Sunday, January 28, 2018

How Strategic Planning and Organizational Development is Done by Every School . . . Every Year [Part II of II]



An Introduction to Successful School-based Strategic Planning Science-to-Practice

Dear Colleagues,

Introduction

   The Elementary and Secondary Education/Every Student Succeeds Act (ESEA/ESSA) requires every state department of education to oversee and evaluate the school improvement processes for at least 5% of their lowest performing schools.  Moreover, these State Education Agencies (SEA)—ESEA/ESSA’s term for any state department of education—must provide guidance to the districts involved so that the schools in improvement status have at least one evidence-based intervention in their improvement plans.

   But the State Departments of Education have a Dilemma:

   We still have not identified science-to-practice approaches that match the “right” interventions to the root causes underlying a school’s under-performance.  In addition, we really have not identified many interventions that have consistently and predictably turned students’ academic performance around. 

   Finally, most SEAs have focused on providing global “intervention menus”—rather than encouraging the functional assessments needed to explain exactly why a school’s students are not academically (and socially) succeeding.
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   In Part I of this two-part Blog series, we recommended that SEAs:

   * Require low performing districts and schools to use a scientifically-and-field-based-proven strategic planning process as their primary and first evidence-based practice.

   This will satisfy ESEA/ESSA’s evidence-based practice requirement, resulting in better decisions relative to the organizational, curricular, instructional, and multi-tiered systems of support practices (including strategic and intensive interventions) that are needed by a school relative to staff and student success.
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   In saying this, however, I want to emphasize the intent in using the scientifically-and-field-based-proven phrase above.

   Educators must understand that there is an independent science of strategic planning and organizational development—that has identified scientific principles and practices that transcend different settings, situations, circumstances, and businesses. 

   Thus, in order to maximize district and school improvement success, this science needs to be validly and differentially applied to the common and unique circumstances in specific educational settings by practitioners who have experience and a demonstrated track record of success in schools, districts, regional resource centers, and state departments of education.

   For the past five years or more, the U.S. Department of Education has funded at least two Technical Assistance Centers focused on strategic planning, school improvement, and scaling-up science.  These Centers have tried to create their own strategic planning processes—often without integrating and applying the known and (pre-)existing science of strategic planning and organizational development.  Not surprisingly, their track records, especially at the state department of education level, are spotty at best.
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Summarizing Part I to get to Part II

   In Part I of this Blog, we reviewed two reports focusing on school improvement and ESEA/ESSA.  These reports were:

ESSA Leverage Points: 50-State Report on Promising Practices for Using Evidence to Improve Student Outcomes (January, 2018; Results for America).

Examples of Actions Taken by Principals Trying to Lead Turnaround (2017; The WestEd Center on School Turnaround).
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   This first report analyzed the ESEA/ESSA Consolidated State Plans that have been submitted to the U.S. Department of Education over the past 10 months—from every state department of education in the country—in the area of school improvement for low performing schools.

   Specific to the process of strategic planning and organizational development, two findings were notable:

   * Only seven states (DE, IN, IA, MN, OH, OK, and TN) prioritized high-quality needs assessments as a key component of the school improvement process.

   * Just nine states emphasized the use of evidence and continuous improvement in the design of their school improvement applications.
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   The second report identified a number of common strategic planning and organizational assessment actions, but it did not identify:

   * How to link the results of an organizational assessment (at the district, school, staff, and student levels) with the actions discussed; and

   * How to objectively and empirically prioritize the problematic characteristics or conditions in a specific district or school such that certain actions are more advantageous and predictive of improvement success.

   It did not do this because, in essence, that would be indefensible.

   Indeed, Carlas McCauley, the Director for School Turnaround at WestEd, the group that published this report recently said in an Education Week article:

States, meanwhile, are still sorting through exactly what their role will be (in ESEA/ESSA) when it comes to helping districts and schools pick improvement strategies and supporting them through the process.  They could, for instance, decide to come up with a list of approved strategies and providers for districts to choose from, although that’s not a must.

But state officials interested in taking that step might not have many options to put on those lists—at least at first.  There’s just not much out there when it comes to turnaround strategies with a clear track record of fixing the lowest-performing schools.

   To expand on this point, it is notable that ESEA/ESSA defines “evidence-based practice” by outlining a research-based system that categorizes interventions as having “Strong evidence,” “Moderate evidence,” or “Promising evidence.”

   And yet, to a large degree, these distinctions are virtually meaningless given the following.  Specifically. . . another recent Education Week article on school improvement noted:

While the federal What Works Clearinghouse has reviewed more than 10,000 studies on various interventions, a forthcoming meta-analysis based on the clearinghouse’s reviews found only 29 different interventions showed significant effects—and the average effect was small, particularly when the interventions were in messy real-school contexts instead of highly controlled laboratory settings.


   And so, a major fear with this second Report (and, in general) is that districts or schools might simply pick one or more actions from its menu of school improvement clusters. . . without linking them to the results of a systematic and effective needs and root cause assessment, resource and capacity analysis, and strategic planning process.

   Indeed, when districts or schools choose school improvement strategies based on:

   * Their perceptions of what the problem is, or what might work;
   * The preferences of staff (or others);
   * The testimony (endorsements, or marketing) of others;
   * The ease of implementation;
   * The resources (or lack thereof) available; and/or
   * What worked elsewhere. . .

the likely result will be continued failure, increased frustration, and perhaps, a more serious or convoluted problem.

   It is because of all of these concerns that this Blog Part II will provide a science-to-practice introduction to strategic planning and organizational development.

   This introduction is based on my work in thousands of schools across the country with Project ACHIEVE, our evidence-based (as cited on the National Registry of Evidence-based Programs and Practices—NREPP).  Project ACHIEVE was the U.S. Department of Education-approved school improvement process for the Arkansas Department of Education for all Focus Improvement Status schools in the state during the NCLB Waiver/Flexibility years of the Obama administration.
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The Strategic Planning Areas in Continuous School Improvement

   Strategic planning, organizational development, and progressive school improvement involves ongoing, interdependent, scaffolded, and articulated processes that have specific stages distributed across the school year.  Often tied to districts’ annual budget cycles, effective strategic planning and school improvement focus on the staff and skills, materials and resources, instruction and intervention, and formative and summative evaluations needed to educate a diverse and often complex student body. 

   At a functional level, most districts and schools need to set annual strategic goals and school improvement activities in the following areas:

   * Organizational development—including resource mapping and development, capacity-building and sustainability, and systems-level support to schools, staff, and students

   * Effective school and schooling—including the use of scientifically- or research-based practices at the administrative, curriculum and instruction, progress monitoring and evaluation, and multi-tiered (i.e., prevention, strategic intervention, and intensive need) service and support levels

   * Professional development and staff evaluation—including supervision and mentoring, and teacher/educator effectiveness, accountability, and evaluation

   * Multi-tiered academic instruction, assessment, and intervention— including positive academic supports and services

   * Multi-tiered positive behavioral support systems—including attention to school safety, school and classroom climate, effective classroom management, and student health, mental health, and wellness

   * Multi-tiered systems of support—including problem-solving teams, consultation processes, and data-based functional and diagnostic assessments leading to effective instructional modifications and/or academic/behavioral interventions

   * Parent and community outreach and involvement—including needs assessments, training, support, capacity-building, advocacy, and the braiding of school and community services and supports

   * Data management, evaluation, and accountability—including the formative and summative tracking of system, school, staff, and student outcomes


   All of this planning is operationalized in a school’s annual School Improvement Plan—a detailed plan that should outline student, staff, and school goals, objectives, activities, and outcomes, respectively. 

   When crafting these Plans, it is essential that school leaders focus on the preventive services, supports, strategies, and programs that most strongly predict and result in students’ academic and social, emotional, and behavioral learning and success.  This occurs best when schools adopt and practice effective shared leadership approaches that involve collaborations among teachers, support staff, related service specialists, administrators, and others at the district level. 

   When sound preventive practices are implemented with fidelity, more students are successful, and fewer students need individual assessments and multi-tiered strategic or intensive services or supports.

   At the same time, comprehensive School Improvement Plans also must explicitly address the multi-tiered services, supports, programs, and strategies that students need at the strategic and intensive/crisis management levels . . . in both academic and social, emotional, and behavioral areas.

   This is a frequent, significant gap in most Plans. 

   Indeed, in a figurative sense:  While it’s important to prevent a crisis, it’s just as important to know the early warning signs and how to respond to an impending crisis, while also having plans and resources to address a crisis if it actually occurs.
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Key Past Lessons in Strategic Planning

   What many in education are not aware of is that strategic planning is a well-researched and established independent and scientific endeavor.  That is, the science of strategic planning exists as a generic “body of work” that is then applied to a specific discipline.  Moreover, decades of research in strategic planning—combined with research in organizational, group process, social, and other areas of psychology—have established a core set of successful principles, practices, and approaches. 

   And it is these core principles, practices, and approaches that are applied to (once again) specific fields or disciplines—for example, business, government, social services, and education. 

   From a historical perspective, it is important to revisit the work of the Annie E. Casey Foundation.  In the early 1990s (over 25 years ago), this Foundation sponsored a five-year, five community New Futures grant initiative to prepare disadvantaged urban youth for successful lives as adults.  After investing an average of $10 million in each community, the Foundation evaluated the implementation and planned change process so that future initiatives would be more efficient and effective. 

   In the end, the key lesson was that, in the low-income communities involved, systems-level initiatives, by themselves, could not transform poor educational, school, and health outcomes for vulnerable children and families.  That is, institutional change was not enough.  The change process required a comprehensive and strategically-planned and implemented home, school, and community collaboration that included social-capital and other economic-development initiatives targeting entire low-income neighborhoods. 

   Among the other lessons described in this Report were the following:

   1. Comprehensive reforms are very difficult and involve, at times, the path of most resistance.
                
   2. Comprehensive reform requires advanced and ongoing efforts to build constituencies that are committed to long-term efforts, to strategic planning, and to the development of systems that can sustain the change process over time and through changes in leadership.
                
   3. Comprehensive reform efforts must be planned, public, realistic, and shared; and they need core leadership, management systems and skills, conviction and momentum, and credibility and legitimacy to have any hope of success.
                
   4. Comprehensive reform requires a blend of outside technical assistance and local commitment, leadership, planning, funding, and evaluation that results in local ownership and self-renewal.
                
   5. Comprehensive reform requires repair, revision, reassessment, and recommitment. Significant modification should not be interpreted as a sign of failure.
                
   6. Comprehensive reform often requires the development of entirely new systems and ways of being. The alteration of existing systems or the implementation of new systems built alongside old systems often will not lead to real change and enduring outcomes.
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Key Present Lessons to Guide Strategic Planning

   As a pragmatic first step in applying strategic planning to school improvement, schools need to continuously consider six fundamental questions throughout their outcome-based improvement journey.  These questions recognize both the systemic nature and the student-centered focus of school improvement.

   The Six Fundamental Questions are:

   1. How do we design and deliver an evidence-based academic and instruction system that successfully addresses the differentiated needs of all students while improving their rates of learning such that they progress through the grade levels and graduate from high school with the applied skills needed for college and/or career success?

   2. How do we create a functional assessment and progress monitoring continuum that is curriculum-based, that can track students’ learning and mastery over time, while also guiding the development of successful, strategic or intensive interventions when students do not respond to effective instruction?

   3. How do we design and deliver an evidence-based school discipline, classroom management, and student self-management (or positive behavioral support system) that increases all students’ interpersonal, social problem-solving, conflict prevention and resolution, and emotional control and coping skills; that creates safe and connected classroom and school environments; and that maximizes students’ motivation and their academic engagement, independence, and confidence?

   4. How do we create functional assessment and progress monitoring approaches to track students’ social, emotional, and behavioral learning, progress, and mastery that are ecologically-based and culturally-sensitive; that can evaluate student, classroom, and school outcomes; that can facilitate the development of successful strategic and/or intensive interventions when students do not respond?

   5. How do we increase our parent outreach and involvement so that all parents are motivated, capable, and involved in activities that support and reinforce the education of all students? 

   To complement this, how do we increase our community outreach and involvement so that real interagency and community collaboration occurs—resulting in effective, efficient, and integrated services to all students at needed prevention, strategic intervention, and intensive service levels?

   6. Finally, how do we design and deliver these activities as an integrated, unified educational system through a strategic planning and organizational development process that braids data-based functional assessment and problem-solving to guide decision-making with ongoing formative and summative evaluation? 

   Moreover, how do we institutionalize this process such that it becomes self-generating, self-replicating, and responsive to current and future student, staff, and school needs?
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   All of these questions, and the targets embedded in them, are essential to a school’s continuous, progressive improvement and, ultimately, its students’ success.  But the improvement and strategic planning process takes more than evidence-based approaches.  These approaches must be complemented by the professional and interpersonal interactions that support every staff member. . . from day-to-day, week-to-week, quarter-to-quarter, and year-to-year. 
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The Strategic Planning Process and Its Phases and Activities

   Strategic planning is a continuous, systematic process that helps schools and districts identify, plan, prepare for, execute, and evaluate their short- (i.e., annual) and long-term (i.e., three or five year) goals, activities, and explicit outcomes. 

   Designed to attain these short- and long-term outcomes, strategic planning also results in actions that are:

   * Consistent with the school’s vision, mission, and needs of its students and staff;

   * Reflective of the school (and community’s) strengths and assets, weaknesses and limitations, opportunities and resources, and threats and barriers;

   * Focused on strengthening the school’s organizational capacity and resources while increasing effective and efficient staff collaboration and leadership;

   * Committed to fiscal and technological integrity; and

   * Unapologetic in emphasizing data-based decision-making, the use of scientifically- or research-based approaches and practices, and staff accountability and consistency. 
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   Typically, a school’s strategic planning process is chronologically aligned with the district’s budgeting cycle.  Working backwards, most districts begin their fiscal year on July 1st, and the school board often passes the annual budget by the end of May (at the latest).  Thus, schools in the district must submit their strategic plans and budgets to the superintendent by the end of February (at the latest) so that all requests can be analyzed, approved, and then integrated into the district’s comprehensive plan and budget by April.  This means that schools must begin their individual strategic planning processes by December at the latest. 

   Once the school board passes the budget, each school then needs to revisit its School Improvement Plan—adjusting and finalizing all goals and activities based on the now-approved district and school priorities, and the funds and other resources provided.

The Five Strategic Planning Phases.  In the context of organizational change and continuous improvement, strategic planning can be organized in five phases at the school level. 

   [The recommended activities within each phase are briefly identified below.  I am happy to have more-personalized discussions about these phases and activities for those who contact me.]

   During Phase 1 (Assessing Organizational Readiness/Needs Assessments and Audits), the following primary activities typically occur:

     A. The School Leadership Team is established (or reconfirmed); and it organizes the strategic planning process

     B. The motivational readiness of the school for strategic planning and implementation is evaluated
        
     C. The organizational readiness of the school for strategic planning and implementation is evaluated

     D. Community stakeholders and other important constituent groups are involved
                
     E. Internal (District, School, Staff, Student) current status and trend analyses, needs assessments, internal organizational scan/ SWOT analyses, and personnel and resource analyses are completed

     F. An external (Community, Regional, State, National) environment scan and analysis is completed
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   During Phase 2 (Writing the School Improvement Plan) of the strategic planning process, the following primary activities typically occur:

     A. The School Improvement Plan is written based on the Phase 1 results       

     B. The School Improvement Plan is checked for its consistency with the school’s vision and mission statements

     C. The School Improvement Plan is submitted to the Superintendent and is integrated into the district’s budgeting and strategic planning process (typically by the end of February)      
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   During Phase 3 (Establishing the Infrastructure to Implement the Plan), the following primary activities typically occur:

     A. The school builds (or continues to build) its resources and capacity in preparation for School Improvement Plan implementation (beginning at least by May or June)

     B. The school completes a year-end Consultation Referral Audit

     C. The school completes a year-end Get-Go process to share and apply (especially relative to differentiated instruction) “lessons learned” to the new school year     
        
     D. The school and its committees complete other end-of-year articulation activities to prepare for the transition to the next school year 
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   During Phase 4 (Implementing, Monitoring, and Evaluating the Plan), the following primary activities typically occur:

     A. The School Improvement Plan is implemented at the beginning of the new school year (or during the planning days immediately before the beginning of school)      

     B. Individual teacher Professional Development Plans are written and approved, and they are evaluated biannually     

     C. Progress in the different areas of the School Improvement Plan are evaluated at the school, committee, staff, grade, classroom, and student levels     

     D. The School Improvement Plan is formally evaluated at the end of the first six weeks of the school year, and then on a quarterly basis (typically the end of October and during January)

     E. The January evaluation re-initiates the strategic planning process relative to the relevant activities needed in Phases 1 and 2        
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   During Phase 5 (Reviewing, Retooling, and Renewing the Plan), the following primary activities typically occur:

     A. A summative evaluation of all areas of the School Improvement Plan is completed (typically in April)

     B. This evaluation and review process eventually leads back to the relevant activities in Phases 2 and 3
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   While I have worked with well over a thousand districts or schools in implementing these Phases and Activities, it is critical to note that the outline above is just a blueprint or roadmap.  During actual implementation, the current status of the school—largely determined by the Phase 1 Needs Assessments and Audits—guides the depth, breadth, and sequencing of the different activities.

   Thus, there is a “science-and-art” in applying strategic planning and these different Phases and Activities.  The ultimate success is a collaborative process.  But there is no substitute for experience.
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Summary

   As transformational leaders, all educators are in the business of school improvement.  While teachers and support staff are focusing on student improvement. . . Building administrators and supervisors are focusing on staff improvement. . . and, district administrators are focusing on school improvement.

   And this improvement is contextual.  Some schools want to go from “great to greater.”  Some schools from “good to great.”  And some schools from “targeted or comprehensive external support” to a level of “good” independent success.

   Thus, in order for school improvement and turn-around to succeed, it needs to be done at each involved school and district site using intensive and sustained activities that include: 

   * Ongoing local needs assessment and strategic planning science-to-practice processes;

   * Local resource analysis and capacity-strengthening science-to-practice processes; and

   * Local and on-site organizational, staff development, consultation, and technical assistance science-to-practice processes

   The Key to these processes are the professionals (both at the site and involved as consultants), and their ability to use sound strategic planning processes to select the best services, supports, strategies, and interventions at the district, school, staff, and student levels to facilitate ongoing and sustained success—at all of those levels.

   As districts and schools do the challenging work of school improvement, and as they engage in their current strategic planning processes, I hope that a re-emphasis on the science-to-practice principles and practices will increase your success. . . especially as this process necessarily evolves in the next months leading up to the 2018-2019 school year.

   While we all devote our full and undivided effort every day to improve system, school, and staff processes on behalf of our students. . . we all also need to be “students of strategic planning” to ensure that those efforts are maximizing their outcomes.
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   I hope that this two-part Blog series on strategic planning has generated both interest in and questions about this process—especially as our state departments of education move toward finalizing their respective processes on behalf of our districts and schools nationwide.

   Please get involved in these state discussions, and help our departments of education—once again—to recognize that:

   * There are very few foolproof evidence-based practices currently available for immediate implementation in our schools;

   * Simply providing “menus” of these practices—in the absence of strategic planning and root cause analyses—is NOT its own evidence-based practice;
 
   * The first and best evidence-based practice is a strategic planning process that is based on the existing science that is then applied to educational settings;

   * We must be wary of the U.S. Department of Education’s National Technical Assistance Centers and their “school improvement” approaches— especially given their spotty track records of implementation and success; and

   * Strategic planning and organizational development is a local activity and process. . . and departments of education need to follow ESEA/ESSA’s allowances, letting this process be as autonomous as possible.
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   If you would like to continue this discussion on a more personal level, I am always available by e-mail.  If your Leadership or Strategic Planning Team would benefit from a free one-hour conference call with me, let’s set it up as soon as possible.

Best,

Howie

Saturday, January 13, 2018

Why Strategic Planning and Organizational Development Must be done by Every School . . . Every Year [Part I of II]



Preparing for ESEA/ESSA:  What Effective Schools Do to Continuously Improve . . . and What Ineffective Schools Need to do to Significantly Improve

Dear Colleagues,

Introduction

   HAPPY NEW YEAR !!!!

   As I fly over the Rocky Mountains on my way home after a week of consulting in California, I am reading up on some recent national reports that are essential to district and school success.

   Two reports, this past month, have especially caught my attention:

The First Report:

ESSA Leverage Points: 50-State Report on Promising Practices for Using Evidence to Improve Student Outcomes

was published this month (January, 2018) by Results for America.

   This Report discusses their analyses of the Elementary and Secondary Education/Every Student Succeeds Act (ESEA/ESSA) Consolidated State Plans—from every state department of education in the country—that were submitted to the U.S. Department of Education over the past 10 months. 

   Specifically, the Report describes how the state departments are proposing to address thirteen “leverage points” that relate to ESEA/ESSA’s requirements for school improvement.
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The Second Report:  

Examples of Actions Taken by Principals Trying to Lead Turnaround (2017)

is from the WestEd Center on School Turnaround (CST).

   On the About page in the Introduction of this document, it states:

“The CST is one of 7 national Content Centers in a federal network of 22 Comprehensive Centers. The U.S. Department of Education charges the centers with building the capacity of state education agencies (SEAs) to assist districts and schools in meeting student achieve­ment goals. The goal of the CST is to provide technical assistance and to identify, synthesize, and disseminate research-based practices and emerging promising practices that will lead to the increased capacity of SEAs to support districts in turning around their lowest-performing schools.”

The Abstract page of this document states:

“This report describes examples of actions that school principals have taken in trying to lead turnaround. Most principals have either not worked in a turnaround situation or have fallen short in a turnaround attempt, despite their best efforts. Not all of the principals high­lighted in this report have successfully turned around their schools, but we intend for these examples to be helpful to other principals, teacher-leader teams, and principal supervisors who are looking to approach turnaround work with strategic, but less common actions in an effort to get new, better results (my emphasis added).

The authors draw on prior research to frame the examples. The report also draws on the observations of two organizations with deep experience in the turnaround field: Public Impact and the University of Virginia Darden/Curry Partnership for Leaders in Education.”
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   Clearly, as transformational leaders, all educators are in the business of school improvement.  While teachers and support staff are focusing on student improvement. . . Building administrators and supervisors are focusing on staff improvement. . . and, district administrators are focusing on school improvement.

   And this improvement is contextual.  Some schools want to go from “great to greater.”  Some schools from “good to great.”  And some schools from “targeted or comprehensive external support” to a level of “good” independent success.

   But the introductory comments (as above) in the Turnaround Report are particularly striking.

   Indeed, I cite these quotes at the beginning of this Blog to emphasize that—even after 13 years of the No Child Left Behind (NCLB) version of ESEA (and two additional years since the passage of ESEA/ESSA)—the lead school improvement Technical Assistance (TA) Center for the U.S. Department of Education acknowledges that:

   * We still do not know how to best turn significantly underperforming schools around to ensure student, staff, and school success;

   * They are publishing a major national report with conclusions based on schools where “not all of the principals highlighted. . . have successfully turned around their schools;” and

   * They have selected their own research to fit into their own school improvement model to organize the Report and frame their recommendations.
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   The “Take-Away’s” are that:

   * There is no reliable, valid, or guaranteed evidence-base to any facet of school improvement—not for organization and planning, or staff and professional development, or curriculum and instruction, or student assessment and intervention; and

   * No one—especially the U.S. Department of Education (with its spotty NCLB/school improvement track record)—is “the expert” when it comes to guiding this process.
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   Thus, in order for school improvement and turn-around to succeed, it needs to be done:

   *  At each involved school and district site using intensive and sustained activities that include— 

       -- Ongoing local needs assessment and strategic planning science-to-practice processes;

       --Local resource analysis and capacity-strengthening science-to-practice processes; and

        --Local and on-site organizational, staff development, consultation, and technical assistance science-to-practice processes.

   The Key to these processes are the professionals (both at the site and involved as consultants), and their ability to use sound strategic planning processes to select the best services, supports, strategies, and interventions at the district, school, staff, and student levels to facilitate ongoing and sustained success—at all of those levels.

   Said a Different Way:  Just as we knew from the beginning of NCLB that “every student was not going to be proficient by 2014” . . .

   We know right now:  That having state department of education-determined “evidence-based or promising practices” embedded in a district or school improvement plan is NOT going to increase the number of students whose academic proficiency improves.

   Student achievement occurs in the classroom, NOT at the state capitol.
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The Dilemma . . . and The Solution

   My point here is not to criticize, but to caution. 

   But State Departments of Education have a Dilemma:

   While we still have not identified definitive science-to-practice approaches that maximize the probability of school improvement. . .

   ESEA/ESSA still requires our state departments of education (and districts and schools) to plan and implement—starting next year—school improvement processes for at least 5% of their schools . . .

   and the departments must provide guidance to the districts involved so that the schools in improvement status have at least one evidence-based intervention in their improvement plans.
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   The Solution recommended here is:  

   For the Departments of Education to ensure that the District with school in improvement status use—and require those schools to use—evidence-based strategic planning processes . . .as required by ESEA/ESSA (see below).

   This will satisfy ESEA/ESSA’s evidence-based practice requirement, and will result in better decisions relative to the organizational, curricular, instructional, and multi-tiered systems of support practices that are actually needed by a school relative to staff and student success.
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Report I:  What Does ESEA/ESSA Require for School Improvement ?

   As noted above, the first report (ESSA Leverage Points) identifies ESEA/ESSA’s requirements in the area of school improvement, and then describes what the state departments have proposed to address thirteen school improvement “leverage points.”

   These ESEA/ESSA-required leverage points are (from the Report with some edits):

   Requirement/Leverage Point 1.  States must create local ESSA plan procedures in consultation with the governor and in collaboration with the Districts (i.e., Local Education Agencies—LEAs).

   Requirement/Leverage Point 2.  States must monitor LEA implementation of ESSA strategies described in their plans to ensure compliance with statutory and regulatory requirements.

   Requirement/Leverage Point 3.  States must plan for periodic review and revision of SEA and LEA ESSA plans to reflect changes in strategies and programs—submitting significant changes for approval by the USED.

   Requirement/Leverage Point 4.  States must allocate at least 95% of the state’s school improvement set-aside to LEAs with schools identified for comprehensive and targeted school improvement—ensuring that the funds are “of sufficient size” to enable the LEA’s to effectively implement the selected/approved school improvement strategies.”

   Requirement/Leverage Point 5.  States must describe their plan for developing and monitoring a school improvement application that includes the elements required by ESSA, including how the LEA will (a) develop, implement, and monitor CSI (comprehensive support and improvement) plans, while also supporting TSI (targeted support and improvement) schools; and (b) oversee the “rigorous review process” that the LEA will use with potential external partners.

   Requirement/Leverage Point 6.  States must engage in “monitoring and evaluating the use of [school improvement] funds by local educational agencies” and allows states to use part of the (5%) state school improvement set-aside to carry out these responsibilities.

   Requirement/Leverage Point 7.  States must provide technical assistance to LEAs “serving a significant number” of CSI or TSI schools.

   Requirement/Leverage Point 8.  States must ensure LEAs conduct their own school-level needs assessment in every identified CSI school, using monitoring/auditing to ensure compliance.

   Requirement/Leverage Point 9.  States must provide sufficient guidance to LEAs such that all CSI and TSI plans include at least one evidence-based intervention and that all CSI and TSI plans supported by federal school improvement grants include at least one intervention supported by the top three levels of evidence.

   Requirement/Leverage Point 10.  ESSA does not explicitly address a state-approved list of interventions but permits states to “take action to initiate additional improvement” in LEAs with either significant numbers of TSI schools or non-improving CSI schools and allows states to “establish alternative evidence-based State determined strategies that can be used by local educational agencies to assist” CSI schools. In other words, states are permitted to create a list but are not required to.

   Requirement/Leverage Point 11.  States must take more rigorous actions for non-exiting CSI schools, and districts must take additional actions for non-exiting TSI schools. The law on its own does not necessarily require that these actions relate to the use of evidence.

   Requirement/Leverage Point 12.  States are permitted—but not required—to “take action to initiate additional improvement” in districts with a “significant number” of CSI schools that do not meet the state’s exit criteria or in districts with a “significant number” of TSI schools.

   Requirement/Leverage Point 13.  States must review LEA plans and monitor expenditures to ensure LEAs use federal funds on evidence-based activities where required by law. For those allowable uses conditioned on the availability of supporting evidence, states must determine whether evidence is “reasonably available.”
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What the “Leverage” Report Found

   The Leverage Points above reinforce a critical issue for when educators are preparing to implement practices that are based on policies that are based on laws.

   The Issue:  It is essential that all district and school personnel actually read the original ESEA/ESSA law to determine what elements are required and which ones are recommended or suggested.

   Indeed, based on my thirteen-year career directing a multi-million dollar federal grant at the Arkansas Department of Education, I have described in numerous, past Blogs how the U.S. Department of Education and its TA Centers (and some state departments of education) sometimes suggest that some practices— while cited in federal or state law—are required when they are actually recommended.

   In my experience, (federal and state) departments of education often do this to assert their preferences for specific programs or practices, or to drive districts and schools to use personnel or programs that they have funded.

   Moreover, when they do this, they are depending on the fact that virtually all of the state, district, or school personnel with whom they are interacting will not question, research, or confront their exaggerated statements.

   Critically, even when practices are actually mandated, states, districts, and schools still often have the right to request a waiver—which can be approved with sufficient empirical support and practical documentation.
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   This “required versus recommended” issue is apparent at the very beginning of the Results for America Leverage Report.  Indeed, in its Executive Summary, it says:

The Every Student Succeeds Act (ESSA) gives states, school districts, and schools new flexibility to design K-12 education systems that reflect local needs and priorities. In exchange, ESSA encourages, and in some cases requires, the use of evidence-based approaches and continuous improvement to drive improved outcomes.

   Thus, the whole issue of when and how to use evidence-based and “promising practice” approaches is flexible and fluid. 

   Among the questions are: 

   * How do we apply ESEA/ESSA’s “evidence-based” definition to specific programs, practices, curricula, and interventions?

   * Who makes the decision, and how is it objectively, independently, non-politically, and consistently validated?

   * Which parts of ESEA/ESSA require evidence-based practices, and where in ESEA/ESSA are these practices only encouraged?
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   All of this aside, the Leverages Report detailed the following major results:

   * Across all 51 state plans (50 states plus the District of Columbia), 162 promising practices for building and using evidence to improve student outcomes were identified; all but five states included at least one promising practice.

   * Just nine states emphasized the use of evidence and continuous improvement in the design of their school improvement applications (Leverage Point 5).

   * Only 14 states highlighted plans to base funding allocations at least in part on the proposed use of evidence (Leverage Point 4).

   * Only three states (Delaware, South Carolina, and Texas) described strong plans to prioritize the use of evidence and continuous improvement when exercising their authority to intervene in districts unable to improve their lowest-performing schools (Leverage Point 12).

   * Only seven states (DE, IN, IA, MN, OH, OK, and TN) prioritized high-quality needs assessments as a key component of the school improvement process (Leverage Point 8).


   Given my comments and recommendations above, this last result is the most troubling.

   This result suggests—now more than 15 years removed from the passage of No Child Left Behind—that our state departments of education still do not fully understand the importance of science-to-practice strategic planning relative to successfully addressing the needs of underperforming districts and schools.
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Report II:  How Principals Try to Turnaround Under-Performing Schools

   As introduced above, the second report that caught my attention this past month was:  Examples of Actions Taken by Principals Trying to Lead Turnaround from the WestEd Center on School Turnaround (CST).

   While I still do not completely understand why it was published, the Report does outline a number of important strategic planning processes that could help a district or school to locally identify and effectively implement the organization and planning, staff and professional development, or curriculum and instruction, and student assessment and intervention strategies needed by a district or school to facilitate meaningful improvement.

   But unfortunately, the Report is largely descriptive, and reads like a menu.  It identifies a number of common organizational actions, but it does not identify the characteristics or conditions in a specific district or school that makes one or more of the listed actions more advantageous and/or more predictive of improvement success.

   And so, the fear is that a district or school would simply pick and implement (without using a systematic and effective needs assessment and strategic planning process) one or more actions from the menu provided—resulting in failure, enhanced frustration, and perhaps, a more convoluted problem.

   Significantly, this continues a common approach used—since the passage of NCLB and before—by the U.S. Department of Education and its funded TA Centers.  The approach is to present states, districts, and schools a menu-driven framework, and then suggest that—in the absence of data-driven decision-making—they pick the strategies off the menu that they think will work.
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   At this point, I will list the “examples of actions taken by principal trying to lead turnaround” that are cited in the Report.  But this will lead to Part II of this Blog, where I will discuss strategic planning in more detail.

The Turnaround Actions listed include:

   Vision
      Establish and Communicate a Clear Vision
      Help Staff Understand and Embrace the Need for Change

   Goals
      Prioritize Goals and Focus Areas
      Make Action Plans Based on Data
      Identify and Achieve a Few Early Wins
      Reduce Time Focused on Nonessentials

   Data
      Establish the Expectations for a Data Culture
      Adjust Instructional Practice through Visible Data
      Use Data Continually to Solve Problems   

   Change Leadership
      Focus on Successful Tactics, Discontinue Unsuccessful Ones
      Break Rules and Norms, Take New Action
      Change Systems and Structures

   Teachers and Leaders
      Make Necessary Replacements
      Attract, Select, and Retain Top Talent
      Build and Lead a Team of Leaders
      Ensure Ongoing Professional Growth Opportunities

   Instruction
      Align Instruction to Assessments and Standards
      Monitor and Improve Instructional Quality
      Develop and Deploy a Team of Instructional Leaders

   Strategic Partnerships
      Gain Support of Key Influencers
      Enlist Partner Organizations
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   Once again, all of these strategies are potentially useful to districts or schools in need of improvement.  Two questions remain:

   1. With all that a school in improvement status needs to do, which of these strategies are the immediate, high-hit strategies that will begin the improvement process in a timely way?

   2. Once the high-hit strategies are identified; exactly what is the training, who and where are the targets; and what are the resources, implementation steps, and short- and long-term outcomes needed such that improvement begins, is established, and can be maintained over time?
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Summary

   As noted earlier:

   * There is no reliable, valid, or guaranteed evidence-base to any facet of school improvement—not for organization and planning, or staff and professional development, or curriculum and instruction, or student assessment and intervention; and

   * No one—especially the U.S. Department of Education (with its spotty NCLB/school improvement track record)—is “the expert” when it comes to guiding this process.
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   Thus, in order for school improvement and turn-around to succeed, it needs to be done:

   *  At each involved school and district site using intensive and sustained activities that include— 

      --Ongoing local needs assessment and strategic planning science-to-practice processes;

      --Local resource analysis and capacity-strengthening science-to-practice processes; and

       --Local and on-site organizational, staff development, consultation, and technical assistance science-to-practice processes.

   The Key to these processes are the professionals (both at the site and involved as consultants), and their ability to use sound strategic planning processes to select the best services, supports, strategies, and interventions at the district, school, staff, and student levels to facilitate ongoing and sustained success—at all of those levels.

   In Part II of this Blog series, we will discuss the five phases of the strategic planning process—based on my work in hundreds of schools across the country, and on the fact that the process to be described was part of the school improvement process for the Arkansas Department of Education for all Focus Improvement Status schools in the state during the NCLB Waiver/Flexibility years of the Obama administration.
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   Meanwhile, I hope that this discussion has generated both interest in and questions about the school improvement process—especially as our state departments of education move toward finalizing their respective processes on behalf of our districts and schools nationwide.

   As always, our focus must be on the progress and outcomes for all students.  But we all know that success for our students means staff who similarly successful at what they do.

   If you would like to continue this discussion on a more personal level, I am always available by e-mail.  If your Leadership or Strategic Planning Team would benefit from a free one-hour conference call with me, let’s set it up as soon as possible.

Best,

Howie