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Building the Capacity of Schools to Meet Student Needs

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Title: Building the Capacity of Schools to Meet Student Needs


1
Building the Capacity of Schools to Meet Student
Needs
  • Pedro A. Noguera, Ph.D.
  • New York University

2
Turning around under performing schools
Understanding the difference between technical
and adaptive work
  • Technical work - A focus on managing the
    operations of the system, insuring that
    procedures are working and that employees are in
    compliance with policy.
  • Adaptive work - A focus on the dynamic and
    complex nature of the work, its substance,
    meaning and purpose. Work guided by a long term
    vision, with medium and short term goals. An
    awareness that we are trying to achieve our goals
    in a constantly changing environment
  • Ron Hiefitz - Leadership on the Line

3
Key Adaptive Questions
  • What does it take to educate the children you
    serve?
  • How do they learn at home?
  • How do they use literacy and math?
  • What are they interested in?
  • What challenges do they and their parents face?
  • What are their unmet needs that may impact
    learning?
  • What are their dreams and aspirations?

4
Building Capacity Requires
  • Clear understanding of student needs
  • Academic and non-academic needs
  • Ability to understand what your staff needs to be
    effective in meeting student needs
  • Ability to identify, access and utilize resources
    to meet student needs
  • A plan for creating a culture that is aligned to
    your schools goals
  • A plan for engaging your parents as partners to
    reinforce educational goals

5
Group Discussion
  • How can you and your staff learn about your
    students needs and interests?
  • How can you use this information to develop
    programs, curriculum and instructional
    strategies?
  • How will you learn about the community where your
    school is located?

6
Building school capacity requires an
understanding of how to
  • Build partnerships between schools, local
    government and CBOs in response to
  • Health and social needs of children PS 188
  • Extended learning plan aligned to the academic
    plan - PS 28 Brooklyn, NY
  • Professional development for teachers based on
    student needs Serving ELLs at Edison Elementary
    School in Portchester, NY, Multicultural HS
  • Ability to implement and modify reforms based
    upon demonstrated effectiveness
  • Literacy across the curriculum at Brockton HS

7
PS 28 obtains highest gains in literacy and math
in Brooklyn -2012
8
Brockton scholarship winners 2012
9
Capacity Building
  • Intervene early and effectively in response to
    academic and social needs
  • Minneapolis 3rd grade drop-out prevention plan
  • Personalize the learning environment PS 12,
    Academy of Business and Technology, Bronx
  • Use of data systems to monitor performance
  • Implement interventions to meet student needs
  • Engage parents in effective partnerships that
    reinforce child development and learning
  • Partnerships focused on learning needs -
    McCormick Middle School, Boston
  • Addressing parent needs Eagle Academy

10
Building School Capacity
11
II. Identifying and Responding to Student Needs
What does it take to educate the children you
serve?
  • Analyze student achievement data
  • What do the patterns reveal?
  • Work with teachers to develop tools for
    diagnostic assessment
  • Talk to parents and students about their needs
    and interests
  • Work with social workers, nurses and CBOs to
    identify non-academic needs
  • What are the challenges confronting their
    families and neighborhoods?

12
Developing Professional Development Strategies in
Response to Student Needs
  • Achievement data will suggest areas where your
    staff needs to concentrate
  • Conduct regular classroom observations to get a
    sense of your teachers strengths and weaknesses
  • Look for evidence of learning
  • Engage senior teachers in peer mentoring
  • Provide new teachers opportunity to observe
    effective teachers
  • Ask teachers what kinds of training and
    assistance they need
  • Bring teachers together on a regular basis to
    analyze student work

13
Teaching and Learning
  • We want teachers to see teaching and learning as
    connected activities teach the way students
    learn
  • Use teaching strategies that foster engagement
    Socratic seminars, debate, project based learning
  • Focus on evidence of mastery of skills and
    knowledge
  • Focus on performance what can our students do?
  • Class time must be on-task work time for
    students, direct instruction kept to a minimum

14
Culturally Responsive Teaching
  • They make expectations and standards explicit by
    modeling and exposing students to high quality
    work
  • They utilize diagnostic tools to check for
    understanding
  • They learn about their students interests in
    order to make their lessons culturally relevant
  • They focus on motivation and engagement by
    soliciting feedback and questions from students
  • They analyze student work with a focus on
    evidence of competence and mastery

15
III. The role of the principal in developing
school capacity?
  • Provide the vision keep the big picture clear
  • Why are we doing this?
  • What will we achieve?
  • Share the vision to achieve buy-in
  • Use data to help staff understand the challenges
    facing your school
  • Staff, students and parents must understand the
    vision and their role in achieving it
  • Develop a plan with clearly delineated roles and
    responsibilities for parents, students, teachers
    and staff

16
Role of Principals continued
  • Help staff to understand why certain practices
    and strategies are important
  • Create conditions that enable teachers to be
    successful
  • Stay focused on morale and quality control in all
    aspects of your school
  • Take responsibility for maintaining a safe and
    orderly environment
  • Work on team building, model respect and a
    willingness to cooperate
  • Keep systems working - maintenance, operations

17
Characteristics of Effective Principals
  • Function more like coaches than generals
  • Lead by example
  • Share leadership, do not make themselves
    indispensable - Your work is secondary to the
    most important activity in the school teaching
  • Know their students and staff well
  • Know parents and the community well
  • Find balance between flexibility and
    decisiveness willingness to collaborate and
    willingness to make tough decisions

18
Skills Needed by Principals
  • Instructional leadership
  • Knowledge of finance and budget management
  • Public relations
  • Human Resources
  • Data management/analysis
  • Strategic planning
  • Knowledge of social welfare service delivery

19
Reflection
  • Which of the skills needed by principals do you
    have already?
  • How have your past experiences and training
    prepared you for a leadership role?
  • What do you regard as the necessary steps for
    building support for school change?

20
IV. Obstacles to School Improvement
  • School policies and practices are at odds with
    academic goals
  • Ineffective discipline - over reliance on
    suspension, failure to address underlying causes
    of behavior problems, discipline not connected to
    educational goals and character development
  • Inability to utilize your most effective teachers
  • Too many teachers are isolated
  • Inability to achieve consensus and buy-in among
    key stakeholders on plan for change

21
III. Developing School Culture Focus on Students
  • Create opportunities for students to display
    leadership at school
  • Solicit student ideas for school improvement
  • Provide opportunities for leadership
  • Cultivate attitudes and habits that promote
    academic achievement
  • Confidence and competence
  • Self discipline, self motivation
  • Organizational and study skills
  • Implement extra-curricular programs that help in
    developing these traits Chess, Robotics, Poetry

22
Developing a Student Centered School Culture
  • Adopt rituals and practices that reinforce core
    values
  • Develop an advisory system with clear guidance to
    teachers on how to use the time
  • Devise strategies to break and counter race and
    gender-based stereotypes
  • Teach code switching
  • Create an environment where racial identity and
    achievement are not linked - Is it cool to be
    smart?

23
Focus on Teachers and Staff
  • Use achievement data to make it clear why change
    is necessary
  • Set bench marks
  • Analyze patterns
  • Hold a retreat with staff to set goals and devise
    plans on how to achieve them
  • Must find ways to win buy-in
  • Provide training in how to relate to parents and
    build strong relationships with students

24
Key Principles
  • Develop partnerships with service providers to
    address unmet non-academic needs
  • Health, nutrition, counseling, etc.
  • Maintain quality control in interventions through
    ongoing evaluation
  • Title I and Special Education
  • Adhere to key principles
  • Kids who are behind must work harder and longer
    under better conditions
  • Improving the quality of teaching is the most
    effective way to raise student achievement
  • Look for evidence of learning when evaluating
    teaching

25
Key Questions When Developing a Schools Culture
  • What will it take to educate your students?
  • What are their academic and social needs? What
    challenges do they face?
  • What skills and resources are needed to meet
    their needs?
  • How will you achieve buy-in from staff,
    students and parents?
  • What practices and rituals will serve as the
    basis for your schools culture?

26
IV. Close the Gap Between Parents and School
  • Engage parents in partnerships to support
    students based on respect and shared interests
  • Initiate contact before problems arise
  • Design a variety of activities to engage parents
    throughout school year for parents
  • Hire personnel who have cultural competence and
    are effective at working with parents

27
Basic Requirements for Building Strong
Relationships Between Parents and Schools
  • Must be based on a recognition of mutual need,
    responsibility and respect
  • Must be based on the recognition that all parents
    can help their children
  • Must b e based upon understanding and empathy for
    the situation confronting parents and families
  • Schools need personnel who can communicate
    effectively with parents - language and cultural
    skills
  • Are We Ready for Parental Involvement?
  • What if parents are unhappy with quality of the
    school?
  • Tolerance for tension and some degree of conflict
    is necessary

28
Keys to Success
  • Staff understands the external pressures students
    face and have devised ways to counter the pull of
    the streets
  • gangs, teen pregnancy, pressure to work
  • Strategies for helping students to plan and think
    concretely about their future are in place
  • Code switching is taught explicitly
  • Adoption of social skills that make adults in
    authority feel at ease
  • Learning to code switch
  • Speech, dress, demeanor
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