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Education leadership:How districts can grow and
support a pipeline of highly effective leaders
The Wallace FoundationJuly 2012
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Contents1. Recap of Wallace education leadership initiative 2000-2010
2. The role of the principal: Practices of effective principals
3. The importance of leader training: Five lessons
4. The unanswered question and therefore our new theory of action
5. The principal pipeline initiative
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Wallace’s education leadership initiative: 2000-2010
Our strategies:24 states; 15 main urban districtsCommissioned research to fill knowledge gaps and evaluate
across sitesProfessional learning communities for states, districts, partners
Resulting in:Over 70 research reports140 sustained, high quality initiatives (including 24 pre-service
training programs)15 new non-profit organizations
The school principal as leader: What we have learned
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Leadership is key to improving teaching & learning
“Leadership is second only to classroom instruction among all school related factors that contribute to what students learn at school.”
-- How Leadership Influences Student Learning, Kenneth Leithwood, et al, University of Minnesota,
University of Toronto, 2004
“Six years later we are even more confident about this claim.”
-- Learning from Leadership: Investigating the Links to Improved Student Learning,
Louis, et al, 2010
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Leadership is crucial to making school reform succeed
“There seems little doubt that both district and school leadership provides a critical bridge between most educational reform initiatives, and having those reforms make a genuine difference for all students.”
-- How Leadership Influences Student Learning, 2004
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Especially in difficult situations“…there are virtually no documented instances of troubled schools being turned around without intervention by a powerful leader.”
-- How Leadership Influences Student Learning, 2004
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Effective principals are key to retaining good teachers
“It is the leader who both recruits and retains high quality staff. Indeed, the number one reason for teachers’ decisions about whether to stay in a school is the quality of administrative support – and it is the leader who must develop this organization.”
-- Preparing School Leaders for a Changing World,Linda Darling-Hammond, et al, Stanford University, 2007
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What effective principals doShape a transformational vision of
academic success for all students
Create a hospitable climate
Cultivate leadership in others Lead the leadership team Lead the professional learning community
Manage people, data and processes
All in the service of improving instruction
Source: The School Principal as Leader: Guiding Schools to Better Teaching and Learning, January 2012
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How leaders improve instructionShare decision-making
Principals are most effective when they see themselves as working collaboratively towards clear, common goals with district personnel, other principals and teachers
Sharing leadership increases credibility – doesn’t diminish it Balance clear expectations with fair accountability measures
Lead the professional learning community – the most direct means of improving instruction at all levels
Lead the leadership team Create a common learning agenda among all staff Provide support and clear expectations for teachers
High performing schools leaders both set the climate of high expectations and lead instruction
This is all most difficult at the high school level
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Leader preparation is important and cost effective
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Graduates of effective programs are: Better-prepared Perform better in high-needs schools Twice as likely to actually become principals (60
percent vs. 20-30 percent)
And ... can improve instruction in their schoolsGraduates of the NYC Leadership Academy – which incorporates the above practices – were placed in extremely low-performing schools and improved their schools’ academic performance at higher rates than other new principals in English-language arts and mathematics.
-- The New York City Aspiring Principals Program: A School-Level Evaluation, New York University, 2011
Effective preparation programsmake a difference
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Improving principal preparation is a cost-effective strategy
Superintendents and principals are the leaders with the most influence in schools.
“Efforts to improve their recruitment, training, evaluation and ongoing development should be considered highly cost-effective approaches to successful school improvement.”
-- How Leadership Influences Student Learning, 2004
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Elements of effective leader preparation programs
Based on research-based leader standards
A more selective process for choosing candidates based on the needs of the districts
Training that prepares them to lead improved instruction and school change, not just manage buildings
Robust, paid internships
High-quality mentoring and professional development tailored to individual and district needs
Following up on the progress of graduatesSource: Preparing School Leaders for a Changing World, Linda Darling-
Hammond, et al, Stanford University, 2007
The state role in strengthening leader preparation programs
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Steps states can take to strengthen leader preparation
Set standards for preparation programs
Accredit and reaccredit preparation programs
Define requirements for leader certification
Define and fund requirements for mentoring of new principals
Offer financial support for highly-qualified candidates
What districts can do
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Why the district role is important “Both our qualitative and quantitative evidence
indicate that district priorities and actions have a measurable effect on professionals at the school level.”
Leaders in higher performing districts communicated explicit expectations for principal leadership and provided learning experiences in line with these expectations
They also monitored principal follow-through and intervened with further support where needed.
- Wahlstrom, et al, Executive Summary of Research Findings, 2010
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Key steps districts can take Clearly define standards for principals – and for types of principals (such as elementary,
middle, high, “turnaround”)
Define accountability and leader evaluation measures and gives principals the authority and support to achieve them
Be an active consumer of leader preparation programs to ensure high quality candidates
Place and retain effective principals in the highest needs schools
Provide timely, relevant data to enable principals to accurately diagnose and address students’ learning needs
Use leader evaluation to focus more attention on their role on improving instruction
Provide time for principals to focus on instruction
Design and implement a pipeline to develop, train, place and support effective principals for all schools
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Wallace’s principal pipeline initiative
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The theory of action
When an urban district and its principal training programs provide large numbers of talented, aspiring principals with the right pre-service training and on-the-job evaluation and support….
….the result will be a pipeline of principals able to improve teaching quality and student achievement district-wide.
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Putting it all together:a “principal pipeline”
That are all:
High quality
Aligned
In support of district reform agenda
District-wide scale
Leader standard
s
High-quality aspiring leader
training programs
Evaluation and on-the-job support
Selective hiring
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Leader standardsDistricts and training programs adopt clear standards for
principals based on the effective leader characteristics that research has identified such as: ISLLC 2008VAL-EDGallup
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High-quality leader preparation Selective recruitment of candidates
Focus on improving instruction, not just managing buildings. Includes internships where candidates lead instructional work
Districts exercising their consumer power so graduates better meet their needs
States use their power to set standards for program accreditation, principal certification and financial support for highly qualified candidates
In a principal’s early years on the job, have high-quality mentoring and professional development tailored to individual and district needs
Source: The Making of the Principal: Five Lessons in Leadership Training (The Wallace Foundation, June 2012)
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Making smart hires
Rigorous selection process for filling principal and assistant principal job openings with most qualified applicants
Preference to graduates of high-quality programs
Placing them in schools based on the best fit and match between the candidate and available vacancies
Source: Districts Developing Leaders: Lessons on Consumer Actions and Program Approaches from Eight Urban Districts, Education Development Center, 2010
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Evaluation and on-the-job support for new principals
• Evaluations that reflect leader standards, measure those behaviors as well as school and student outcomes
• Professional development based on needs assessed by the evaluation; value placed on continuous improvement
• Carefully selected, well trained mentors working with new principals for at least one year, preferably more
• Supported by state and local funding that ensures mentors receive high quality training and appropriate stipends
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The principal pipeline initiative is supported by:
An independent evaluation by Policy Studies Associates and RAND with six public reports – the first will be released in second quarter 2013
Professional learning communities for grantees (in-person meetings, webinars, on-going project group work)
Technical assistance across all participating districts
Tools to help implement the research and lessons
For these and other resources on leadership and other topics:www.wallacefoundation.org
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The Wallace Foundation seeks to support and share effective ideas and practices that will strengthen education leadership, arts participation and out-of-school learning.
For a digital library of the publications cited here on education leadership, as well as others, visit the online Knowledge Center at www.wallacefoundation.org
The Wallace Foundation5 Penn Plaza, 7th FloorNew York, NY 10001
212-251-9700 [email protected]
www.wallacefoundation.org