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SIGMOID CURVE ! Leadership in a changing world. July 2004. Explanation and Key ... Our third Sigmoid Curve. September 1998 to August 2004 ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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1
Transformational Leadership in Schoolsthe
journey from good to great
  • e-maginative learning
  • 6th July 2005

2
Covering
  • The leadership challenge
  • The moral imperative
  • Ninestiles
  • Federations
  • Management and Leadership
  • Factors affecting school improvement

3
SIGMOID CURVE !
4
Explanation and Key The solid red line shows that
better-off children who start with relatively
high levels of cognitive ability at the age of 2
also rank well at age 10. The dotted red line
shows that poorer children who start with the
same high levels of cognitive ability rank much
more poorly by age 10. The solid blue line shows
that better-off children who start with
relatively low levels of cognitive ability at the
age of 2 rank well by agel 0 -they overtake
poorer children who started off with much better
levels of development. The dotted blue line shows
that poorer children who start with relatively
low levels of cognitive ability still rank poorly
by age 10.
5
Leadership that seeks to maximise motivation
6
Ninestiles 1988 Brushstroke 1
  • 5 A C 6
  • 5 A G 44
  • 1 A G 68
  • So 32 with no passes, Kings School with 33 no
    passes got the negative headline and was closed
    in 1989.

7
Ninestiles 1988 Brushstroke 2
  • Roughly 7 forms of entry in each year
  • Rigid streaming with little movement
  • Bottom 3 streams following separate curriculum
    and not entered for GCSEs
  • 90 of C passes confined to top stream.

8
Ninestiles 1988 Brushstroke 3
  • Happy and good natured staff with no sense of
    failure acceptance that not much is possible
    with pupils from area.
  • Good and generous response to charity appeals.
  • Middle managers role limited to stock control
    and allocation of teaching groups
  • Focus on process not outcomes

9
Ninestiles 1988 Brushstroke 4
  • Teachers working largely on their own
  • Little if any discussion about teaching and
    learning.
  • Known as tough school in the area and
    undersubscribed with appeals against placement.
  • Banda machine overworked!

10
Ninestiles 1988 Brushstroke 5
  • Very poor social relationships amongst pupils.
  • Fighting, swearing, racist name calling very
    common.
  • Pupils locked out at lunchtimes with special
    needs pupils labelled units and seen as fair
    game.
  • 3 different colours of flaking paint, and 30
    buckets in use when it rained.

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Ninestiles 2004 Brushstroke 1
13
2004 Brushstroke 2
  • A genuine learning community with the capacity
    for continuous change
  • Students are taught national curriculum levels
    criteria and then choose their own level to work
    at in each curriculum area.
  • The highest quality of teaching grades awarded
    by Ofsted during a full inspection 85 good or
    better and 100 satisfactory

14
2004 Brush strokes 3
  • First school in the region approved by the TTA
    to run its own Graduate Teacher Programme.
  • Cisco academy on site and Microsoft partner
    school
  • Largest school wireless network in Europe with
    over 1200 laptops on site.
  • ICT integrated across the curriculum.
  • Fifteen ASTs all home grown.

15
2004 -Brush stroke 4
  • Supporting the TC Trust in school improvement
    partnership projects.
  • School Improvement company Ninestiles Plus-
    established, providing training and consultancy
    to LEAs and other secondary schools
  • Funded by a foundation to train middle managers
    from 3 other schools.

16
2004 -Brush stroke 4
  • 3 yr government/local authority contract first
    Hard federation with Waverley School.
  • Second 3 yr hard federation contract with The
    International School.
  • Visitors on a weekly basis from around the
    country.
  • Impacting on school improvement nationally

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27
Our third Sigmoid Curve September 1998 to
August 2004
  • Moving from mixed ability groups to students
    choosing their own National Curriculum levels in
    each subject
  • Introducing attendance focus meetings
  • Introduction of smart cards and cashless
    catering.
  • Running our own catering and aiming for a
    restaurant rather than a canteen ambience

28
Our third Sigmoid Curve September 1998 to
August 2004
  • A holistic approach to the school day with
    morning breakfast (break) and the lunch break
    staggered and fully integrated into the planned
    teaching and learning.
  • No school bells
  • An open school with students having access to our
    Open Learning Centre between 8am and 5pm
  • Introducing Working At Grades for yr 10

29
Our third Sigmoid Curve September 1998 to
August 2004
  • Creating double classrooms to facilitate team
    teaching
  • Building up our AST team now 15 home grown
    teachers
  • Daily assemblies to share the vision and
    reinforce school values - for students and
    teachers
  • Establishing a student support centre
  • Using brain learning to influence schemes of work

30
Our third Sigmoid Curve September 1998 to
August 2004
  • Annual post 16 residential conference at a
    university
  • Laptops for all staff
  • Leased laptops for students with equity a
    principle
  • Developing a wireless network
  • A school intranet that can be accessed by staff,
    students and parents
  • High quality IT training for all staff

31
Our third Sigmoid Curve September 1998 to
August 2004
  • Becoming a Cisco Academy
  • Introducing GNVQ IT and other vocational courses
    at key stage 4
  • Rethinking the balance/role of support staff
  • Involving staff and governors in strategic
    planning and monitoring of implementation
  • Major improvements in the physical environment
  • Ceiling projectors in every classroom with team
    approach to developing and sharing resources

32
Our third Sigmoid Curve September 1998 to
August 2004
  • Becoming a Leading Edge school
  • Becoming a TTA approved DRB for graduate trainees
  • Developing Ninestiles Plus as a company providing
    school improvement training and consultancy
  • Being actively involved in school improvement
    through our work in the Federation
  • And now planning for our fourth

33
From Improvement to Transformation
  • Fast Tracking School Improvement within a
    Federation Context

34
Leadership History of the Ninestiles Federation
  • Feb 01 Christine Quinn, Ninestiles Deputy
    becomes Head of Waverley (4Start) with Dexter
    Hutt, Head of Ninestiles having overall
    responsibility. John Allen is Deputy of
    Waverley.
  • Sept 03 International School (project
    accelerate) joins Federation. Existing Head
    remains and DH has overall responsibility.
  • 09 Oct 04 Internationals existing Head
    resigns, CQ moves to International as Head on
    10th October, and John Allen becomes Head of
    Waverley.
  • Jan 05 Ruth Robinson joins International as
    Associate Head working with Chris.
  • Sept 05 Dexter Hutt becomes Executive Head of
    Federation, Ruth Head of International, and
    Chris Head of Ninestiles.

35
School Improvement within a Federation Context
-Waverleys Experience
36
Waverleys Context
  • Serving one of the most economically
    disadvantaged communities in Birmingham.
  • Very low levels of attainment, for a sustained
    period of time.
  • 60 FSM.
  • 85 EAL.
  • 55 Pakistani origin, 15 Bengali.
  • Very high levels of student mobility.

37
Waverleys Context
  • A compliant wider community who understand of
    importance of education although are not always
    clear on how to support the learning of their
    children.
  • A core of committed staff.
  • Poor behaviour.
  • Inability to break the downward spiral.
  • Displacing tactics.

38
Recent History
  • HMI SFCC inspection January 2001. Serious
    concerns. I will be back!
  • LEA intervened February 2001. The school joined
    with Ninestiles, the DfES, LEA to form the
    4Start partnership.
  • A period of rapid change followed.
  • Follow up by same HMI Dec 2001. Very positive -
    outlook of and for the school has been
    transformed
  • Culminating in significantly improved exam
    results 18 - 51 -62, and a successful OFSTED.

39
  • School Improvement at The International School
  • Context
  • Merger of one school in special measures and one
    school very near to it (2002)
  • Split site with four buildings (now five)
  • 1500 students 11 18
  • GCSE results Summer 2003, 9 students gained 5A
    - C passes and 36 gained 5A - G passes

40
  • School Improvement at ISCCeb
  • Federation with Ninestiles
  • Officially started in September 2003
  • Began in earnest on 13th October 2003.
  • Phase 1 to put in place whatever was needed to
    force feed Year 11 (2004) results, and to
    improve student behaviour throughout the school
  • Phase 2 to begin to put the school in the
    position where it would get through an impending
    Ofsted successfully

41
  • School Improvement at ISCCeb
  • Phase 1
  • Introduction of Behaviour for Learning
  • Timetable rewritten to support implementation
  • Immediate significant improvement in behaviour
  • Joint residentials to share schemes of work and
    develop team culture
  • Introduction of regular assemblies

42
  • School Improvement at ISCCeb
  • Phase 1 - Year 11 Results
  • Introduction of GNVQ ICT to a significant number
    of the year group
  • Introduction of Working at Grades to teachers and
    students (and later parents )
  • Introduction of year group assemblies
  • August 04 5A -C up to 34 , 5 A-G up to 75.
  • Phase 2 Ofsted Dec 04 reports This is a good
    school

43
Key ingredients of a Federation aiming to achieve
rapid improvement
  • Additional strategic leadership from lead school,
    quality Head with shared vision of school
    improvement
  • Management fees paid to lead school to create
    capacity for teachers to team teach.
  • Lead school frees expert teachers to support
    client school staff in the classroom.

44
Management and Leadership
  • The role of the Head
  • HMI the single most important factor in the
    improvement of a school is the quality of
    management and leadership provided by the
    headteacher

45
Management and Leadership
  • Management
  • Dealing with complexity, problem solving to
    bring order and consistency through structures,
    systems, procedures, and routines.

46
Management and Leadership
  • Leadership Strategic way forward, deciding on
    the direction, communicating this in a way that
    wins hearts and minds so that staff are aligned
    and working in the same direction. Inspiring
    staff to believe that they can overcome
  • hurdles and achieve success

47
Management and Leadership
  • The right leadership for the right situation
  • Hero Head or Distributed Leadership?
  • Identifying different leadership styles
  • Your preferred (default) style
  • Leadership in different situations
  • Resonance and leadership

48
Factors Affecting a Schools Ability to Improve
  • A vision for the school giving direction.
  • -The 3 year planning cycle - what do we want
    the school to be like in 3 years time?
  • The concept of phased development
  • -The ability to judge the phase that the school
    is in and the appropriate initiatives to take the
    school forward from its current position.
  • - How strong is the disciplinary platform?
  • - How strong is the communications platform?
  • - Revisiting and modifying as necessary

49
Factors Affecting a Schools Ability to Improve
  • The capacity for change
  • How receptive are staff?
  • How flexible is the organisation?
  • How supportive are governors?
  • The quality of leadership and management - at all
    levels
  • - The leadership and management of the
    Headteacher and Deputies.
  • -The crucial role of middle managers
  • - The culture of the team

50
Factors Affecting a Schools Ability to Improve
  • The nature of the intake
  • - Students and parents
  • - Expectations

6. Funding making use of opportunities
- Identifying new sources of funding -
Making the best use of available funding
51
Factors Affecting a Schools Ability to improve
7. Risk taking - Confidence, optimism and
detailed planning - The ability to respond
quickly to unforeseen situations
  • Creating the culture
  • - Building trust and encouraging an open culture
  • - Developing a service approach to our
    students
  • - A determination to aim for the best - and
    never be complacent

52
Innovations are not independent of each other
they interlock with each other, they support and
reinforce each other.
Their combined effect is much greater than the
sum of their individual parts and it is this that
determines the resulting school culture.
Effective school leadership and management is
about the interrelationship of these factors,
within the context of the specific developmental
phase that a particular school is in making use
of the Sigmoid Curve concept ..
53
  • and recognising that
  • good is the enemy of excellent

54
Ninestiles Mission Statement- to be implemented
using the Balanced Scorecard strategic approach
  • Ninestiles School will be nationally and
    internationally acknowledged as a high achieving,
    innovative and exciting school which respects and
    celebrates the diversity of its community. It
    will be structured and resourced to meet the
    needs of 21st century students. Within a caring
    environment, we will develop and reinforce the
    values, skills and attributes which promote good
    citizenship and lifelong learning. Parents,
    governors, and the wider community will work in
    partnership with our committed, appropriately
    skilled workforce and our students, to ensure
    that high quality learning takes place. Outcomes
    will be outstanding.

55
SIGMOID CURVE !
Great can also be the enemy of World Class
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