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Learnings from Diagnostic Reviews

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QIE has conducted 33 diagnostic reviews over the past 2 years. Predominantly in primary schools but a ... Weller & Hartley, TQM & School Restructuring (1994) ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Learnings from Diagnostic Reviews


1
Learnings from Diagnostic Reviews
  • Quality, Improvement Effectiveness

2
Diagnostic Reviews
  • QIE has conducted 33 diagnostic reviews over the
    past 2 years
  • Predominantly in primary schools but a number of
    R-12 and 2 secondary sites
  • Additional 10 diagnostic reviews to be conducted
    by the end of Term 3 2009
  • Over 400 hours observing in about 200 classrooms
    in 2008
  • Identified a number of SYSTEMS issues

3
  • So what have we learnt?

4
Improvement isnt linear and
where you start from influences the next steps
5
Appreciative Inquiry
  • People have more confidence going into the future
    (unknown) when they carry forward parts of the
    past (known).
  • If we carry parts of the past into the future,
    they should be the best about the past
  • Thin Book of Appreciative Inquiry, Sue Annis
    Hammond

6
Commendations are the Key
  • Appreciative Inquiry is based on the premise
    that- in every organisation something works and
    change can be managed through the identification
    of what works and the analysis of how to do more
    of what works. Sue Annis Hammond
  • The report COMMENDATIONS tell us about your
    values, passions and strengths
  • USE THEM to build from successes-unpack and
    explore them tounderstand and capture what
    works

7
Make success explicitfor staff students
8
  • ... the most important factor affecting student
    learning is the teacher. ... The immediate and
    clear implication of this finding is that
    seemingly more can be done to improve education
    by improving the effectiveness of teachers than
    by any other single factor.
  • Wright, S. Horn, S. Sanders, W. (1997).
    Teacher and Classroom Context Effects on Student
    Achievement Implications for Teacher Evaluation

9
  • .. students learn best when teachers accept
    responsibility for student outcomes.
  • Dimmock, 1993 Restructuring for School
    Effectiveness.

10
Focus on learning
  • Establish clear and high expectations for
    teachers and learners
  • Review and use data to establish challenging
    standards for all students
  • Improve and monitor curriculum coverage,
    consistency and coherence
  • Identify, document and monitor teaching
    agreements, coach staff to enact them
  • Review effectiveness of processes used to
    support students at risk- class and school level

11
Focus on learning
  • Broaden the range of pedagogies in operation to
    engage and extend all learners
  • Provide more explicit teaching of skills and
    concepts, seize the teachable moments
  • Ensure learning activities provide relevant,
    challenging tasks with high order thinking,
    extended time on task and clear success criteria
  • Provide for differentiation and peer/group work
    within the normal classroom program

12
Focus on learning
  • Improve programming, planning, record keeping and
    assessment practices
  • Clarify and monitor teacher program expectations-
    term/year overviews- link to PM
  • Support teachers to use achievement data and
    build an assess-teach-plan cycle
  • Improve the quality of verbal and written
    feedback and marking provided to students
  • Extend the use of peer moderation, observation
    and critical reflection by teachers

13
Whole school agreements are important
  • How is it we can have whole school agreements
    about lining up and not teaching and
    learning?Some stuff really does make a
    difference!
  • Never work harder than your students Robyn R.
    Jackson

14
Attend to Culture
  • school improvement is not about a dependency
    culture but about the school doing something for
    itself, which it wants to do.
  • Meeting the Challenge, David Hopkins 2001

15
Attend to Culture
  • Promote a critically collaborative and reflective
    teaching and learning culture
  • Establish a job-embedded, whole school
    professional learning focus for staff
  • Build accountability for agreements through
    performance management and peer meetings
  • Structure regular and explicit planning time
    between teachers and for teachers and SSOs
  • Attend to key culture building processes eg
    induction, performance management, professional
    development, communication and decision making

16
Teacher Wellbeing
  • For teachers to be open and reflective to
    incorporate new learnings into practices they
    need to feel that they are valued, respected,
    supported and capable.This requires a culture
    that supports wellbeing for adults as well as
    learners.

17
Set Directions
  • Natasha "Boris, you got plan?"
  • Boris "Behehe... Plan? Of course I got plan.
    Dey don't ever work, but I got one!"
  • Rocky Bullwinkle

18
Set Directions
  • Engage staff (stakeholders) in setting narrow and
    deep directions/priorities for improvement
  • Limit and focus priorities- what specific aspect
    of literacy will you improve? Why?
  • Strengthen targets and translate into actions-
    how many students, who are they?
  • Collaboratively set classroom level strategies
    and monitor for effectiveness
  • Link wellbeing and behaviour strategies to
    learning focus- integrate/weave priorities
  • Review management process/calendars - reduce
    projects and event driven curriculum

19
Challenge Wellbeing for What?
  • What is our goal for engaging with learner
    wellbeing?
  • What are the outcomes from our efforts?
  • ..unless school improvement strategies impact
    directly on learning and achievement then we
    are surely wasting our time. Hopkins 2001

20
Shared Leadership
  • Leadership is to this decade what standards was
    to the 1990s if you want large-scale, sustainable
    reform. Leadership at all levels, developing and
    supporting leadership and expecting leaders to
    develop other leaders are all essential
    components of present day strategies.
  • Michael Fullan, 2003

21
Shared Leadership
  • Promote pedagogy and curriculum as the key focus
    for all leadership roles
  • Structure regular strategic leadership meetings,
    clarify roles, develop a joint stance
  • Teacher leaders encourage staff to step up,
    support colleagues, undertake AST/leadership
  • Student voice and choice- teach students and
    structure for them to make choices within
    classes, the curriculum and across the school
  • Investigate different ways to engage parents in
    their childs learning

22
Grow improvement
  • I think that it is dangerous to try to create
    great changes in human nature in any short space
    and time. If youre going to change a
    civilisation, it can only be done as the gardener
    does it, not as the engineer does it. That is, it
    has got to be done in harmony with the rules of
    nature and cant all be done overnight. Thats
    why Im against practically all revolutions-
    because they usually end up badly by trying to do
    too much at once.
  • George Kennan

23
Difference is contextual
  • READY for improvement
  • Clear directions, effective plan, resources
    first steps
  • WILLING to improve
  • Agreed directions, culture supports learning,
    critical collaboration
  • ABLE to improve
  • Knowledge skills to improvePD and performance
    feedbackSufficient time
  • Not ready plan, debate, discuss
  • Not willing build culture/morale/trust
  • Not able- PD, model, teach, observations

24
Start small - look for levers/root causes
Example Staff Wellbeing
Helpful tools- Inter-Relationships Diagram, 5
Whys etc
25
  • Effective schools are ones in which principals
    and teachers focus on student learning outcomes
    and link this information to improvements in
    teaching and learning strategies.
  • Michael Fullan 2003

26
Effective schools
  • have leaders who are dedicated to obtaining
    quality performance from teachers and students
    alike
  • have a climate in which learning is stressed,
    order exists and all are committed to a single
    vision
  • are student-oriented and classrooms are permeated
    with the belief that all students can learn and
    all are expected to reach their full potential
  • emphasize time on task, require daily homework,
    and offer a warm and supportive work environment
    where teachers use a variety of teaching styles
    and encourage student interaction and team
    learning. Weller Hartley, TQM School
    Restructuring (1994)

27
For support / questions / comment
  • Contact QIE!www.decs.sa.gov.au/quality
  • Katrina Spencerspencer.katrina_at_saugov.sa.gov.au
    8226 1349
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