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Culture Findings from the International Project

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Title: Culture Findings from the International Project


1
Culture Findings from the International
Project
  • Rose M. Ylimaki, Ph.D.
  • Associate Professor
  • University of Arizona

2
Successful School Leadership Culture
  • Single Nation Studies Identify Culture Building
    as an essential part of Successful Leadership
    Seminal Studies
  • Effective Schools Research in USA correlates
    feature safe school environments norms of
    learning and continuous improvement ethos of
    high expectations role of principal as
    instructional leader (Purkey Smith, 1983 Louis
    Miles, 1990 Lezotte, 1997)
  • British Head Teachers in High-Poverty Schools in
    England leaders take a directive approach to
    school safety and improvement of academics and
    gradually release leadership responsibility as
    safety improves (Harris, 2002)
  • AERA Task Force - Leithwood Riehl (2005)

3
Aera Task Force Report Leadership requires
  • Setting Directions
  • Developing People
  • Redesigning the Organization professional
    learning structures and norms
  • Managing the Instructional Program
  • These concepts are necessary but not sufficient
    for successful leadership in any context

4
School Culture
  • Ethos feeling how we do things around here
  • Safety
  • Norms
  • Beliefs
  • High Expectations for Learning
  • Rituals

5
International Successful School Principalship
Study (ISSP)
  • Eight Countries (USA, England, Denmark, Norway,
    Sweden, Canada, Hong Kong Australia)
  • 86 cases to date
  • Focus on Challenging School Contexts US,
    England, and Australia

6
Challenges - Changing Demographics
  • Immigration accounts for population increases
    (increased cultural diversity)
  • High-poverty schools serve a minority majority
    population
  • USA (64 of foreign born residents arrived since
    1980, most coming from non-English speaking
    nations 30 of schoolage children live in
    poverty)
  • Britain (Half of population growth between 1991 -
    2001 due to immigration
  • Australia (41 of population growth in 1991 due
    to immigration

7
Increased Accountability
  • England (1988 Education Reform Act)
  • National School Inspections and Standardized
    Tests of Academic Performance - Student Outcomes
  • Australia (1990s)
  • State and Territory Levels
  • Self-Evaluation and External Review Combination
  • Differentiated Reviews based on Past Performance
  • Multiple Data Sources and Foci on Participation
    as well as Authentic Pedagogy and Student
    Performance
  • USA
  • No Child Left Behind Act (2002)
  • State Testing Mandates

8
Organizational Reforms
  • England (Local Management of Schools)
  • Decentralization - head teachers are accountable
  • National Mandate
  • Australia
  • Decentralization and Self-Management
  • Variation by Region (initiated in Victoria,
    spread throughout the Australia during the 1990s)
  • Accountability for Participatory Leadership
  • USA
  • State and District Mandates for Site-Based
    Management
  • No Accountability for Participatory Leadership

9
Research Phases
  • Phases
  • Development of Common Interview Protocols, using
    single nation literature on successful school
    leadership
  • Development and Analysis of Case Studies (86 to
    date 13 high-poverty)
  • Survey
  • Digital Videos and Modules for Leadership
    Preparation

10
Case Study Phase
  • Sampling - Reputation and Outcomes (13 culturally
    diverse, high-poverty schools in NE)
  • Data Sources and Collection
  • Document Analysis
  • Participant Observations
  • Semi-Structured Interviews - common protocol
  • Principals (two interviews) random selection of
    20 teachers parent focus groups student focus
    groups
  • Data Analysis
  • National Case Study Development Identification
    of Themes and Categories - Leadership Practices
  • Cross-National Analysis

11
US Case Descriptions
  • Seven Northeast US Elementary, Middle, High
    Schools
  • Four women (three African American and one
    Caucasian) three men (all Caucasian)
  • Range of Experience (3 years to 22 years)
  • Three Masters and Four Doctorates
  • Range of School Size and Location (urban,
    suburban, rural)

12
Findings
  • (Outer) Core Practices
  • Multi-focal Direction Setting Beauty, Safety,
    Learning
  • Developing People - Unlearning and Learning
  • Organizational Redesign - Physical and Learning
  • Managing the Instructional Program (Direct and
    Indirect)
  • (Inner) Qualities of Leadership - persistence,
    empathy, passion, respect for multi-culturalism,
    flexible thinking

13
Multi-Focal Setting Directions
  • Two Simultaneous Intentions
  • Secure the building
  • Beautify the Physical Setting (with respect to
    school culture)
  • Refocus on teaching and learning
  • Principals / Headteachers Close the Doors in
    Order to Open Them

14
Setting Direction - Security, Beauty, Learning
  • USA Costello Principal - I knew the first thing
    I had to do was clean the school upliterally. We
    locked all doors but one and got parents to help
    us secure that oneParents and the teachers
    needed to see the school as a safe, beautiful
    place where children could and would learn.
  • Australian Billabong Principal - I would have to
    stand outside and stop transients from coming in
    school. I had to also teach people that this
    building was for education and giving children a
    chance. That means we plant flowers and
    learning.

15
Setting Direction cont.
  • Respect for Multi-Culturalism
  • I started working with a community organization
    to beautify the surrounding neighborhood and to
    create a mural in the school entranceway that
    respected the school culture. US Fraser
    principal

16
Setting Directions cont.
  • Part of making a school beautiful is showing
    respect for the community culture. Beauty is in
    the eye of the beholder (our kids) and part of
    that requires respecting and learning from the
    community culture. US Hamilton principal

17
Setting Directions cont.
  • I really had to develop relationships with the
    growing Muslim population and help create
    positive learning relationships, giving respect
    for their beliefs and educating all of us
    (including me) about what that meant. Australian
    principal

18
Developing People - Unlearning and Learning
  • Knowledge, Skills and Dispositions to Improve
    Teaching and Learning
  • Creativity with Resources
  • Direct Modeling and Support in Classrooms
  • Unlearning and Learning
  • Intellectual Stimulation and Emotional Support
  • Empathy for Poverty Barriers but No Excuses

19
Developing People Quotes
  • England (Shale) Head Teacher - You have to make
    sure the kids get to do the real reading and
    writing, to be actively involved in learning, and
    I really had to help teachers unlearn old
    practices and learn new ones, even teaching in
    their classrooms.
  • Australian (Appler) Principal - Our kids have a
    lower tolerance for didactic teachingthey have
    to have constructivist learning, which means some
    teachers need to unlearn more didactic practices.
    We spend time every day sharing strategies to do
    that.

20
Developing People cont.
  • USA Teacher quote about Fraser Principal - She
    knows so much about literacy. She sent us to
    Teachers College for training in authentic
    literacy and she came with their coaches into our
    classrooms.
  • Costello Principal - I found Americas Choice
    and it included literacy coaches, which really
    helped teachers learn how to teach reading skills
    and raise their expectations about what kids can
    do when they get good instruction.

21
Organizational Redesign - Physical and Learning
  • Redesigns focused on Safety and Learning
  • Decision Making Teams included beautification
    or physical school development
  • Variation in Transition Toward Teacher and Parent
    Leadership and Participation (from early
    stages/intentions to sophisticated (horizontal
    and vertical) teams
  • Using Accountability for Leverage

22
Redesigning Organization Quotes
  • Influence of Accountability
  • England (Birch) Head Teacher - When local school
    management is working well, it provides a
    principal with opportunities for democratic
    curriculum development.
  • Birch Teacher We have a clear view of where
    curriculum should be headed. Our meetings are
    open and we communicate about students daily. We
    make decisions together.

23
Redesigning Organization
  • Australia (Billabong Principal) - We are
    accountable for values of participation,
    particularly following the riotswe are conscious
    of including diverse participants in decisions
    about the school.
  • Billabong (Muslim) Parent - I attend school
    meetings, and we look at what our kids are
    learning and make decisions with the teachers
    about how curriculum needs to be for our
    children.

24
Redesigning the Organization
  • USA (Fraser Principal) - We have layers of
    decision-making teams at grade levels,
    cross-grade level and stakeholder groups, school
    governance, and specific projects. We started
    with a beautification group, which was improving
    the look and safety of the building, then we
    gradually added curriculum issues. Parents and
    students sit on the teams as well.

25
Managing the Instructional Program (direct and
indirect)
  • Teaching and Modeling in Classrooms
  • Monitoring Classroom Activity
  • Buffering Staff from Distractions
  • Hiring (and Removing) Staff According to School
    Priorities
  • Variation in Philosophy, Pedagogy, and Use of
    Externally Developed Programs
  • Using Accountability to Leverage Improvement

26
Managing Instruction Quotes
  • England Head Teacher - I teach and spend a lot
    of time in other classrooms. I help teachers do
    what needs to be done..Its unlearning in some
    ways.
  • Australian Teacher about Tasmanian principal -
    His real credibility is in the fact that he
    practices what he preaches. He runs our staff
    meetings like a teacher who believes in immersion
    and engagement.
  • USA Hamilton teacher - She rolled up her sleeves
    and taught eighth gradeShe stands out in the
    rain with us to get kids on the buses safely.
    Then teachers started to take on a new belief.

27
Managing Instruction
  • USA Fraser Teacher Quote about Principal - She
    constantly reminds everyone that this school is a
    place for learning. Theres no time to waste.
  • Fraser Principal - I literally had to get kids
    to sit so teachers could teach. In some ways,
    accountability helps create pressure to change.
  • USA Hamilton Teacher Quote about Principal - We
    listen because she doesnt ask people to do
    anything she doesnt do herself. She actually
    taught eighth grade when there wasnt a qualified
    teacher available. When we looked at data, it was
    her own teaching data, too.

28
Inner Leadership Qualities
  • Persistence (England Head Teacher) - You just
    need to persevere. This job is not for the faint
    of heart.
  • Empathy (Costello, USA) - She seems to have more
    empathy for the neighborhood children than
    teachers who she thinks are not able to handle
    them.
  • Passion - (Australian Principal) - Shes
    passionate about making a difference.
  • Flexible Thinking (Hamilton Principal, USA) - We
    tapped Fraser teachers trained in literacy to be
    coaches and give workshops at our school.

29
Discussion Connection to Culture
  • Principals exhibit common practices to improve
    school safety (direct as well as indirect)
  • Each principal initiated change in physical and
    learning environment
  • Professional development required creativity and
    flexible thinking, using whatever fiscal or
    material resources were available.
  • Whenever possible, they redesigned school
    structures, policies, and practices to facilitate
    collaboration and improve school performance.

30
Discussion cont.
  • Self-management was at various levels of
    maturity, but there was tighter coupling.
  • Differences in policy shape leadership beliefs
    and practice (i.e. accountability for
    participation as well as student outcomes)
  • This job is not for the faint of heart. It takes
    courage and persistence as well as leadership
    knowledge and skills to be successful in
    high-poverty, challenging schools.

31
Discussion - Differences
  • Schools differed both within and across countries
    in size, diversity, stage of development,
    leadership structure, school-wide pedagogy, and
    resources.
  • School leaders differed in their philosophies of
    learning and pedagogy, and these differences were
    shaped by national / regional context.
  • Schools were in different stages of development
    toward distributed leadership or participatory
    governance, which may be due, in part, previous
    principal experience and district/state/national
    expectations.

32
Culture
  • Ethos how we do things around here (school
    culture are the same)
  • Safety and Beauty Multi-Cultural Beauty
  • Norms of Cultural Respect and Rigorous Academics
  • Beliefs making our cultures into better places
    to live
  • Rituals respect multi-cultural, diverse
    population

33
Conclusions and Implications
  • Findings Extend Single Nation Studies of
    Successful School Principals
  • Direct as well as Indirect Leadership Processes
  • Context is Critically Important, but there are
    Marked Similarities Across these Countries
  • Limitations of Case Study Research and Sample of
    13 (cannot be generalized to All High Poverty
    Schools)

34
Conclusions cont.
  • Evidence Suggests that Creating a Safe, Nurturing
    Child-Centered Environment may be a Necessary
    First Step in Schools Confronting Conditions at
    13 Sites
  • Emphasis on Beauty and Safety
  • Respect for Multi-Cultural
  • Emphasis on Western Perspectives
  • Need for Longitudinal Component and more
    Ethnographic Methods
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