The Schools We Need ''' ''' and how to get there - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 42
About This Presentation
Title:

The Schools We Need ''' ''' and how to get there

Description:

Such a blueprint or charter could be endorsed by a broad cross-section of ... E-mail: info_at_viccso.org.au. Website: www.viccso.org.au. Jacinta Cashen, President, VICCSO ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:56
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 43
Provided by: win94
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: The Schools We Need ''' ''' and how to get there


1
The Schools We Need ...... and how to get there
  • New Leadership and Governance
  • Nicholas Abbey, Meryl Andrews, and Jacinta Cashen
  • Presentation at the ACCSO National Conference
  • October 27 2006

2
Introduction
  • The purpose of this presentation is twofold
  • To briefly examine some of the key issues facing
    all education systems and schools
  • To explore five things that can be done to help
    build the 21st century schools and education
    systems that all students need

3
First of all a reality check
  • Two big issues facing all education systems and
    schools are
  • How to solve the performance plateau problem and
    significantly improve learning outcomes and
    opportunities for all students
  • How to reduce the large achievement gap based on
    social class/family background

4
The performance plateau
  • For example, as with other countries, England's
    National Literacy and Numeracy Strategy was
    successful
  • But in many countries the results levelled off -
    and have more or less stayed at that level to the
    present
  • This plateau effect - which has been seen in
    other large scale projects - signifies that the
    strategies that generated earlier results were
    not sustainable (at http//www.oecd.org/dataoecd/4
    1/2/34923120.pdf)

5
The effect of socio-economic status
Year 9 literacy and numeracy in Australia (OECD,
2000)
6
The achievement gap
  • Canada, Finland, Japan, Korea, Finland, Iceland,
    and Sweden manage to combine high overall
    achievement with relatively small gaps between
    schools
  • Finland contains quality differences between
    schools to within 5 of the overall performance
    variation among students (Schleicher, 2006)
  • As Dr. Barry McGaw, then Director for Education
    at the OECD, put it If you are going to be born
    in circumstances of poor family background, it
    would be better to be born in Finland, Korea,
    Japan or Canada, than in Australia (2002)

7
Impact on subject choices
The table below shows the percentage of Year 12
female students from each of the different
socio-economic groups who enrolled in each of the
mathematics and science subjects and English over
the period 1999-2001 (at a large secondary school
in Victoria). There is a trend which can be
observed in Chemistry, Physics, Mathematical
Methods and Specialist Mathematics of increasing
percentage enrolment of the socio-economic groups
as one progresses from Group 1 through to Group
5. From the table the most remarkable difference
is in Specialist Mathematics where females from
Group 1 are over eight times less likely than
Group 5 females to be enrolled.
8
Equity and quality
  • Written by Professor Richard Teese and John
    Polesel at The University of Melbourne,
    Undemocratic Schooling (2003) documents how the
    system of schooling produces unequal outcomes
    which both reflect, and help to entrench, social
    inequities
  • It is obviously of interest to all educators and
    parents in the context of how best to promote
    equity and quality in all schools

9
Why? A fundamental shift!
  • Immediately after WW II, only 1 in 10 children in
    Victoria completed a school program leading to
    university today, nearly 8 out of 10 do so
  • Teaching has been undergoing a long period of
    major adjustment to mass secondary schooling
  • Bigger changes in teaching practice are yet to
    happen with many teachers leading this (but
    such changes are not effected overnight)

10
But an inputs approach prevails!
  • Many schools are obviously locked into
    competition for students, seeking to attract the
    most desirable students, in order to boost year
    12 results (via, to a large extent, the
    advantages of these students backgrounds)
  • If the focus is on securing certain students as
    inputs, and if such practice is encouraged or
    not actively discouraged by education systems, it
    is difficult for schools to work to optimize
    outcomes for all students (by developing 21st
    century teaching and learning)

11
The challenge of school leadership
  • The impact of leadership on optimizing learning
    outcomes for all students is critical, perhaps
    second only to teaching as a major school-based
    influence
  • While it is increasingly recognized that
    leadership should be shared among many members of
    a school community, this does not diminish the
    importance of a principals leadership in
    partnership with others!
  • But there can be constraints on a principals
    leadership role and school leadership at all
    levels, as the following two extracts from a
    Victorian report show

12
School principals and planning
From The Privilege and the Price a Study of
Principal Class Workload and its Impact on Health
and Wellbeing (2004) at www.eduweb.vic.gov.au/edul
ibrary/public/ohs/PCWFinal.pdf
13
School principals and leadership
From The Privilege and the Price a Study of
Principal Class Workload and its Impact on Health
and Wellbeing (2004) at www.eduweb.vic.gov.au/edul
ibrary/public/ohs/PCWFinal.pdf
14
SO WHAT CAN WE DO?
  • Better school community dialogue
  • Leadership and professional learning
  • Good governance and accountability
  • Real planning for 21st century schools
  • A new democratic education system

15
Action 1Better school community dialogue
  • It is important to enable all school community
    members to exchange information, share
    experiences, honestly express perspectives, pose
    questions, clarify viewpoints, explore the best
    available research, and develop a new way forward
  • Dialogue is a structured process, at times
    supported by a trained facilitator, that aims to
    lead to new knowledge and better practice and
    improved outcomes
  • Not developing a professionally facilitated
    school community dialogue (and setting clear
    ground rules for it) is perhaps the most common
    reason school improvement efforts fail

16
Ground rules for dialogue
  • New ideas and insights will be strongly
    encouraged
  • We will tap the deep practical experience and
    more formal knowledge held by all participants
  • No simple choice between the pragmatic and the
    visionary
  • Open, attentive, and respectful exchange will be
    strongly encouraged
  • We will explore areas of commonality and
    difference, not papering over differences in
    order to reach a quick consensus

17
Workshop agenda an example
  • An agenda as used at a schools full-day workshop
    (that
  • involved the principal, teachers, parents, and
    students)
  • Welcome, purpose, agenda, and ground rules for
    on-going dialogue
  • First key question Our school and backgrounds,
    what we hope for, and what we want to achieve in
    the workshop
  • Second key question What can be done to improve
    learning outcomes and reduce the achievement gap?
    Research findings and discussion
  • Final set of questions What useful ideas,
    insights, and possibilities are emerging? How do
    we best lead and support a new way forward? With
    whom?
  • Closing thoughts, opening thoughts for the next
    stage

18
Toolkits for community dialogue
  • There are many toolkits that can help parents and
    others to develop a dialogue at a school
  • For example, the Community Dialogue Toolkit at
    www.rural.gc.ca/dialogue/tool/index_e.phtml
    offers a flexible approach that can be easily
    adapted to a school community

19
Action 2Leadership and professional learning
  • Parents may be most welcome in schools, of
    course, but more as helpers and fund-raisers
    rather than as co-learners let alone as school
    community leaders
  • The whole school all individuals must get
    into the change business (Fullan) but the old
    problem persists of squandering opportunities for
    parent participation in school leadership and
    governance
  • And when adults do think of students, they think
    of them as the potential beneficiaries of change
    . They rarely think of students as participants
    in a process of change and organisational life
    (Fullan, 1996 170)

20
Leadership is everyones business
  • As Alma Harris (Crossing Boundaries and Breaking
    Barriers, 2005) suggests, practical questions for
    teaching staff and increasingly all school
    community members include
  • How far is leadership distributed currently?
  • How many formal leadership roles are there? Are
    they effective?
  • Who are the informal leaders and do they have
    significant influence?
  • What would need to happen to make leadership more
    distributed in your school?

21
Parent and student participation
  • Inviting parents as participants in staff
    workshops and PD
  • Parents as team leaders (of high-level teams to
    set policy directions, not old-style committees!)
    in a range of areas (e.g., technology, health
    promotion, and school building design)
  • The largely untapped power of ex-students and
    parents (e.g., creating small teams and alumni
    groups in subject areas such as music and science
    and areas such as civic participation)
  • Mainstreaming student leadership roles (e.g., as
    peer mediators and student leaders and coaches in
    areas such as technology, music, and PE) and
    developing a new student leadership strategy

22
Better professional learning
  • For leadership to become everyones business,
    school council and parent organizations may
  • Develop a more structured program of professional
    learning and induction for parents (lets learn
    from each other - across all states - as to how
    stakeholder organizations can improve
    professional learning and their work to skill up
    parents)
  • Ensure that a substantive focus item is a
    feature of every school council or parent
    association meeting
  • Set up a Furl account to share edgy articles
    from the Web (for help, go to http//www.furl.net
    / and http//del.icio.us/)

23
Action 3Good governance and accountability
  • Effective governance in a school means that it
  • Has a shared vision and shared goals and its own
    evidence-based policy framework which has been
    publicly discussed and endorsed and built into
    its plan and budget
  • It achieves this through strong democratic
    governance and accountability practices

24
Get the governance balance right
  • School governing bodies and parent groups that
    provide real leadership for improved outcomes
    combine a high degree of challenge with high
    levels of support
  • It is obviously not always easy to get the
    balance right, to be a critical friend, as shown
    in the following diagram
  • But candid discussion of this can help to build a
    strong, high-support, high-challenge
    partnership between a principal, leadership team,
    teachers, and parents

25
Building a real partnership
From Governing the School of the Future (2004),
Department for Education and Skills at
http//publications.teachernet.gov.uk/eOrderingDow
nload/Governing20the20school20of20the20future
.pdf
26
Increasing accountability
  • It is wrong to single out schools and teachers as
    the sole sources of performance improvement
    which can be a convenient diversion from
    system-wide issues
  • The work of One World Trust can help us to better
    assess the responsibility and accountability of
    schools and departments of education according to
    four criteria
  • Transparency
  • Participation
  • Evaluation
  • Complaint and response mechanisms

27
Four types of increased accountability practice
from www.oneworldtrust.org/
28
Does school governance matter?
  • Some school councils are obviously rubber stamps
  • Nearly 60 of schools in one study (Ranson et
    al., 2005) had weaker forums or sounding
    board governance and less than 10 had strong
    governing bodies with real strategies and
    accountability
  • A strong school governing body can focus a
    schools discussions and decisions on how best to
    progress learning and improve learning outcomes
    for all students

29
So important to focus on learning!
  • As Hayes et al. in their book Teachers and
    Schooling Making a Difference write
  • A key issue in current debates on educational
    leadership is the extent to which school-based
    management, particularly in large secondary
    schools, draws leadership away from pedagogical
    concerns to the many tasks of management
    marketing, budgeting, reporting, human resource
    management and so on.
  • It is all the more important to foreground
    learning as the central focus of the school and
    to disperse leadership so that learning becomes
    the responsibility of as many people as possible
    (2006 201-202, emphasis added).

30
Educational policy is the key
  • As VICCSO found in its survey, responses to the
    question of what takes up most of school
    councils time were generally divided between
    reports, discussion, management of school,
    finances, committee reports and facilities
    and buildings/environment
  • As well, in answer to the question What takes up
    most of your councils time? only 16 out of 780
    individual responses included either the word
    policy or policies
  • Yet developing a policy framework should be the
    main responsibility of a school council/governing
    board

31
Governance is also evolving!
  • School governance to revitalize public education
    may increasingly include and link three levels
  • P-12 and K-16 multi-school clusters and networks
    (that may meet twice a year to help build
    strategic groupings of primary and secondary
    schools)
  • School councils/boards and parent associations
    focused on how best to improve learning outcomes
  • High-level teams and alumni groups (that may only
    meet several times a year to set school
    directions)

32
A Good School Governance Guide
  • Need a Good School Governance and Leadership
    Guide with key principles and practical
    examples
  • An example is the UK Independent Commission for
    Good Governance in Public Services set of
    principles (as depicted on the next slide)
  • Their six principles of good governance could be
    easily developed and modified to fit the needs of
    schools
  • These principles could also be combined with the
    One World Trust accountability criteria

33
Six principles of good governance From
www.opm.co.uk/ICGGPS/download_upload/Standard.pdf
34
Action 4Real planning for a 21st century school
  • There are four major ways to significantly
    improve learning outcomes for all students and
    reduce the achievement gap (see the next slide)
  • This can inform a new kind of community-friendly
    21st century school strategic plan
  • Plus a simple succinct vision every school
    community member should know it!

35
Improving learning outcomes for all and reducing
the achievement gap
Making ICT integral to all learning and
building networks and communities
A more coherent, inclusive, and
concept-based P-12 curriculum
  • Student leadership and self-regulated learning
    skills and responsibilities

Personal learning and health plans and
capabilities to shape the future
Improving learning outcomes for all and reducing
the achievement gap
Improving learning outcomes for all and reducing
the achievement gap
36
A school self-assessment tool
  • To begin to develop a strategic plan, a simple
    self-assessment tool can provide parents,
    principals, teachers, and students at the school
    level with a useful starting point for
    considering
  • Where are we now?
  • Where do we want to be?
  • How do we get there?

37
Self-assessment elements
  • Informed by the best available research and good
    practice in schools, key issues obviously
    include
  • Relationships and networks
  • Teaching and learning
  • Technology use and communication
  • Leadership and participation
  • Culture and values
  • Innovation and change
  • Governance and accountability

38
Self-assessment an example
  • Parents can identify the strengths and weaknesses
    of their schools communication practice (e.g.,
    are blogs and wikis used by teachers and
    students?)
  • A blog is also a building block for a new kind of
    school website to increase communication among
    parents, students, and staff, post student work,
    archive work, and create a stronger school
    community
  • For an example, go to http//lewiselementary.org/
    and http//tim.lauer.name/)

39
Action 5A new democratic education system
  • As Richard Teese and John Polesel point out
  • More fundamental changes are needed to address
    the basic policy issues which arises from this
    problem how to ensure that secondary education
    should not only be a mass system, but a
    democratic one as well. Or, in short, how to
    build equity on quality (Undemocratic Schooling
    Equity and Quality in Mass Secondary Education in
    Australia, 2003 13)
  • Thus, what is required is a smart, sustained
    campaign for a new democratic education system
    (NDES)

40
Features of a NDES
  • A whole-of-government approach to improving
    learning outcomes for all and reducing the
    achievement gap
  • The access of all schools and all students to
    21st century teaching and learning and new
    technologies
  • Good governance and good accountability practices
  • A significant increase in total education
    spending
  • A major program for rebuilding and improving
    schools

41
What is to be done?
  • A campaign may begin with a policy statement and
    a charter for a new democratic education system
  • Such a blueprint or charter could be endorsed by
    a broad cross-section of individuals and
    organizations
  • This means discussing how best to combine the
    more pragmatic with longer-term strategic work,
    thus supporting continuing efforts to move
    educational reform beyond projectitis and
    superficial quick fixes

42
Contact details
  • The Victorian Council of School Organizations
    (VICCSO)PO Box 550, Richmond, Vic., 3121
  • Telephone (03) 9429 5900 E-mail
    info_at_viccso.org.au
  • Website www.viccso.org.au
  • Jacinta Cashen, President, VICCSO
  • Nicholas Abbey
  • nicholas.abbey_at_optusnet.com.au
  • Meryl Andrews
  • meryl_at_viccso.org.au
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com