Title: Continuing the Commitment:
1Continuing the Commitment
Sustaining Reading First Results Beyond Reading
First Funding
- Dr. Stan Paine
- Western Region Reading First
- Technical Assistance Center
- University of Oregon
National Reading First Convention Reno, NV, July
18-20, 2006
2Preview/Overview
- Sustainability questions
- Sustainability issues Reading First
- Sustainability strategies for Reading First
- Learning from others about sustainability
- A tool for sustainability planning
- Resources on sustainability
3Key Sustainability Questions
What is it? Is it possible? Who is
responsible? What do we want to sustain? What are
the threats? What is required?
4What is sustainability?
- Traditional view
- Sustainability is the potential for a program to
continue after an initial implementation or
funding cycle has run its course. - Alternate view
- Sustainability is the capacity of a program to
withstand significant changes in context while
continuing to yield improved results.
5Is sustainability possible?
- Traditional view
- No, we cant do it without continued funding.
- No, we cant do it without so--so.
- No, we cant do it with changing priorities,
etc.. - Alternate ViewYes, because . . .
6Whose responsibility is sustainability?
- federal or state government?
- district leaders?
- principal?
- coach?
- teachers?
- all of the above!
7Are we there yet? What is it that we want to
sustain?
- Not just these procedures.....
- but comparable or improved results
- Results-oriented leadership (not one person)
(Fullan, 2005) - this culture, this context, this commitment
(Reading First) . . . - Culture how we do things here (e.g., RF
elements) - shared purpose, vision, beliefs, agreements
expectations
8What are the greatest threats to sustainability?
- Traditional view
- reduction or discontinuation of funding?
- turnover of key staff?
- other factors outside our control?
- Alternate view
- erosion of culture commitment on which success
was built - schools failure to focus on the variables which
make a difference - and over which they have control (failure to
own outcomes)
9What does sustainability require?
- Attention to those elements needing continued
funding - Attention to staff turnover
- Managing program drift
- Attention to the culture
- Coaching stands out, but many RF elements cost
very little - Planned succession (Fullan, 2005)
- reading-based hiring practices
- Ongoing supervision for fidelity
- Leadership to support a culture of success
10Sustainability through the essential elements of
Reading First
11Issues strategies related to Sustainability in
Reading First
- Leadership (organization, goals, priorities)
- Culture (shared vision, beliefs, practices
commitments) - Curriculum (SBRR) (core, supplemental,
intervention programs) - Instruction (differentiation, grouping, delivery)
- Use of time (90) (additional learning
opportunities) - Formative assessment/use of data for
instructional planning - Professional development
- Coaching
12Sustainability Reading First Leadership
- Issue
- turnover of key leaders
- diminished leadership for improved achievement
- weak communication
- non-supportive management style
- inefficient organization
- and/or scheduling
- Approach
- hiring practices-- 1) planned succession 2)
reading-based hiring practices (posting,
recruiting, screening, interviewing, doing
reference checks) - assignment of staff-- district staff must place
principals, coaches teachers based on vision
skills which match the needs of the students in
the school - supervision evaluation of principals/coaches on
the variables related to effective implementation
13Sustainability Reading First Culture
Approach
Issue
- staff turnover/new staff
- new goals/priorities
- loss of urgency
- cultural drift
- catch-up training w/mentoring and coaching
- deflect/defer new priorities
- leadership through effective communication
(vision, goals, motivation) - leadership/supervision for fidelity to plans and
commitments - renew shared beliefs
- recommit to priorities and effective practices
- be guided by formative data
14Sustainability Reading First Curriculum
- Approach
- supervise for fidelity to instructional plan
- additional training
- district, Title 1 funds, other sources for
materials
- Issue
- Insufficient attention to fidelity of
implementation (reversion to previous practices) - insufficient training on program implementation
- funds for replacement materials
15Sustainability Reading First Instruction
- Issue
- reversion to previous, less effective practices
- procedural drift
- inefficiencies in instruction
- Approach
- supervise for fidelity
- leadership/supervision for fidelity to plans
commitments - Additional training or support based on data
16Sustainability Reading First Formative
assessment use of data
- Issue
- loss of staff time or commitment to collect,
input, use data - Lack of leadership for collecting/using data
- Lack of capacity in maintaining data use
- Lack of support for grade level team meetings
- Approach
- identify support for data collection/use
- leadership/supervision for fidelity to plans
commitments - Build team use of reading data into the school
culture
17Sustainability Reading First Use of time
- Issue
- inadequate time scheduled
- reversion to previous practices
- competing events
- school culture does not make efficient use of
instructional time
- Approach
- revise schedules
- supervision for adherence to instructional
schedule commitment to adequate learning time
for all Ss - deflect/defer/delegate/ new priorities
18Sustainability Reading First Training (PD)
- Approach
- deflect/defer competing priorities
- provide leadership to sustain focus
- use Title 1, 2A, 3, 5, and district to focus on
the most efficient productive training
activities - develop internal capacity for training and
support (district trainers for curriculum, data) - planning based on student data
- Issue
- new priorities
- loss of focus
- loss of PD funds
- lack of PD planning
- training for new staff
- lack of transfer from training to implementation
setting
19Sustainability Reading First Coaching
- Approach
- Look at other coaching models
- Supervision/support for coaching effectiveness
- Issue
- Loss of funding for coach
- Diminished effectiveness of coach
20Providing reading support without a full-time
coach
- Title 1 Title 2a (highly qualified staff)Title
3 (ELL) Title 5 (innovative programs)district
funding Special education (15) - consider a part-time coach (retired teachers)
- share a literacy specialist with one or more
schools - assign building literacy specialist from existing
FTE - provide release time refocus job description
- Title 1, librarian, teacher w/strong reading
background - peer coaching (coaching as a function rather
than a person) - principal provides technical assistance
(different from supervision)
21Sustainability through the stages of
implementation
22Stages of program implementation
Adoption
Program Need
planning, training
Continuation/ Discontinuation (sustainability)
Implementation
changes in context
changes in context
Adaptation
23Early stage sustainability strategies
- begin planning for sustainability at the earliest
stage possible - begin to identify and involve natural reading
leaders - begin building a culture to support a
results-oriented improvement effort (shared
mission, vision, beliefs, practices, commitments) - begin defining and following through on how we
do things here to help all kids succeed as
readers - develop an alliance of regular, Title, ELL and
special education instructional staff
24Mid- late-stage sustainability strategies
- begin any steps not begun in early stage
- cultivate involvement and leadership in staff new
to the program and in those staff members who
have not been as involved to date - acknowledge those who have contributed to the
success thus far - continue to nurture the culture of reading
success
25Mid- late-stage sustainability strategies
(continued)
- monitor adjust program elements
- plan for replacement of staff lost through
turnover - reading-based hiring practices
- training for new staff
- cultivate support for continued implementation
from district staff, resources - build support for the program into district
staffing and budget planning
26Sustainability by program level
27Sustainability at the classroom level
- teachers continue high fidelity implementation of
key elements - use of time
- use of curriculum
- use of formative assessment and data
- differentiation of instructional components)
- principal supervises for these elements
- provides differentiated support as needed (train,
coach) - provides positive and formative feedback
(supervise)
28Sustainability at the school level
- principal takes lead on
- leadership activities developing leadership in
others - continuing to develop nurture reading culture
- maintaining communication w/school district
staff about reading - forging an alliance of all instructional staff
- involving all school staff in reading improvement
- overseeing use of time (calendar, schedules)
- providing supervision support for
implementation - principal, coach or specialist
- continue school-wide formative data collection
- continue team process to use data to guide
instruction - continue PD, follow-up support process
29Sustainability at the district level
- district administrators
- align/allocate adequate resources to sustain
efforts (staffing, budgets) - align district goals in-service activities
w/school priorities - manage adoption of materials to support reading
goals - support district-wide formative assessment
process - build calendars schedules which support reading
goals - allow job descriptions which support reading
goals - hire, assign and supervise principals on RF
elements - guide collaboration among regular education,
Title, special education, ELL staff in the
reading improvement process - build capacity among staff for reading
improvement by investing in training for all and
mentoring for new teachers, assistants
principals - show up at the school to acknowledge staff
efforts and ask, How can we support you?
30Sustainability at the district level
- superintendent school board
- consider policies procedures to support reading
goals - support hiring practices, assignment, job
descriptions, mentoring supervision which
strengthen reading improvement efforts - review results of reading performance measures
when they are released discuss these with
district leaders and principals - provide adequate funding to support instructional
staff, materials and training needed for reading
improvement - develop calendars schedules which support
reading goals - align district goals in-service activities
w/school priorities - seek support for reading improvement through
community contacts - show up at the school to acknowledge staff
efforts and ask, How can we support you?
31Sustainability at the state level
- provide leadership to support reading success by
developing initiatives, coordinating trainings
and providing funding - ensure that curriculum materials appearing on a
state adoption list are SBRR-compatible - provide recognition for schools demonstrating
significant increases in student reading
performance - consider state level policies supporting
resources and effective practices to improve
reading results (e.g., time, funding) - support programs in institutions of higher
education to prepare teachers and administrators
to implement practices which lead to increasing
students reading performance - support collaboration at state level between
general education, special education, ELL and
federal programs for effective reading
instruction
32Sustainability strategies for Reading First
33A key to sustainability
- Attain, then sustain.
- Is the program working well during the
implementation stage? - If so, sustainability is desirable and possible
- If not, it may be undesirable and impossible
34Plan for sustainability as early as possible in
the planning and implementation process
- This is not the end. It is not even the
beginning of the end. But it is, perhaps, the
end of the beginning. - Winston Churchill
35Make the implementation a systems level change
Systems All components, all staff, all working
together for one goal
regular education
special education
System for reading improvement
federal programs
ELL programs
36 Systems change funding
Systems All components, all staff, all
funds--working together for one goal
regular education
special education
District budget
15 IDEA allocation
System for reading improvement
ELL programs
federal programs
37Focus on fidelity in all elements of the
implementation
(Seek) the degree of precision which the nature
of the subject (allows), (yet) do not seek
exactness where only (the best) approximation is
possible. Aristotle
- in implementation of curriculum
- with instructional plans schedules
- with assessment practices
38Distribute leadership across multiple staff
members roles
Dont rely on a hero. Rely on the team -Rob
Horner
- Cultivate leaders
- provide training, opportunity, support,
recognition - School reading leadership team
- meet regularly data focused
39Reading Leadership groups by level
40Sustain improved results by continuing to collect
and use formative data at all levels (class,
school, district)
41Embed structures in district policy/procedure
- Policies/administrative procedures regarding
42A school district policy framework for
facilitating sustained implementation
The district will establish administrative rules
that define specific guidelines for a K-3 reading
program that include
- classroom instructional practices
- professional development
- administrative practices
- district level support
- assessment
- instructional time
- instructional grouping and scheduling
- instructional materials and programs
Bethel School District, Eugene, OR, July 12,
2004
43A school district procedure for monitoring
student reading performance
- school sets process of using data to improve
instruction - data reports go to principal, literacy coach
data base - data teams review data, set instructional
improvement goals set PD needs - staff share improvement plans across grade levels
set shared PD plan
- school repeats cycle on a schedule for steps 2-4
- coordinator prepares data notebook for district
admn. copy is sent to Supt. admn. review
disaggregated data by school, grade teacher - district staff review data prepare report for
Supt. - Supt. reviews data meets with staff to discuss,
plan
LAUSD, 2002
44Develop capacity within the system to sustain
the program
- train leadership skills in key staff members
- provide expert level training to all who teach
instructional groups - train key staff to become trainers in the
district on the data system on core, strategic
intervention programs used
Knowledge, skills, ability and information, when
shared, empower people and systems to greater
heights
45Build a culture within the system to sustain the
program
- Culture how we do things here
- cultivate input and buy-in from staff
- continue shared vision, beliefs, practices
- form common expectations, commitments
Changing the outcomes of students is about
changing the cultures of schools. How we do
things doesnt matter only when outcomes dont
matter. -unknown
46Allow for some mutual adaptation within the
defining elements of RF
- Identify the critical elements of the model
- (the non-negotiables)
- identify satisfactory standards of performance
- (benchmarks, rubrics)
- within these, identify ways in which we can
obtain the desired result while accommodating
input feedback from those implementing the
system - business model quality assurance standards,
consumer satisfaction ratings/standards of service
47Sustain critical elementsto sustain desired
results
- Continue use of formative data system and use of
data for instructional planning - differentiated curriculum instruction
- leadership culture
- use of time
- training and support
48Elements of a school-wide reading model w/added
costs sources of support
49Connect elements of Reading First to other
instructional anchors
- NCLB/AYP
- Response to intervention model
- (RTI--IDEA, 2004)
- School-wide Title 1 programs
50Allocation of recurring resources
- Staffing
- Certified, classified allocations
- Special programs allocations
- Budgets
- Supplies
- Training
- Time
- PD, planning
- Time use policies
51Create implement a sustainability plan
- See Planning and Evaluation Tool-Sustainability
(PET-S)
52Learning from others about sustainability
53Learn from the work of others about sustaining
innovation and change
- from other RF schools, districts states
- from exemplary service delivery models that have
lasted over time - from the literature on adoption of innovations,
systems change and sustainability
54Learning from exemplary service models that have
lasted over time
- Teaching Family Model
- Regional Intervention Program Model
- Positive Behavior Support (PBS)
55Models of service delivery (systems
implementations)
56Sustaining Positive Behavior Support Programs
(PBS)--What makes a difference?
- administrative leadership
- school-level teams
- formative data system
- positive data on own kids
- local capacity
- build sustainability from day 1
- staff input/feedback helps guide program
(adaptation within a framework) - -Horner, 2006
57Learning from the literature on sustainability
- Concerns-based adoption model (CBAM) (Hall, et.
al.) - stages of concern
- levels of use
- Rand Study (Berman McLaughlin, 1978)
- Local systemic change
- http//sustainability.terc.edu
- http//sustainability2002.terc.edu
- http//sustainability2003.terc.edu
58Concerns-based adoption model
- Stages of concern
- unaware
- actively engaged
- Levels of use
- OMDB
- expert trainer
59The Rand Study Berman McLaughlin, 1978
- National sample of federally-funded educational
innovations - Studied projects in
- the last two years of a 3-5 yr. funding cycle
- and the first two years post-funding
- Outcomes reflected not the amount of funding, but
the actions of the local staff - Mutual adaptation
- project adapted to context of school setting
- school staff adapted practices in response to
project
60A Tool for Sustainability Planning
- PET-S--Planning Evaluation Tool for
Sustainability - (activity--using the tool)
61Summary of Key ideas
- Sustainability is possible (if the implementation
is effective). - Effective practices can survive turnover of key
staff--even loss of grant funding--with planning. - The greatest threat to sustainability is erosion
of the culture the commitment upon which the
initial success was built.
62Summary of Key ideas
- We can sustain improved outcomes for kids if we
- Begin planning for sustainability early
- Attend to the fidelity of key elements
- Build capacity into the organization
- Engage all stakeholders in building success
- Embed key elements of the program into district
policy - commit to sustaining a can do culture that is
responsive to data on student performance
63Contact information
- Dr. Stan Paine, Interim Director
- Principal-in-Residence
- Center on Teaching Learning
- 5292 University of Oregon
- 1600 Mill Race Drive
- Eugene, OR 97403-5292
- ph (541) 346-1644
- fx (541) 346-4349
- spaine_at_uoregon.edu
64Resources references on sustainability
- Berman, P. McLaughlin, M. (1978). Federal
programs supporting educational change, volume
VIII Implementing and sustaining innovations.
Santa Monica, CA, Rand Corporation, - Fullan, M. (2005). Leadership sustainability
Systems thinkers in action. Thousand Oaks, CA,
Corwin Press. - Hargreaves, A., Earl, L., Moore, S., Manning, S.
(2001). Learning to change Teaching beyond
subjects and standards. San Francisco,
Jossey-Bass. - Hargreaves, A Fink, D. (2006). Sustainable
leadership. San Francisco, Jossey-Bass. - Horner, R. (2006). Personal communication.
65Resources references on sustainability
- Lehming, R. Kane, M. (Eds.) (1981). Improving
schools Using what we know. Beverly Hills,
Sage Publications. - Paine, S., Bellamy, G.T., Wilcox, B. (1984)
Human services that work From innovation to
standard practice. Baltimore Paul H. Brooks
Publishing. - Virtual Conferences on Sustainability
- http//sustainability.terc.edu
- http//sustainability2002.terc.edu
- http//sustainability2003.terc.edu
- Wolf, M. (1997). The development of the Teaching
Family Model. Journal of applied behavior
analysis, 30, 381-382.