 | Sustainability
 | | Tracy Reimer |
Sustainability: More than Instructional Leadership
Best Practices in Instructional Leadership (March 2007)
Tracy Reimer, principal Bendix Elementary, Annandale
The No Child Left Behind act (NCLB) has brought resurgence to
the basics, reading and math, at the elementary school level.
Stakeholders measure our schools by the number of stars on our report
card and the percentage of students meeting proficiency on state tests.
This public form of accountability has elicited increased attention to
tested subject areas and concern for at-risk students. NCLB’s
distinction between subgroups (minority, poverty, special education)
and requirement for all students to reach proficiency by the year 2014
are captured in the words of Deborah Meier, “The question is not, Is it
possible to educate all children well? But rather, do we want to do it
badly enough?”
Elementary principals have responded with a renewed focus on their role as instructional leader.
Principals work diligently implementing standards-based reform via
supervising and participating in detailed studies of the Minnesota
academic standards and aligning standards with literacy and math
curriculum. Accountability for results and the high stakes associated
with measurable outcomes spurs leaders to seek guidance from the
research community. Instruction itself was highlighted by multiple
research study findings reporting “improved classroom instruction as
the prime factor to produce student achievement gains” (Odden &
Wallace, p. 64). Research publications endorse best practice
instructional strategies: best practice defined as strategies proven
effective in boosting student achievement. Elementary principals have
concentrated on analyzing assessment results, understanding new
standards, and implementing best practice.
The achievement gap continues. While these efforts impacted
classroom instruction and led to an overall rise in student
achievement, this would not be true of reducing the achievement gap
(Kim & Sunderman, 2005). National and state government leaders
proclaimed victory for the initial gains waiving the flag of
“accountability” as the impetus for improvements. As years have
progressed, student achievement has begun to plateau. Political leaders
express disappointment, but the phenomenon should not be a surprise as
it has been documented in previous studies (Department for Education
and Skills, 2004). Short-term gains have been achieved, but sustained
improvement has not. Michael Fullan states that centrally
(district/state) driven reforms can boost achievement but “can never
carry the day of sustainability.” (p.7)
Schools need sustainability. Fullan defines sustainability as
the “capacity of a system to engage in the complexities of continuous
improvement consistent with deep values of human purpose.” (p. ix) It
is “leadership” that produces this level of reform. Leadership is not
viewed as owned by a traditional leader, rather there are educators who
involve themselves to a lesser or greater degree in leadership actions.
Longer-term, sustainable reform requires the deep ownership of teachers
and principals. A principal needs to support and empower teachers in
order to achieve sustainability. Roland Barth summarizes it succinctly,
“All teachers can lead! Most teachers want to lead. And schools badly
need their ideas, invention, energy, and leadership.”
A principal striving for sustainability is focused on more than
particular practices (though practices are imperative to gains), but
also on building collaborative relationships and structures for
improvement. Successful schools have collaborative cultures in which
administrators and teachers work as a team with a common commitment to
initiatives that ensure success for all. It has been shown that if
schools work as teams, there is much sharing of expertise so that all
students benefit from the most effective instruction available.
A mechanism promoting sustainability is a Professional Learning Community.
Professional learning communities allow people to talk across grade
levels, departments, and schools within a district. “This simple,
powerful structure starts with a group of teachers who meet regularly
as a team to identify essential and valued student learning, develop
common formative assessments, analyze current levels of achievement,
set achievement goals, and then share and create lessons to improve
upon those levels” (Schmoker, p. 176).
In summary, short-term gains can be made through the leadership
of a principal, but true sustainability requires a new schema of reform
that encourages collaboration and leadership among teachers . . . the
very individuals truly touching our children each day.
References Booth, D., & Rowsell, J. (2002) The literacy principal: leading, supporting, and assessing reading and writing initiatives. Markham, Ontario, Canada: Pembroke Publishers. ISBN 155138146X.
Department for Education and Skills. (2004). Results of school reform in England. London:Author.
Feuer, M.J., Towne, L., & Shavelson, R.J. (2005). Scientific culture and educational research.
Educational Research, 31 (8), 4-14.
Fullan, M. (2005). Leaderships & sustainability: Systems thinkers in action. Thousand Oaks, CA: Corwin Press, ISBN1412904951
Kim, J.S., & Sunderman, G.L. (2005). Measuring academic proficiency under the no child left behind act: Implications for educational equity. Educational Researcher, 34(8), 3-13.
McAndrew, D. A. (2005). Literacy leadership: Six strategies for peoplework. Newark, DE:
International Reading Association. ISBN 0872075567.
Odden, A., & Wallace, M.J. (2003). Leveraging teacher pay. Education Week, 22 (43), 64.
Schmoker, M. (2006). Results now: How we can achieve unprecedented improvements in teaching and learning. Alexandria, VA: Association for Supervision and Curriculum
Development. ISBN 1416603580.
Taylor, B.M., Pearson, P.D., Peterson, D.S., & Rodriguez, M.C. The CIERA school change framework: An evidence-based approach to professional development and school reading improvement. Reading Research Quarterly, 40 (9), 40-69.
|