districts that work: lessons from the field and policy implications february 1, 2010 ledyard...
TRANSCRIPT
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Districts that Work:
Lessons from the Field and Policy Implications
February 1, 2010
Ledyard McFadden
President
SchoolWorks
Dr. Wanda Bamberg
Superintendent
Aldine Independent School District
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Who we are
The Eli and Edythe Broad Foundation is a national venture
philanthropy established by Eli Broad to advance entrepreneurship
for the public good in education, science and the arts. The Broad
Foundation’s education work is focused on dramatically improving
urban K-12 public education through better governance, management,
labor relations and competition. (www.broadfoundation.org)
SchoolWorks is an educational consulting company based in Beverly,
Massachusetts. Using a research-based rubric for school district
quality, SchoolWorks leads site visit researchers and practitioners to
analyze qualitative Broad Prize finalist district practices.
(www.schoolworks.org)
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Who we are
The Aldine Independent School District, serving 62,000 students, was a Broad Prize finalist in 2004, 2005 and 2008 and the Winner in 2009, among other honors such as the Texas Awards Performance Excellence, 2006.
Why Aldine today? Two very good reasons:
1. From 1981 to 2008 went from approximately 16% Hispanic to 64% Hispanic
2. Demonstrates higher average proficiency rates by racial, ethnic and income subgroups than state counterparts in reading and mathematics
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Session Objectives
1. Share a hypothesis to explain why
Broad Finalists Districts, like Aldine,
have made progress in closing
achievement gaps
2. Share policy recommendations based
on the hypothesis
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Session Agenda1. Quick overview of the Broad Prize Process
2. Presentation of four aspects of leadership that – I hypothesize – are related to the success of Broad Prize Finalists in closing the achievement gap
3. Make policy recommendations for each aspect of leadership
4. Let Dr. Bamberg tell you the real deal
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What is The Broad Prize?
The Broad Prize for Urban Education is an annual $2 million award
that honors large urban school districts demonstrating
the greatest overall student performance and improvement and
reduction in income and ethnic achievement gaps.
sculpture © Tom Otterness, 2002
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How it works
Every year:
1. 100 largest urban American school districts are eligible
(list on www.broadprize.org)
2. Student achievement data are analyzed
3. Five finalists selected by Broad Prize Review Board (nationally
acclaimed statisticians, researchers and education leaders)
4. Qualitative site visits
5. Winner selected by Broad Prize Selection Jury
(three former U.S. Sec’s. of Ed., former Govs., university presidents,
union leaders, CEOs)
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2009 Broad Prize Finalist School Districts
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Quantitative data reviewed by Review Board and Selection Jury Graduation rates (NCES’ Common Core of Data):
– Average Freshman Graduation Rate (AFGR)– Urban Institute Graduation Rate (Cumulative Promotion Index)– Manhattan Institute Graduation Rate (Greene’s Graduation Indicator)
College Readiness data (AP, SAT and ACT) Adequate Yearly Progress results District demographic data (enrollment, income, language, special education, ethnicity) School-level variance analyses Analyses across proficiency levels (i.e., advanced, proficient, below basic) District performance and improvement rates on state reading and math tests,
compared with:– Prior performance – Expected performance for similar districts (based on poverty levels) in the state,
using a regression analysis Degree of achievement gap reduction between ethnic groups and between low-
income and non-low-income students, compared to the state
No formula is used.
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2009 Broad Prize WinnerAldine Independent School District in Houston, 80% FRSL
Outperformed similar Texas districts in reading and math at all grade levels
Demonstrated higher average proficiency rates by racial, ethnic and
income subgroups than state counterparts in reading and math
Narrowed income and ethnic achievement gaps (e.g., 14 percentage point
reduction in gap between African-American students and state average for
White students in middle school math between 2005 and 2008)
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Process for conducting qualitative reviewof district-wide policies and processes
Uniform 3-day site visit in each finalist district
Evidence collected according to SchoolWorks Quality Criteria
as developed for The Broad Prize (i.e., site visit framework)
– District documents reviewed
– Focus group interviews conducted with district stakeholders
– Limited classroom observations conducted
Developmental rubric provides a multi-dimensional perspective
on the degree to which district systems and practices are effective
and sustainable
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How do these districts close the achievement gap?
The achievement gap is closed one student at a time. Focus on the individual child. Broad Finalists Districts thrive on beliefs, policies and practices that individualize education and emphasize success for all students.
• Belief and leadership
• Advanced systems of curriculum, instruction and assessment
• Teamwork and investment in people
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To be clear…
Yes. Board Finalists examine how well groups of students do (English Language Learners, ethnic groups, socioeconomic groups, etc.)
Yes. Broad Finalists Districts consider culture, language and economic status as important information that informs programming
No. Broad Finalists Districts do not apply blanket approaches aimed to cover a whole group based on its identity
Yes. Broad Finalists build systems of curriculum, instruction and assessment that can meet the needs of each individual child
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Curriculum, instruction and assessment
Broad Prize Finalist Districts typically have established a core structure– Alignment to state standards– Available materials– Systems to ensure fidelity of curriculum implementation
What’s exceptional– Continual review and refinement of curriculum and instruction
through knowledge capture
Vertical teamsto review analysis and make decisions
Living curriculumAnd instruction
Multiple assessments and
fine-grained analysis
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Making it happen takes four kinds of leadershipLee Bolman & Terrence Deal
Symbolic: Myths, rituals, culture. “What does this decision mean?”
Structural: Goals, division of labor, coordination. “What is the rational decision?”
Human Resources: Organizational success and personal fulfillment are linked. “Will this decision reap something from our people or sow new capacity in them?”
Political: Organizations as coalitions. Conflict is a natural state. “Will this decision be a deal everyone can live with?”
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Organizational frames as characters you might know. “To boldly go where no one has gone before.”
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Structural: Spock
Symbolic: Bones
Political : Kirk
Human Resources: Scotty
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Symbolic Framework
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The Way
Culture as Identity Weave in the mission
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Theory of action articulated from the top
Core Beliefs of the Gwinnett County Board of Education
• Our core business is teaching and learning.
• All children can learn at or above grade level.
• All children should reach their learning potential.
• The school effect is important and has a profound impact
on every child’s life.
• A quality instructional program requires a rigorous curriculum, effective
teaching, and ongoing assessment.
• All children should be taught in a safe and secure learning environment.
(From Gwinnett County PS website) www.gwinnett.k12.ga.us
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What can you not see from the organizational structure?
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Signatures of LBUSD Organizational Culture
• Collaboration between and among departments
• Shared challenges and shared success
• Stakeholder engagement (internal & external)
• Informality of lines of communication
• Customer service orientation
• Emphasis on support
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Aldine: Producing the Nation’s Best
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Policy Recommendations
1. Support, foster, provide school board development that creates a clear articulation of each district’s theory of action. This not a fluffy mission and vision exercise. It’s about articulating necessary inputs, expected outputs and clear strategies to get there.
2. Apply the “One Child Test” to potential law and policy aimed at closing the achievement gap. Create three individual student profiles. Hypothesize about how the proposed policy will affect each child. Is this a policy aimed at a stereotype? at an ambiguous group? Or is it crafted to serve the needs of real, individual students?
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Structural Framework
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Confidential – Not for distribution
The Plan will save us.Baldrige, scorecards, SMART goals, etc.
Let’s make our performance on the plan a public matter. Data systems, open access,
Formative approach
Let’s work the plan.Rolling it up from bottom to top; Quarterly review
Let’s organize people around
the plan.Teams, division
of labor
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Organizing around the plan
Broad Prize Finalist Districts
typically have a clear vertical
structure in place
Of particular interest..
– Distributed leadership
– Thin at the regional level
– Invest at the school
District
Region
School
Classroom
Student
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Coordination and division of labor
District
Region
School
Teacher
Student
Set goals, coordinate plan,
implement data collection,assess progress,
allocate resourcesCoordinate resource but don’t
have many themselves
Use resources in loose/tight world of
non-negotiable targets and autonomy to
implement
Heavily networked within each school and across the district
Client and “Outcome”
Example: Northside frozestaffing level at central office , avoided any regional structure and instead grew school staff.
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Making performance public
Broad Prize Finalist districts typically share outcomes on a regular basis– Regular cycle of measurement and reporting– Evaluation linked to organizational goals
Of particular interest…– Very deep alignment of goals vertically through the system, heavily
influenced by Baldrige – Use of technology to track and communicate progress
Example: Results-based Evaluation System in
Gwinnett
Example: Aldine’s BaldrigePeer Review
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Policy Recommendations
1. Promote, foster and provide school board and superintendent professional development and models of practice that create aligned accountability in district plans (Baldrige).
2. Promote, foster and provide models for superintendent and principal evaluation that create aligned accountability for both student achievement and other outcomes (balanced scorecard, multiple measures).
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Human Resources Framework
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Being part of a team
Here are the map and the keys. You can drive within the rules of the road.
The professional life
Grow your own
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To reap or to sow?
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Broad districts make strategic decisions that typically invest in people and yield greater productivity over the long term
Fulfillment through challenging goals and opportunities to self-actualize
Clear personal goals linked to organizational goalsAbility to innovate toward the goals
Satisfaction from being part of a networkGrade-level teams
Regions and/or K-12 feed patternsCross-functional teams solve difficult issues
From the cradle to the graveRecruitment channels through universities
Extensive professional and leadership developmentCareer path: “We grow our own leadership.”
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For example…
Examples from Brownsville– All elementary-level teachers in the district are dual certified
in bilingual education to support immersion program– Feedback on Bloom’s taxonomy, questioning skills and
learner-centered instruction using rubrics called “innovation configurations”
– Strong partnerships with the University of Texas, Brownsville (UTB), which provides many new teachers to the district.
Example from Long Beach– Comprehensive, internally designed leadership development
program. With rigorous selection progress, extensive coursework and strategic internship placements, and a multi-year induction process
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Policy Recommendations
1. Promote, foster and provide relationships between higher education institutions and districts that allow for meaningful teacher education, recruitment and training.
2. Promote, foster and provide models of district and school leadership develop programs that allow districts to “grow their own” leadership.
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Political Framework
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Steady at the helm
Stakeholder focus
The planning and decision making process is in part a political tool
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Managing conflict for available resourcesGwinnett Educational Management System (GEMS) Oversight Committee
– Community-driven development of academic standards
– Addressed community concern about state standards
Northside– “When two or more are gathered in the name of the district,
I will be there,” Superintendent Folks
Aldine’ s Vertical Educational Advisory Committee – A group of about 200 representing every school meets six times
a year to hear reports on the district’s progress and to allow its representatives to voice concerns and ideas.
Long Beach– Intensive surveying of personnel and community
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Steady Political Leadership“Is it a must have?”
Can any of these things be done without steady political leadership at the Board level?
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Policy Recommendations
1. Promote, foster and provide models of how districts can gather effective community input and monitor community satisfaction.
2. Promote, foster and provide policies that recognize the complexity of School Board participation and require necessary professional development.
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Strategic leadership in four frames
Structural: Goals, division of labor, coordination. “What is the rational decision?”
Human Resources: Organizational success and personal fulfillment are linked. “Will this decision reap something from our people or sow new capacity in them?”
Political: Organizations as coalitions. Conflict is a natural state. “Will this decision be a deal everyone can live with?”
Symbolic: Myths, rituals, culture. “What does this decision mean?”