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Leading Learning in a School & District Dr. Brad Balch, Indiana State University Mrs. Leslie Ballard, AdvancED Indiana

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Presentation on theme: "Leading Learning in a School & District Dr. Brad Balch, Indiana State University Mrs. Leslie Ballard, AdvancED Indiana"— Presentation transcript:

1 Leading Learning in a School & District Dr. Brad Balch, Indiana State University brad.balch@indstate.edu Mrs. Leslie Ballard, AdvancED Indiana lballard@advanc-ed.org

2 Standard 2 The school operates under governance and leadership that promote and support student performance and school effectiveness.

3 Growth Culture Leadership and staff foster a culture consistent with the school’s purpose and direction.

4 Indicator 2.4 Leaders and staff align their decisions and actions toward continuous improvement to achieve the school’s purpose? They expect all students to be held to high standards in all courses of study? All leaders and staff are collectively accountable for student learning? School leaders support innovation, collaboration, shared leadership, and professional growth? The culture is characterized by collaboration and a sense of community?

5 Supervision and Evaluation Leadership and staff supervision and evaluation processes result in improved professional practice and student success.

6 Supervision & Evaluation Consider: What is the purpose of a supervision and evaluation system? What does a highly effective system look like?

7 Indicator 2.6 Read the four performance levels for this indicator. – What rating would you give your school on this indicator? – Why? – What evidence do you have to support that rating?

8 Program Evaluation The systematic assessment of the design, implementation, improvement or outcomes of a program with the intent of improving it. Programs could be initiatives such as a tutoring program, grading policies, PLCs, professional development, academic programs such as Read 180, High Ability, ELL, Special Education, and so on. Ideally program evaluation is built into the program from the beginning.

9 Purpose of Program Evaluation Demonstrate program effectiveness to stakeholders Improve the implementation and effectiveness of programs Better manage limited resources Document program accomplishments Justify current program funding Support the need for increased levels of funding Document program development and activities to help ensure successful replication

10 Types of Program Evaluation Context Evaluation Formative Evaluation Process Evaluation Performance or Program Evaluation Impact Evaluation Outcome Evaluation

11 Learning Leaders: The Key to Successful Schools and Districts High-performing schools have leadership capacity that understands which practices improve student achievement, brings about positive change, supports teacher practices that help all students, and prepares accomplished teachers to become school leaders. (Adapted from SREB, 2004)

12 Reorient Your Learning Team: Affirm Commitment, Insight & Passion 1.I became an administrator/teacher because… 2.My big hope for our school improvement team is to… 3.Think of an effective team you’ve worked with. What made it effective. 4.What are the most important issues facing your team?

13 Building a Committed Learning Team Establish a clear vision and mission. Define member roles and responsibilities. Listen to one another. Set goals. Establish ground rules for meetings. Get to know each other.

14 Resistance to Working in Teams Lack of conviction that the Learning Team is worth the effort. Discomfort and riskiness for individuals. The Learning Team lacks clear focus on performance and success. (Adapted from Katzenback and Smith, 1993)

15 We believe in the power of education. © 2012 AdvancED 15


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