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Capacity Building In Higher-Performing Middle Schools

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1 Capacity Building In Higher-Performing Middle Schools
A Report on Best Practices In New York State American Educational Research Association March 27, 2008 New York City Kristen Campbell Wilcox Janet Ives Angelis School of Education-University at Albany

2 Capacity Building Processes and practices by which districts and schools enhance collaboration focused on student learning among teachers, administrators, and community members, and provide teachers with instructional support.

3 Findings Culture supports a vision of high achievement
Climate of respect helps enact vision Structures reinforce collaboratively supported instruction Leadership encourages teacher initiative taking

4 Previous Findings Culture, climate, relationships
(Van Zee et al., Brown et al., Hoy & Hannum) Professional communities (Fullan, Weisbord, DuFour) Learning organizations (Senge, Hargreaves, Darling-Hammond, Resnick, Little)

5 Ecological Framework Culture, leadership, and relationships + formal structure Classrooms are nested in schools, within districts, and within communities. (Brofenbrenner 1993) 5

6 Our Sample 10 HP schools with 6 similar but AP schools based on 3 years of NYS assessment data (2003-5) Half: = or > NYS average poverty level Urban, rural, and suburban Open admissions NYS average PPE

7 The Data 2-day site visits
Interviewed teachers and administrators using a semi-structured interview protocol Collected documents Coded more than 160 interviews and documents Crafted case studies for each site Created a cross-site report of BP

8 Culture supports a vision of high achievement
Broad visions, big plans Input from multiple stakeholders Aligned with overall goals Focused on achievement, especially closing the achievement gap Everything we do is centered on students achieving, improving, and closing the achievement gap. 8

9 Culture . . . . . . Enacting the vision.. Clearly articulated
Teachers encouraged to innovate to enhance student achievement I want my faculty to take risks and try new things. 9

10 Culture . . . . . . Never done Proactive stance
Excellence is a goal without a finish line. You never arrive. You are always becoming. When is good not good enough? Where can we improve? 10

11 Climate of respect helps enact vision
Relationships are based on mutual trust and respect Trust is most essential Respect for and from all The single most important thing is to build trust with your faculty. 11

12 Climate . . . . . . Clear expectations Explicit and consistent
Freedom to explore and learn within clear goals Good citizenship, respect, and responsibility. When you set expectations in terms of behavior and academic success, students generally meet them. 12

13 Climate . . . . . . Shared responsibility No blame
More support when fall short of goals/expectations Rather than a reprimand or finger pointing, the AS asked what more the administration could do to help us be more successful. 13

14 Structures reinforce collaboratively supported instruction
Scheduled meeting time focuses on curriculum, instruction, assessment, and student learning/needs. We have a lot of input as to what happens. We are empowered.

15 Structures Mentor programs and other formal teacher leadership roles Team leader Middle school department head Academic coach We have an awesome mentoring program and it is run by the teachers.

16 Structures . . . Multi-constituent decision-making bodies
Curriculum design Textbook selection “Congruency” teams Action research teams SDM Committees here are a huge thing.

17 Structures . . . Relevant program of professional development
Balanced between district- and teacher-defined needs Relevant to district/school goals (e.g., closing the gap) New initiatives include PD – are not “teacher proof” [Our school improvement model] expects teachers to make professional choices.

18 Leadership encourages teacher initiative taking
A “can do” culture and strong work ethic Build on strengths Focus on ability > disability Challenge but provide support Differentiated instruction has stretched us all a lot as ways to meet [student] needs in our classes.

19 Leadership . . . Provide professional opportunities beyond one’s own classroom Encourage conference participation/presentation Conduct workshops for colleagues Visit other classes I try to bring teachers early into facilitator roles to develop their leadership skills.

20 Leadership . . . Encourages initiative taking and action
Propose/pilot new programs Apply for grants Call services in > sending student out We can say, “What’s a better way to do this?” and not be penalized. Taking risks is okay.

21 Implications HP schools differ from APs primarily in the degree to which they have been able to put all 4 of the elements in place. These schools serve as models of adaptive systems that provide ‘linkages’ between people, activities, contexts, and time.

22 www.albany.edu/aire/kids jangelis@uamail.albany.edu


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