Challenging Environments, Extraordinary Leadership
Transformational
Practices, Leading Change
Imagining the Impossible, Creating Tomorrow
Creating the Future, Challenging the Past
My own learnings and insights from the conference
- There is a tendency to hold onto old models when new models are required
- Traditional school improvement can be short-lived – often there is nothing of substance underneath
- Schools are becoming desensitised to external accountability to drive improvement
- Good leaders create conditions for teaching and learning
- The paradox: What gets you there won’t keep you there!
- Leading for high performance requires constant disequilibrium and looking forward
- Ineffectual schools have dysfunctional cultures
- Leadership, rather than leaders, makes a difference
- Learning is at the core
- Leaders need a vision and need to develop a narrative
- The goal is improvement – innovation is at the service of improvement
- You cannot do educational improvement by riding the backs of teachers
- Successful school improvement is rarely achieved without external support and impetus
- Within school variance in pedagogical quality is 4 times greater than between school variance.
Possible tipping points
- Leaders having high quality conversations about learning
- Build capacity of leaders to have the difficult conversations with teachers about learning
- Leaders being skilled in having conversations about expectations and support
- Conversations need to be collaborative and respectful and based on evidence
- Relentless pursuit of what will help students learn more, achieve more, be better
- Couple optimism (what can be achieved) with realism (what is possible)
At a system level there is a need for
- the lateral transference of what works
- a strategy of sustainable improvement for large numbers of people
- a simple narrative line linked to a vision to explain the complex
and a need to
- draw upon and maximise expertise rather than positions/roles
- distribute accountability and responsibility
- ensure flexibility of roles within teams.
The “HOW” of school improvement as a continuous process
Alma Harris
Pro-Director (Leadership), Institute of Education,London; and Chair in Educational Leadership, London Centre for Leadership in Learning, England, UK
5Ds of continuous improvement
- Diagnosis
- Development – the right development strategies
- Data-informed
- Drive – focused to improve
- Distribute leadership
3 stages of improvement
Stage 1: Stopping the decline and creating conditions
Stage 2: Ensuring survival
Stage 3: Achieving sustainability and aspiring for much more
How to get there
- Evidence-based
- Connected programs, not localised projects
- High local accountability – build internal capabilities
- Abandon what gets in the way
What brings about educational improvement?
Ben Levin
Professor and Canada Research Chair at the Ontario Institute of Studies in Education (OISE), University of Toronto
The right changes
Change teaching and learning practices in all schools
- best evidence
- student engagement
Reach out to parents and community
Build sector capacity and commitment
Improve leadership skills
Approach curriculum and assessment as servant, rather than masters
Where to focus
Think ‘systems’ more than schools
All schools need to improve
Pay specific attention to
- low performing schools
- “coasting” schools
Priority groups
Aboriginal, ESL, special education, disability
Implementation
Focus on system and whole school changes – avoid projects
Create infrastructure
- relevant to the size of the challenge
- support people as well as resources
Be relentless about reminders, events and supporters
Build research, evaluation and data
Improving practices
Use what we know makes a difference (pick the low hanging fruit)
Build on good practices towards universal use
Start with easier steps
Take ownership
Work collectively in teams
Ground practices in school settings
Use data effectively
Importance of systems and processes
Regular events to review data and progress
Processes to ensure every student is considered
Prevention rather than remediation
Primary and Secondary
Different strategies are required
Primary – focus on teaching and learning
Secondary – focus on knowing students and tracking progress
Build sector support
Build strong political leadership
Align with local leaders
Respect all partners
Appeal to educators’ ideals
Build staff support
Stay focused and aligned
Develop public confidence and support
Public confidence
Public must believe that schools deliver
Requires sustained effort
Day to day work matters more than PR
There must be simple, clear messages backed by action
Role of assessment
Public is entitled to information system performance that goes beyond public test scores
Educators need information on student outcomes that is timely and relevant, and need to know what to do next
Communication and support
Endless communication to sector
- enlist support from leaders and teachers
- constant positive reinforcement
- respectful but with expectations
Regular public communication
- successes and challenges
Labour peace is a key element
Leadership capabilities that have a positive influence on learning
Viviane Robinson
Professor in the Faculty of Education, The University of Auckland, New Zealand
1. Integrate pedagogical knowledge
Learning Goals
Pedagogical Shift
Leadership required for shift
2. Analyse and solve complex problems
a. Goals determined
b. Discern constraints
c. Modify and integrate constraints in ways that enable solutions to be found
Loosen constraints to give room to move
Need for systematic identification and use of high quality solutions
3. Build relational trust
Relational trust is about interdependence
High relational trust leads to positive attitudes to innovation and risk
Uniqueness of the School context
Uniqueness of schools can lead to solving problems on your own
Need to test whether the school is more similar than unique
Further questions and answers
What contributes to a continuous improvement culture?
Flatter structures
Expertise at point of need
Work in teams
New ways of working
How do leaders influence teaching and learning?
Shape the work around learning
Shape goals focused on improving learning
Spend more time looking at teaching and learning
How are competing demands balanced and how is alignment created?
Focus on the things that need to be done to improve learning
Create alignment around Principles of Learning?
How much pressure and how much support?
Requires a skills set of strong influence
Pressure equates with High Expectations
What are the things that will move things forward with the least effort?
How can Instructional Leadership be strengthened?
Establish priorities/goals focused on learning at system level yet allow enough flexibility for schools to address
Develop a sustained improvement agenda
Slow down change to speed up improvement
2 comments:
Andrew
Lots of great points you make here. I have heard Viviane before and can really relate to her leadership messages particularly around relational trust. I heave just finished reading Sergiovanni's book Strengthening the Heartbeat and he makes the same points and building relational trust be acknowledging the good points and contributions of all teachers for even the less skilled teachers have good points.
Thanks
Mark Walker
well summarised, Andrew!!
Thanks.
Sue.
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