Effective
Schools Research integrates tenets of the Continuous
Improvement Theory into a sustainable school improvement framework. As
a counter to Coleman’s (1966) research that extensively absolved schools of
responsibility for student achievement, Edmonds (1979) began extensive research
designed to investigate successful schools with large populations of low SES
students. His subsequent findings
resulted in a call for equity grounded in a commitment to promoting the academic
skills of low socio-economic status (SES) children to levels of mastery of basic skills. By addressing the equitable distribution of
goods within a society, Edmonds’s work was framed in socio-political terms
whereby all children could be educated and the school's treatment of children
was seen as a critical factor in each child’s academic success. Edmonds believed there are six factors that
schools can actually control, which can optimize academic success for poor
children. These included:
1.
strong administrative leadership;
2.
a climate of expectation that
children would succeed;
3.
orderly school atmosphere;
4.
primary emphasis on student
acquisition of basic skills;
5.
school energy and resources focused
on basic skills; and
6.
frequent monitoring of pupil
progress (p. 18).
The six factors identified by Edmonds (1979) were
reinforced by Pechman and King’s
(1993) identification of six essential factors for successful school reform. These six factors included:
1.
a
stable and safe school environment;
2.
the
ongoing support from district staff for reform;
3.
the presence of teacher leaders within the
school;
4.
the
collaboration and support of the whole faculty;
5.
the
acceptance and commitment by the faculty to participate in the change process;
and
6.
a
principal who facilitates the changes and encourages collegiality.
Additionally,
Childress (2009), reinforced the six essential types of involvement to be
included in any program of school reform.
This comprehensive program of school-family-community partnerships, which
was initially explicated by Epstein (1995), includes:
1.
parenting--helping all families
establish home environments that support children as students;
2.
communicating--designing and
conducting effective forms of communication about school programs and
children's progress;
3.
volunteering--recruiting and
organizing help and support for school functions and activities;
4.
learning at home--providing
information and ideas to families about how to help students with schoolwork
and school-related activities;
5.
decision-making--including parents
in school decisions and
6.
collaborating with the
community--identifying and integrating resources and services from the
community to strengthen and support schools, students and their families (p.
16).
The
basic conclusion of Edmonds
(1979) comparative research on Effective Schools was that public schools
can and do make a difference, even if comprised of students from low SES
backgrounds. As a result of effective
public schools, all children can learn at high levels including children from
low SES backgrounds. Unique
characteristics and processes found in schools where all students were learning
at high levels regardless of SES status were correlated with student success
therefore the term "correlates" has been subsequently referenced in
Effective Schools Research. These
interconnected correlates include:
• Safe
and Orderly Environment
• Clear and Focused Mission
• Climate of High Expectations for
Success
• Opportunity to Learn & Student
Time on Task
• Frequent Monitoring of Student
Progress
• Positive Home-School Relations
• Strong Instructional Leadership (Lezotte,
1991)
As a bridge between the initial work
by Edmonds and more recent research related to school reform, Lezotte (1991) and
Lezotte and Snyder (2011) focused upon correlates of effectiveness, processes
for creating effective schools, and achievement criteria for determining the
success of these efforts. Lezotte
encouraged an emphasis on dual research that focused upon the instructional
features of effective teaching and the organizational features of effective
schools. Ultimately, the Seven
Correlates and Six Essential Elements of School Reform formed the basic beliefs
framing improvement for Effective Schools.
The
continuous
improvement management approach
reinforces Deming’s
Total Quality Management (TQM) system, comprised of 14 points posited as “essential
for business success” (Davenport & Anderson, 2002, p. 33). Deming’s TQM system and the
“Plan-Do-Check-Act (PDCA) cycle” (p.34) grounds the well-documented Brazosport
sustained reform initiatives. Given its
genesis in the PDCA cycle, the Continuous Improvement Theory effectively aligns
well with other existing research shown to result in sustainable school
improvement.
An
Effective School’s mission grounded in the seven interconnected correlates for
reform would expect success regardless of socioeconomic status (SES) of its
students. Despite these findings by Comer,
(1998), the relationship between SES and educational outcomes continue to be so
“unquestioned that contemporary research is more likely to employ SES as a
control variable than as the subject of inquiry” (Duke, 2000, p. 442). For this reason, an effective leader needs to
promote the interconnectedness of the seven correlates of Effective
Schools.
Before
implementing the principle of monitor and adjust effectively, leaders
must identify the problem and then lead
continuous improvement systems and processes.
At least two methods can identify organizational problems. Root Cause Analysis is a method that helps individuals
learn as much as possible from adverse events or poor outcomes of processes in organizations. It is important to know why something
happened and learn how to prevent a recurrence. A root
cause is the most basic reason
that a situation did not turn out ideally (Frendendall, et al., 2002).
Theory of constraints is another method
for identifying organizational problems.
It evaluates multiple interactions among processes and systems that
ultimately effect decisions toward implementing change. Theory of constraints involves a thinking
process that emphasizes:
1) WHAT to Change?
2) To WHAT to Change?
Through rigorous analysis of a
problem system, the leader can identify the core conflict. This optimizes
efficiency toward construction of a complete solution based on
consideration of complex interdependencies that exist within a problematic
system. Considered and proposed changes
are only elevated toward implementation after careful evaluation of the
interactions that result from interrelated processes and systems. Theory of constraints extends conventional
cause and effect diagrams by constructing diagrams that show interdependencies
and interactions.
To
lead continuous improvement systems
and processes, the effective educational leader evaluates the Five Ts of Continuous
Improvement: Theories, Teams, Tools, Time, and Technology. The
effective educational leader then ensures appropriate performance criteria are
established. Just as performance
criteria is needed for leading continuous improvement systems and processes, the
effective educational leader ensures appropriate performance criteria are
established to monitor and adjust performance strategies.
Too
often diversity is the basis for contention rather than community building. Effective collaboration with the community is therefore essential. Childress (2009) advanced Epstein’s research
on a comprehensive collaborative program of school-family-community partnership
by highlighting the need to identify and integrate “resources and services from
the community to strengthen and support schools, students, and their families”
(p. 16). Schools will benefit from four
areas that form the core of their sustained, data-driven reform efforts. These areas include:
1) Designing and
delivering an evidence-based academic and instruction system
2) Designing and
delivering an evidence-based positive behavioral support system
3) Increasing community
and parent outreach and involvement
4) Designing and
delivering an integrated, unified educational system based on a strategic plan
and organizational development process.
The lack of universal success in
reform movements relates with the detrimental impact resulting from the lack of
a holistic approach. Too often reform
efforts are piecemeal, despite clear evidence of success for schools that
implement the seven correlates of Effective School Reform in an interdependent
manner (Lezotte, 1991). Certainly, the
single thread linking the four areas that form the core of sustained,
data-driven reform efforts to sustained improvement and ongoing success is the
effective utilization of positive, collaborative relationships among all
stakeholders actually responsible for the implementation of any strategically
planned and evidence-based change initiative (Knoff, 2006). Therefore, from an educational point of view,
a district implementing a system of reform based on the six essential
attributes and the five critical components of Sustainable School Reform and
grounded by the seven correlates of Effective Schools is more likely to
experience sustained success in its school reform initiative.
While
developing the Continuous Improvement Theory, Zangwill and Kantor (1998)
suggests the repeated use of the learning cycle provides a powerful method to
produce improvement and additional learning.
In theory, change agents repeatedly utilize the learning cycle to
observe and differentiate between techniques producing the greatest
improvement. As a result, change agents
learn how to improve organizational processes with greater efficiency.
Without
combining quality principles with its school reform efforts, continuous
improvement becomes less likely. A
strong leader of educational reform,
making continuous
improvement a moral journey, makes the efforts
for followers to join the change process.
A detriment to reliance on a charismatic change agent during reform
efforts, without including quality principles in the initiative, is that effort
often dies and the gains are quickly lost if the leader leaves before the
initiative becomes institutionalized.
Therefore, while the
interconnectedness of the seven correlates of Effective Schools requires a
strong educational leader, once the reform efforts institutionalize quality
principles then the likelihood for continuous improvement is increased. In the Brazosport case study, such
institutionalization analyzed, synthesized, and implemented Mary Barksdale’s
successful classroom approaches into an eight-step process “similar to Deming’s Plan, Do, Check, Act, cycle” (Davenport &
Anderson, 2002, p. 48). Likewise,
Kennewick’s Targeted Accelerated Growth (TAG) loop system (Fielding,
Kerr, & Rosier, 2007) exemplifies tenets of Continuous Improvement Theory
and thereby proves it is effective for inclusion in the Effective Schools
Framework to support sustainable school improvement.
Stakeholder
buy-in and consensus is crucial for achieving success in implementation of a
change initiative. It is an accepted
tenet of change management that stakeholder buy-in builds support and
acceptance of the change. It also
reduces resistance to the change initiative, which research has shown is a major
reason for implementation failure (Brown &
Arriaza, 1999). Effective leadership
facilitates movement toward consensus. Consensus
is the condition in which mutual
agreement exists between members of a group after addressing legitimate
concerns of all individuals within the group to the group’s satisfaction
(Saint & Lawson, 1994).
Should
educational leaders experience discomfort with risk, reluctance to encourage
real experimentation will result. While
educational leaders must provide clear vision and structure, they must
understand a little structure is very liberating for promoting the vision
needed in the continuous improvement process.
Leaders must be humbly aware that any improvement generally exhibits
modest increments of improvement. Desired
sustained progress will result from consistency, effective structure, and
innovation.
Academic
press is a particularly effective variable in Effective Schools, which is the
extent that “environmental forces press for student achievement on a
school-wide basis” (Murphy, Weil, et al, 1982, p.22). More than high expectations by staff alone,
the academic environment experienced by students includes “school policies,
practices, expectations, norms, and rewards generated by both staff and
students” (p.22). These environmental
factors press students to respond in certain ways to do well academically. The effective school leader implement school
polices and enforcement practices that form the framework for classroom-level
activity thereby allowing the framework to move schools from being loosely
coupled to Effective Schools
Edmonds
(1982) found a strong instructional leader in an ineffective school but did not
find an Effective School without strong instructional leadership. This correlation exemplifies there is utility
in considering each correlate one at a
time for purposes of becoming familiar with the related research. Nevertheless, each correlate must be viewed
as a necessary, but not sufficient, part of the entire school as an effective
system that successfully produces learning for all. The Effective School demonstrates the
presence of equity in quality through performance or result outcomes, which
reflects its learning for all mission.
Policies, practices, and procedures that holistically promote the seven
correlates of Effective Schools promote high expectations for everyone involved
in the school system. Then, the students
can receive this clearly conveyed message.
By contrast, a system that exhibits loosely coupled policies, practices,
and procedures, especially when there is neither consensus on the school’s
mission nor strong school leadership is more likely to convey low expectations.
The result of frequent monitoring and analysis means data guides
instructional decisions. However, effective
use of data depends on how well educational leaders are able to guide the
process. The continuous improvement
process in education should develop a building-wide culture whereby all
systems, processes, strategies, and actions define “how we do things around here”
Lezotte & Snyder, 2011, p. 141).
Otherwise, any progress is adversely impacted.
Success
is most evident through valid data.
"Data makes goals meaningful; without data, we will have only the
semblance of accountability (Davenport & Anderson, 2002, p. 54)." Therefore, three key factors of continuous
improvement are teamwork, goal setting, and data.
When seeking school improvement,
implementation of the correlates for Effective Schools is prudent based on
research and best practices.
Disaggregated data helps “the district, its schools, and its teachers to
evaluate their effectiveness” (Davenport & Anderson, 2002, p. 62). As a result, an educational
leader could then seek to empower a “vertically integrated team of teacher and
school-level leaders including district office representatives, the community,
and schools. Empowerment of staff is an
important variable that could result in development of a school culture positively
impacting student learning.
The Targeted Accelerated Growth (TAG)
loop process perfected at the Kennewick, WA school district is a process not a
linear model. With any process, change
resulting from the interpretation of reliable data is crucial for success based
on application of correct micro-adjustments.
Utilization of diagnostic testing and professional development for the
teaching staff to administer and interpret results will ensure staff can effectively
use data. This element of reform is the
piece that allows well-developed, proportional increases during instructional
time. Absent data gathering and
understanding how to use it diagnostically, little else within an effective
process is truly possible.
District-wide continuous improvement
results are optimized when administrators structure time so that teacher teams
have the opportunity to meet regularly. This
strategy recognizes planning and professional development related to goal
achievement is necessary to sustain the improvement effort. If it is true that teams outperform
individual efforts then "learning not only occurs in teams but
endures" (Schmoker, 1999, p. 12).
A
school or district’s continuous improvement goals must succinctly indicate
implementation steps for each improvement goal.
For this reason, the current framework widely utilized for continuous
school improvement prudently encourages a school to limit the number of goal
statements to no more than three. Given
the complexity of the school system, too many goals can adversely affect the
level of human energy devoted to the initiative. Displaying the limited number of continuous
improvement goals allows followers and stakeholders to monitor growth through
well-explicated action plans.
Since
each improvement goal requires development of a well-explicated action plan, every
action plan should include evaluation to ascertain what works and what is not
working. To monitor the implementation
and overall impact of the action plans on the improvement goal, effective
leadership identifies the necessary data.
The leadership team creates realistic
timetables for implementing the multiple action plans and improvement
goals. Gantt charts optimize
project management.
Frequent
monitoring and then adjusting form the central tenet for the continuous
improvement framework (Lezotte & Snyder, 2011). Effective leaders
model the image of a learner. Therefore,
the effective leader examines updated research, best practices, and seminal
systems to identify potential ways to optimize the organization’s effectiveness.
Human and financial resources are important factors when the
effective leader considers a continuous improvement program, development of
goals, explication of action plans, and evaluation of each. Outputs, or results, need to be the primary
focus of evaluation. The data selected
for evaluation should therefore allow evaluation of outputs. This also reinforces the core belief of
continuous improvement: the next level to which a school or district aspires is
just beyond the current goal.
Without quality and commitment to the action steps, any continuous
improvement plan will be ineffective for promoting positive change. Therefore, the Continuous Improvement Framework
posits the oversight responsibility of the school leadership team is an
essential element of school improvement.
Given the complexity of schools, it is easy for an initiative to wane or
get lost. Lezotte and Snyder (2011) believe
change efforts need champions, which means “the school leadership team and the
individual correlate teams must accept responsibility to act as the champions
for their change strategies” (p.140).
The Continuous Improvement Framework details a process aimed to
revise the cultural mindset among staff.
Champions of a successful change initiative move onto new goals while previous
followers assume more leadership roles in the process of continuous school
improvement. Therefore, the process,
which is “data-driven, research-based, results-oriented, focused on quality and
equity, collaborative in form, ongoing, and self-renewing,” will result in
continuous school improvement based on the effective schools framework advancing
the learning-for-all mission (Lezotte & Snyder, 2011, p. 140). A data dashboard based on feedback
available to teachers provides a communication loop that is essential for
empowerment, ownership, and sustainability.
Therefore, understandability of data is paramount. Professional development and effective hiring
of teachers, who are well versed in data interpretation, becomes essential for
sustaining a culture of learning for all, as optimized through frequent
monitoring and adjustment.
The Brazosport and Kennewick case
studies prove sustained growth is possible through a systemic, continuous
improvement model. It is fair to ponder
whether leadership at Brazosport Texas or Kennewick Washington would have been
given the chance for success if they began their process for sustained growth
in 2005 rather than 1995. Such a debate
highlights the need for district support, which needs to be in place for
advancing a new principal's vision of school improvement. Faculty also needs to be willing to say to
the leader, “exhibit trust in us through your exhibition of Invitational
Leadership so we can do more together!”
An unintended consequence of Adequate
Yearly Progress (AYP) pressure is expecting immediate results and two-year
life spans for new school leaders. This
is counter-productive for implementing the correlates of Effective
Schools. The current state of assessment
and accountability pressures does not encourage the sustained growth processes
previously exhibited by Brazosport and Kennewick. The proven Brazosport and Kennewick success
processes grounded in Continuous Improvement Theory will become an aberration
unless educators demand an earnest, reflective response to the question, “are
we doing the right thing with the results from our high stakes testing?”
Without combining quality principles
with its school reform efforts, continuous improvement would be unlikely. A strong leader of educational reform, making
continuous improvement a moral journey, makes the efforts for followers to join
the change process. A detriment to
reliance on a charismatic change agent during reform efforts, without including
quality principles in the initiative, is initial effort often dies and gains
are quickly lost if the leader leaves before the initiative becomes
institutionalized. Therefore, while the
inter-connectedness of the seven correlates of Effective Schools requires a
strong educational leader, once the reform efforts institutionalize high-quality
principles, the likelihood for continuous improvement is then increased. Principles, rather than personalities, should
always guide reform initiatives.
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