2. Education Resource Strategies 2
Explore opportunities and challenges involved in attempting
school turnaround at scale
Begin planning NOW to sustain turnaround work once
transition funding and special exemptions run out
Identify ways we need to work together to raise the likelihood
of success
Celebrate, honor and support each other’s efforts
Sustaining Turnaround at Scale: Summit Goals
3. Education Resource Strategies 3
Boston
Charlotte-Mecklenburg
Chicago
Cincinnati
Denver
District of Columbia
Duval County (Jacksonville
Providence
Summit Participants: District Teams
4. Education Resource Strategies 4
Academy of Urban School Leadership
Achievement Network
Blueprint Schools Network
Citizen Schools
City Connects
City Year
Corporation for National and Community
Service
Council of Chief State School Officers
Mass Insight Education
National Center for Time and Learning
New Leaders for New Schools
New Schools Venture Fund
Summit Participants: Partners
New Schools Venture Fund
ReNEW
Say Yes to Education
Strategic Grant Partners
TeachPlus
The Annenberg Institute for School Reform
The Aspen Institute
The Education Trust
The New Teacher Project
Turnaround for Children
U.S. Department of Education
University of Virginia Partnership for Leaders
in Education
5. Education Resource Strategies 5
We are a non-profit firm dedicated to helping school systems spend
and organize time, talent and technology to create great schools
at scale
We partner with system leaders to analyze spending, human
resource, organization and student data to better align with high
performance strategies
We leverage insight from this work to provide lessons and tools for
school leaders and those who support them
Our work is grounded in over a decade of experience working with
school districts across the country
5
Education Resource Strategies
6. Education Resource Strategies 6
Making Meaning and Sharing Lessons
Break out panels and working groups
8:30-10:15
Session #1: Building a turnaround principal pipeline
Session #2: Building a strong teaching force
Session #3: Using data effectively
10:30-12:15
Session #4: Using and extending time
Session #5: School designs for turnaround
Session #6: Reengineering the school-community
relationship
12:15-1:30 Lunch and speaker Jason Snyder, DOE
2:30-3:30 Facilitated small group working sessions
3:45-4:30 Wrap up and reflection panel
8. Education Resource Strategies 8
1. Clear goals for student learning and engaging curriculum that aligns to
standards
2. Strong leaders who build a culture of high expectations and ownership of
student outcomes
3. Effective Teacher teams with expertise, time and support collaborate to
adjust instruction using data student progress
4. Intervention for individual learning needs (Special Ed, ELL, gifted and
struggling) that integrates with core instruction
5. Individual attention and schedules that prioritize core academics and
allow time for students to catch up
6. Safe, welcoming community for students and families
7. Ongoing use of data for continuous improvement
We know the essential traits of continuously
improving schools
9. Education Resource Strategies 9
But some schools can’t get there because they are
trapped in a cycle of failure
Declining expectations
(faculty, students, families)
Remaining students fall
further behind and high
needs get concentrated
Teachers and families with
options leave
Persistently poor
performance
Resource levels and
expertise no longer
match needs
Leaders and teachers have
less capacity to collaborate
and adjust instruction
10. Education Resource Strategies 10
1. Strong leaders who build high
expectations and ownership
2. Collaborative teacher teams
with combined expertise to
meet student needs
3. Expertise and resources to
serve high concentrations of
students with high need
To break the cycle of failure, schools must
accelerate the pace of improvement through:
11. Education Resource Strategies 11
Mixed results of turnaround efforts suggest that investing
in some schools may not be enough to reverse cycle due to
community disengagement, location or facilities challenges
Declining expectations
(faculty, students, families)
Remaining students fall
further behind and high
needs get concentrated
Teachers and families with
options leave
Persistently poor
performance
Resource levels and
expertise no longer
match needs
Leaders and teachers have
less capacity to collaborate
and adjust instruction
12. Education Resource Strategies 12
District-wide strategy for measuring school performance and
diagnosing appropriate action including school closure
Definition of a school turnaround model
Accountability and support
Removal of barriers to implementing effective turnaround
practices
Integration with district-wide strategy of accountability,
autonomy and support
To address core challenges, district turnaround
strategies have five components
13. Education Resource Strategies 13
Defining a model for strategic intervention
Strategic Intervention
SchoolLevel
Transformational leaders Ensure a transformational principal in every
school
Effective Teaching Teams with
Expert Support
Ensure needed expertise and provide
support for teams to continuously improve
instruction
Individual attention and time for
accelerated learning
Vary and extend individual and small group
time and attention in response to student
needs)
Productive School Culture Invest school community in high
expectations for learning and behavior
Health, social and emotional
support
Guarantee baseline health, social, and
emotional support to students to ensure
readiness for learning
System
Level
Central support and
accountability
Provide additional school supervisory
support and attention
Removal of Barriers to Effective
Turnaround practices
Actively remove district policies, contractual
restrictions and state regulatory barriers that
limit hiring, organization and use of time
14. Education Resource Strategies 14
District’s Turnaround investments suggest
different levels of intensity and emphasis
CATEGORY
INVESTMENT ($ invested in a 1,000 student school)
Year 1
Charlotte Miami-Dade Chicago(HS)
Strong leaders $20,000 $493,000 $136,000
Effective teacher
teams
$50,000 $630,000 $612,000
Individual attention
and time for
acceleration
– $425,000 $817,000
Productive school
culture
– $179,000 $1,042,000
Health, social and
emotional
– – $187,000
Central support – $140,000 $350,000
Total
$70,000 $1,871,000 $3,144,000
Source: District reported to ERS
15. Education Resource Strategies 15
And investment level analysis must consider base
funding levels
$14,500
$8,500
$11,500
$10,300
$7,400
$11,500
$1,500
$100
$3,144
$2,000
$1,249
$823
$0
$2,000
$4,000
$6,000
$8,000
$10,000
$12,000
$14,000
$16,000
$18,000
Boston Charlotte Chicago Denver Miami AUSL
Spending Per Pupil Additional $ for Turnaround Students
$16,000
$8,600
$14,644
$12,300
$8,649
$12,323
K-12 9-12 K-12 K-12 Elem, HSK-12
TotalSpendingPerPupil
Source: District reported to ERS
16. Education Resource Strategies 16
Summit districts employ a mix of strategies
regarding school leader autonomy
Traditional District
School
Typical Charter
School
District-Run
Turnaround Zone
School
Hiring and Firing Varies
Staffing
Composition
Varies
Curriculum and
Assessments
Varies
Teacher
compensation
Professional Growth
and Collaboration
Time
Varies
Scheduling and
Time
Varies
LowAutonomyHighAutonomy
17. Education Resource Strategies 17
District Approaches: “In a Nutshell”
District Approach
Charlotte Mecklenburg Schools
Hire great principals, let them bring in a
core turnaround team and set them free
Denver Public Schools
Create a portfolio of charter, innovation,
and district-run schools, with family
choice
Boston Public Schools
Collaborate with schools and outside
providers on intervention strategies within
framework, adapt to fit school needs
Chicago Public Schools
Comprehensive, standardized, supported
model; district runs 1/3 of schools,
outsource others to AUSL
Cincinnati Public Schools
Intensively train school leaders and
provide them with a comprehensive,
standardized, supported model
More
Autonomy
Less
Autonomy
18. Education Resource Strategies 18
Resources
– “Civic Capacity”
– Base Funding Levels
– State resources for English
Language Learners or
concentrated poverty
The nature of the challenge
– Starting proficiency levels
– % of district schools at crisis levels
– Safety
Factors that influence district approach
Flexibility to organize resources
– Union contracts and relationship
– State requirements
Existing teacher and leadership
capacity
District “Theory of Action”
19. Education Resource Strategies 19
Ann Clark, Chief Academic Officer,
Charlotte-Mecklenburg Public Schools
Deborah McGriff, Partner, New Schools
Venture Fund
Designing and refining a district turnaround
strategy
Noemi Donoso, Chief Education Officer,
Chicago Public Schools
Alyssa Whitehead-Bust, Chief of Innovation and
Reform, Boston Public Schools
20. Education Resource Strategies 20
Summit Agenda: Friday
Time Event Location
7:30-8:30 Breakfast Available Concord Room
Break out panels and working groups
8:30-10:15
Session #1: Building a turnaround principal pipeline Concord Room
Session #2: Building a strong teaching force Bedford Room A
Session #3: Using data effectively Bedford Room B
10:30-12:15
Session #4: Using and extending time Concord Room
Session #5: School designs for turnaround Bedford Room A
Session #6: Reengineering the school-community
relationship
Bedford Room B
12:15-1:30 Lunch and speaker Jason Snyder, DOE Concord Room
2:30-3:30 Small group working sessions (various, see agenda)
3:45-4:30 Wrap up and reflection panel Concord Room
Notes de l'éditeur
Source: ERS Library SlidesJDAUG08
Location: \\Minerva\ers_data\Internal ERS\Slide Library Documents\1-ERS Slides