Title: 1995
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18School Improvement Planning
19When it comes to School Improvement Planning I
think of..
- I Get Around
- Be True to Your School
- Help Me Rhonda
- Good Vibrations
20When it comes to School Improvement Planning I
think of..
- I Get Around
- Networking
- Involving the staff and community
- Consulting and sharing with other principals
- Be True to Your School
- Pride of accomplishments, celebrations of success
- Responsibility to the goals of student learning
- Help Me Rhonda
- Questions where to start, who to involve etc.
- Good Vibrations
- Positive culture, Professional learning teams,
action research
21AGENDA
Other resources- Action Research, Using Data,
School Effectiveness Factors
22School Based Reform Lessons from a National
U.S. Study identified 3 Common Characteristics
- The most promising efforts focused on the
classroom - on raising expectations for all
students, emphasizing problem-solving and
critical thinking. - The most successful schools developed and
sustained a culture in which teachers worked
collaboratively and actively participated in
decisions that directly affected their ability to
improve classroom practices. - Successful schools took a long-term, strategic
perspective to build professional capacity. - Take a moment to discuss the implications of
these statements and your school improvement
plans. What do you focus upon? How do you build
professional capacity?
23Why change is so challenging for schools An
interview with Peter Senge by Dennis Sparks
- This article is in your resource book.
- Number around the table 1- 5. (repeat if
necessary) - 1will read Leverage points (83-85)
- 2will read Habits hold us back (85-86)
- 3will read Reflection is necessary (86-87)
- 4will read Unconscious mental models (87-89)
- 5will read Dialogue requires openness (89-90)
24Why change is so challenging for schools
- Read your section.
- Choose a few lines from the text that have
meaning to you and implications for School
Improvement Planning. - Each person will share. (1 minute each)
25Why change is so challenging for schools An
interview with Peter Senge by Dennis Sparks
- Leverage Points
- Are the places where the least amount of effort
provides the greatest influence of change. - Profound change cant be imposed it has to be
nurtured. - Leverage in schools is engaging teachers,
principals, and parents in creating something
new. - A broad cross section of the community must be
engaged to address the forces that preserve the
status quo.
26Why change is so challenging for schools an
interview with Peter Senge by Dennis Sparks
- Unconscious mental models
- Change occurs when we open ourselves to the views
of others, to engage in real conversations, to
listen deeply. - The diversity that matters is the diversity of
thought. - If someone is doing something different in the
classroom, am I truly interested in why and how
well it is working if its something different
than I do? - See students as forces of innovationthey are the
only ones who see the system as a whole. - Use student dialogue circles - ask kids to talk
about their experiences. - Get the voice of the student out in the open.
27Why change is so challenging for schools an
interview with Peter Senge by Dennis Sparks
- Reflection is necessary
- Ask- What do I really care about? What do I
really want to create? (as Dufour asks, What
should students learn? How will I know if they
are learning? What will I do if they are not
learning?) - It is important to consider what you want to
create, not just what you want to fix. - These questions and questions like them have no
substitute when sustaining innovation. - Vitality comes when we move in the direction of
what we truly want to bring into reality. - Believe that every person has the capacity to
create.
28Why change is so challenging for schools An
interview with Peter Senge by Dennis Sparks
- Habits hold us back
- Every organization is a product of how its
members think and act. - The fundamental nature of reality is
relationships, not things. - The system does not make people do anything.
- An area of leverage is finding and supporting the
innovators--someone who says I believe we can do
something differently here. - Informal structure is often where the leverage
for basic change exists.
29Why change is so challenging for schools An
interview with Peter Senge by Dennis Sparks
- Dialogue requires openness
- Leaders need to be patient and really passionate
about these kinds of discussions and willing to
make themselves vulnerable. - A leaders job is to create an environment for
teachers to continually learn. - Leaders must be committed to the continuous
learning of everyone associated with the school.
30- When we visualize our success we begin to change
behaviours to achieve that success. - Conzemius and ONeill
31- Clear, measurable goals are at the centre of the
mystery of a schools success, mediocrity or
failure. - S.J. Rosenholz, 1991
32SMARTGOALSare gap closers toward your
vision
33SMART GOALS
- focus on the few things most likely to have the
greatest impact - have both short and long term impact
- Align with other key strategic initiatives
- focus on results
- are generally 1 to 3 year goal - change takes
time
34STRATEGICMEASURABLEATTAINABLERESULTS
BASEDTIMEBOUND
35School Wide SMART GOAL
- Within 3 years 75 of our grade 3 and grade 6
students will meet the provincial standard in
reading (or math).
36Indicators
- The skills, knowledge or evidence of performance
that comprise or lead to proficiency in our goal
area. e.g., EQAO subtest skill sets, teacher
continua and other assessments. - Standards and objectives (weak areas for
students) - What indicators should we focus on for the school
wide SMART goal?
37Measures
- Tools used to monitor progress toward our goal.
We use them to determine where students are now
and whether they are improving. Measures are
specific to the indicators. - e.g., EQAO tests
- formative reading assessments
- classroom assessments
- for numeracy - timed tests, performance tasks,
unit tests, pre/post competency tests, etc.
38Targets
- Shorter term incremental steps toward the goal.
- Targets are set for each MEASURE.
- Targets are the attainable performance level we
would like to see. - Ask
- Based on the data, what is attainable?
- Based on resources, what is attainable?
- What is a reasonable, yet challenging level of
improvement we think we can achieve? (Be 80
sure you can reach the target.)
39Planning
Measures
Targets
Indicators
G O A L
Targets
Measures
Vision
- Methods include
- Instructional changes
- Curriculum alignment
- Assessment development
- Professional Learning
40School Improvement Plan
- Using your own school improvement plan, and the
graphic organizer on your table, - REVIEW YOUR PLAN BY ANSWERING THE QUESTIONS
PROVIDED ON THE PLACEMAT ORGANIZER. - You may wish to share your thoughts with those at
your table.
41Making a Difference
- Schools that attend to both strategies
building a collaborative culture that focuses on
student learning and creating a system of timely
interventions for students experience a
powerful synergy - p.186 Whatever it Takes
42Characteristics of a Professional Learning
Community
- ? Shared , Values, Mission and Goals
- ? Collaborative TeamsAdministrators and
Teachers - ? Parent Partnerships
- ? Action Orientation/Experimentation
- ? Collective Inquiry
- ? Continuous Improvement
- ? Results Oriented
43School Based Reform Lessons from a National
U.S. Study identified 3 Common Characteristics
- The most promising efforts focused on the
classroom - on raising expectations for all
students, emphasizing problem-solving and
critical thinking. - The most successful schools developed and
sustained a culture in which teachers worked
collaboratively and actively participated in
decisions that directly affected their ability to
improve classroom practices. - Successful schools took a long-term, strategic
perspective to build professional capacity.
44If, as a teacher,
- I present the lessons in a variety of ways
- I seek feedback from my students
- I analyze and evaluate their work in a manner
that changes my own emphasis, repertoire, and
timing - I visit or observe other adults as they teach
- I share the work of my students with colleagues
for feedback, suggestions, and critiques - I visit other schools or attend particular
workshops or seminars or read professional
literature on aspects of my teaching - I welcome visitors with experience and expertise
to observe and provide feedback to me on my
classroom practice - I yearly individualized professional development
plan focused on classroom changes to improve
student learning - and finally, I have systemic evaluation of my
teaching tied to individual, grade/department,
and schoolwide goals, - Then
- I have absolutely become better as a teacher.
- Adapted from Carl D. Glickman. Leadership for
Learning How to Help Teachers Succeed (2002)
45AGENDA
Other resources- Action Research, Using Data,
School Effectiveness Factors
46- Good to great transformation never happened in
one fell swoop. There was no single defining
action, no grand program, no one killer
innovation, no solitary lucky break, and no
wrenching revolution. Good to great comes by a
cumulative process step by step, action by
action, decision by decision, turn by turn of the
flywheel that adds up to sustained and
spectacular results.
Good to Great p. 165
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