture and share best practices.
Data and information is only as effective as the processes with which it is used. Structured
data inquiry protocols and processes for regular reviews of the key metrics at each level,
a cultural expectation that follow-through and action is valued, and ongoing training
and professional development must be present throughout all stages of the process
of implementing and utilizing performance management.
The implementation is different for every district or school. Most begin with a diagnostic
assessment to identify gaps in data, leadership, goals, technology, and processes.
Administrators and teachers must work together to develop a list of critical milestones
to achieve throughout the development process. They must track their progress against
the milestones and develop a list of success metrics, such as usage rates, that can be utilized
once the system has been put in place.
Most districts or schools already have a way to review data in place because of the No Child
Left Behind (NCLB) requirements and state-level requirements. But those data reviews are
often expensive, incomplete, and inefcient. The data is oriented to focus on status rather
than on the growth needed for a student to be procient. Schools either dissect the limited
data they have themselves or they hire a consulting rm to help them take inventory of
whats available and come up with a solution. Schools need to be able to set goals andempower faculty to work as a team to achieve them.
In Denver, those involved in the implementation of performance management say it
has succeeded because they started at the end or at least with the end in mind.
-
8/7/2019 Dell Foundation - Denver Case Study
10/16Denver Public Schools / Michael & Susan Dell Foundation
The rst steps we took were to set the vision of what was possible, said Jason Martinez.
As we discussed our goals and strategy, we really started with the end in mind. We asked
ourselves, when all is said and done what do we want to have happen and what do we hope
will happen because of our efforts.
DPS ofcials used the Backward Design planning process, in which the standards andgoals are established then the best ways of reaching those goals are determined.
Denver North High School Assistant Principal Nancy Werkmeister called Backward Design,
a great way to implement a plan of action.
Principal Magana noted that this approach is standard practice in the corporate world.
Just like a business would, we identied specic goals--in our casea things the kids
need to learn. Most educators call those standards, but that is too broad, so we call
them learning goals.
District Goa (5 yar) Student Performance Goal
Group Goa (COO/CAO) Improve service and increase efciency in operations
Dpartmnt / Division Goa Implement Electronic W2 process to improve transaction accuracy rate and service
to internal customers
Individua Goa Train customers on W2 Employee Self Service feature to enable employees to retrieveW2 information online
Team Goal Develop communication and training plan for new Employee Self Service feature
and opt-in decision to advise employees of implementation and available resources
Financial stability and transparency
Maximizing dollars in the classroomAction Pan (Dnvr Pan 2009)
Examples represent goal alignment, not SMART goals.
ReSUlTS
Goal Alignmentfor Payroll OfceSupport Staff
As DPS implements the employee perormance evaluation project (called employee
perormance management), everyone goes through training and a rigorous goal alignment
process. Teachers, principals and central ofce sta establish goals that are then used as
a basis or individual and department evaluation.
-
8/7/2019 Dell Foundation - Denver Case Study
11/16Denver Public Schools / Michael & Susan Dell Foundation
In Denver, there is a customer service element to performance management processes that
has become important to teachers and extremely helpful to parents. Teachers understand
that performance management helps them at parent-teacher conference time, said Martin
They understand that ultimately if they cant address a parents question about their child
in a positive way, we are going to have a group of dissatised parents. And that is not good
because we need their support to educate their children.
In addition to using data to drive more effective decision-making and improved student
achievement, performance management has been used at DPS to secure additional funding
for the district. DPS leaders were able to identify processes within the district that were
highly leveragedthose that require large amounts of manual data entry, nancial resource
and employee time. In many cases, causes for defective processes have been repaired and
additional resources have been made available.
For example, the DPS Process Improvement Team followed a Lean Six Sigma process that led
them to focus on a Free and Reduced Lunch (FRL) process that identied additional funds for
the district. Technology gave the team the ability to easily search through thousands of FRL
records and scenarios were established to capture likely FRL- eligible students who were cod
in DPS as not eligible. Previously, DPS did not submit an FRL-eligible student to the state for
reimbursement and lost the potential funding of $1,500 per student. During the course of
this initial data gathering, the team identied 178 such students for the 2009 2010
academic year, representing additional potential funding of over $260,000.
But this is only part of the story. DPS had to understand why this potential defect occurred a
why these students were overlooked. Further investigation revealed that the correct data le
had not been loaded in the initial phases of the process, which can easily occur if there is not
proong process in place to prevent it. Discovering this process defect and loading the prope
le uncovered 1058 eligible students who were ofcially coded as not eligible for FRL. This
malfunction cost DPS $1,587,000 in available funding.
Though DPS was not able to recoup the total amount due to the states budget issues, theeconomic impact for DPS is substantial. The greater number of eligible students for 2009
2010 opened the door for other funding formulas such as the percentage of schools eligible
for future Title 1 funding.
ReSUlTS
Additional Free
and Reduced LunchDollars IdentiedThrough DenversData-DrivenEnvironment
The same data-driven culture that allows teachers to plan dierentiated
instruction and interventions can also utilize a data governance process that
has helped DPS fnd additional monies or students. Thanks to the diligent andpersistent work o the DPS Strategy Ofce, it was discovered that the schools were
eligible or an additional $1,587,000 in Free and Reduced Lunch (FRL) unding rom
the state or the 2009 2010 academic year. Going orward, this has opened the
door or uture potential unding or DPS schools.
-
8/7/2019 Dell Foundation - Denver Case Study
12/16Denver Public Schools / Michael & Susan Dell Foundation
COMPONENTS OF PERFORMANCE MANAGEMENT:TOOLS & REPORTS
Smart use of technology enables performance management. The amount of data andinformation that must be processed at each campus and district to understand student
needs, academic achievement, and operational demands is astoundingPerformance
management technology allows the data to be digested quickly, and easily understood
and encourages collaboration among educators to improve academic outcomes for
their students.
DPS used technology to build performance management Digital Doors. Within the Digital
Doors were two products: the Administrator Portal and the Teacher Portal. We were trying
to understand how to leverage technology and help people do their day-to-day work in a
much more meaningful and important way, said Martinez.
We know teachers dont teach from behind computers, so performance management isnt
about the technology. For us in Denver, it was really about what the tool was going to do forthe educators and how it was going to improve student achievement. Thats the brass ring.
If you can answer that question, youre really on to something.
Principal Magana is a strong believer in the power of data to help his students learn.
Before we had the tool, I had to compile spreadsheets on top of spreadsheets. Then I had to
manipulate them all to make the data usable. I knew this would make my job easier, and it d
but it also enabled me to quickly give our teachers a big picture view of what was happening
in their classrooms.
Of course, the tool also tells us what classrooms we need to visit more frequently, which kid
we need to talk to, and when we may need to bring in the social worker to help. We can ask a
student to stay after school for extra work when needed. We now have scorecards of what a
that looks like.
The students are aware of the power of performance management as well. Every student in
the class knows how many learning goals they are achieving. And this is not only monitored
once. Its monitored throughout the year, which gives accountability to the students and tha
is really important.
Assistant Principal Nancy Werkmeister uses the performance management portal to deal
with attendance issues at North H.S. Everybody has issues with attendance, but before
the portals, we would have to call a students middle school and asked what had happened
there. With this tool, we can track a student for years, see patterns, and get good informatio
It really helps us to narrow our focus: These are the students we need to help and why.
And unlike the old paper and pencil system, this tool is immediate and a huge timesaver.
With the help of these tools and processes, student achievement is on the rise in Denver
and the Board of Education was able to use the tool to dene ve-year targets for academic
achievement where none existed previously.
More and more information isavailable in the performance
management dashboard each
year. In 2008, none of the district
curriculum was available online for
teachers to use for interventions
or modications to instruction.
With over 25,000 lesincluding
curriculum, multimedia, and
enrichment materialsuploaded by
2010, 90 percent of the curriculum
was available via the portal. Now
teachers can analyze data, create a
group of students to track, and then
click to instructional materials that
will help guide the interventions
and assessments used in improving
students performance.
-
8/7/2019 Dell Foundation - Denver Case Study
13/16Denver Public Schools / Michael & Susan Dell Foundation
ReSUlTS
Denver Public Schools
Colorado AssessmentProgram (CSAP)Scores 2005-2009
District
Stat
10%
8%
6%
4%
2%
0
-2%
-4%
Gains in % Prociency and Achievement 2005 - 2009
READING MATH WRITING SCIENCE
Formalization of training and support is another critical component of building a performan
management culture. While the desire for continuous improvement exists in the principal
and teacher corps, most need additional support and guidance on how to initiate such chan
Without ongoing training, using performance management to improve student achievemenwill fail. Without continuous communication around uses for data, districts create technolog
tools that go unused. Educators trained in all of the tools available are able to help students
more because theyre able to leverage all of the tools at their disposal and apply the data
available in the dashboard to curriculum, resources, and processes.
DPS administrators made a conscious decision to roll out performance management on
a deliberate pace, ensuring the end users had time to get comfortable with the tool and
understand how it could help them aid their students.
Our implementation was a slow roll and that worked well for us, Martinez said. We began
by introducing the concept in an informal way. Informal conversations took hold even before
any tangibles were shown to people. We shared the concept broadly with those who wouldultimately use it.
We asked for their feedback and what specically would be most helpful to them. We then
built on that by giving more information, ultimately giving demonstrations, while continual
asking for feedback and asking the teachers and principals to tell us if we were on target.
COMPONENTS OF PERFORMANCE MANAGEMENT:TRAINING & SUPPORT
-
8/7/2019 Dell Foundation - Denver Case Study
14/16Denver Public Schools / Michael & Susan Dell Foundation
Assistant Principal Werkmeister was among the end users who had the chance to provide
useful feedback. The performance management tool was set up in a pilot and presented
at a Principal Institute, she explains. There were strong people involved in the Administrato
Portal pilot who represented the users point of view across the board, from elementary
through high school. Everybody has different needs and we were able to put ideas up on
the wall and rate them to give the team putting this together focus regarding what wewanted this program to do.
As performance management was being slowly implemented across DPS, of course there
were some tech savvy teachers who were eager to dive in deeper. Those who were less
comfortable with technology were nurtured through the process in a hands-on manner
with help on websites, with assistance from the central ofce a phone call away, with videos
they could access when they were ready to learn more, and with drop-in ofce hours wher
they could learn from experts and peers on ways to use the tools. We understood that some
teachers would be uncomfortable at rst, said Werkmeister. We helped them get to a
comfort zone and expand from there.
Werkmeister found virtually no resistance from her teachers at North H.S. The biggest sellin
point is that you can log on and pull all of the information we use from one place. All the dat
is instantly accessible and really saves time, which is why it is so helpful to teachers.
She agrees that the informal rollout was the right approach, but suggests one way the early
training could be improved. It would have been nice to be able to manipulate data and
reports in the portal during the training. We werent at computers during the early instructio
The casual intro was good, but some time on a live computer would have been benecial.
And Werkmeister also suggests follow-up training to check in with users to answer any
questions and help them take their use of the performance management tools to the most
advanced level possible.
ReSUlTS
Net Change inPrincipal Satisfaction
with DPS OperationalDepartments
Mean customer service rating o all
departments has improved rom
48% to 86% rom 2008 to 2010
Mdiansatisfactionhasrisnfrom48%inApril2008to55%inApril2009
12-Month Improvement in Principal Satisfaction
120%
100%
80%
60%
40%
20%
0
-10%
-20%
110
45 45
34 34
2725
21 2117
Difference of Strongly
Agree & Agree minus
Strongly Disagree &
Disagree from April
2009 over April 2008
survey administrationHumanResources
Facilities
Communications
EnterpriseMgmt.
FinancialServices
Security
Planning
Transportation
Technology
Payroll
-
8/7/2019 Dell Foundation - Denver Case Study
15/16Denver Public Schools / Michael & Susan Dell Foundation
DENVER PUBLIC SCHOOLS THE IMPACT OFSCHOOL-BASED PERFORMANCE MANAGEMENT
ON STUDENT ACHIEVEMENT
Performance management is still in its early stages, but a profound impact is being seen across
Denver Public Schools from the central ofce to the schools and into the classrooms. Data-driven
cultures can and should be created to guarantee the academic success of each and every student
From my schools perspective, scores are up and any growth were showing we attribute to the
data we collect through the data portal and other assessments we use, said Werkmeister. It he
us focus our instruction so when scores go up and more students are learning, we know it has to
have played a signicant role.
Principal Nicole Veltz attributes an increase in her middle school attendance to the ability to
track data. Whatever your energies are, whatever you need to improve, you need data to do it.Otherwise, you are shooting in the dark, she said.
Martinez reminds us that performance management is all about the students. It has made
happier classrooms and it has created opportunities to help students learn in a very positive way.
In Denver it has accelerated the increase of achievement across our system. It works and it bene
students, families, and communities.
-
8/7/2019 Dell Foundation - Denver Case Study
16/16
Michael & Susan Dell FoundationP.O. Box 163867Austin, Texas 78716
www.msdf.org
Special thanks to Connie Casson and
all of the educators at Denver Public Schools.