Title: Dr' Tarrell Awe Agahe Portman
1Using Change-Management Models and Score Cards as
a Tool to Raise Educators Expectations for All
Students
- Dr. Tarrell Awe Agahe Portman
- tarrell-portman_at_uiowa.edu
- Dr. Susannah Wood
- susannah-wood_at_uiowa.edu
- TSCI 9th Annual Conference
- St. Louis
2Small Group Discussion (1)
- What changes have you witnessed and experienced
in the school counseling profession over the past
few years? - What were the driving forces?
- What were the outcomes?
- And what happened in between?
- Summarize and document
3John Kotters Change Process
- Step 1 - Increase Urgency
- Step 2 - Build the Guiding Team
- Step 3 - Get the Vision Right
- Step 4 - Communicate for Buy-in
- Step 5 - Empower Action
- Step 6 - Create Short Term Wins
- Step 7 - Don't let up
- Step 8 - Make change stick
4Intentional Change Process
- Analyze the current structure,
- Brainstorm resources and potential partnerships,
- Construct a new vision,
- Document proposal,
- Engage the process of change,
- Facilitate supports for change
5Analyze
- What is our baseline?
- What do we have?
- Whats working?
- What isnt?
- What can we keep?
- What needs to change?
- What is our focus?
- What do we need?
6Brainstorm
- What factors should we consider?
- Sources of support
- Current and possible partners
- K-12 alignment
- Career and college preparation
- Student skills
- What potentials are there for curriculum changes?
- Content
- Delivery
- Outcomes
7Construct
- Guiding team with common vision and complementary
backgrounds - New vision
- Common mission and goals
- Clarity of voice
- Shared language
- Action plan
8Document
- Mission
- Goals
- Roles
- Program and service-delivery alignment
- Implications for
- Student numbers and requirements
- Collaboration
- Program promotion, district/state/national
visibility - Program reputation
- Money and resources
9Engagement in Change
- Labels or stereotypes
- Issues of professional identity
- Departmental understanding
- The lone voice
- Appearance of favoritism
- Implications for possible failure
- Trust
- Costs/Benefits
- Territory
- Fit
- Threats to status quo
- The unknown
- Power
- Differences in personal paradigms
10Facilitate
- Identify and present preliminary ideas to
political entities for feedback. - Incorporate feedback when appropriate.
- Consult with administration, teachers, staff,
parents and students. - Identify and select the appropriate channels at
your institution for introducing the changes. - Be sure the written documentation can be clearly
understood and easily read. - Schedule appropriate discussion meetings.
- Immediately follow-up meeting with action plan.
11Commonalities within Models
- Abstract to concrete
- Analysis of status quo
- Creation of forward-thinking teams
- Inter/intra personal struggle with the change
process - Vision into action plans and outcome measures
- Short term changes
- Forecasting of impact of change on multiple
domains
12Paired Reflection
- Change from theory to practice
- What are driving forces in your context that
would lead to a change? - Who do you want on your team to discuss and
implement change? - What positive outcomes could you see to change?
- What are other implications for change?
- How would you expect you would experience that
change? - What would be causes of resistance or frustration
in the change process?
13An Impetus for Change in School Counseling
- Societal changes
- Educational reform
- Need accountability
- Need for increased professional recognition
14Refocusing Change and Accountability
- Scorecards
- Intentionality
- Strategic change
- What is our focus?
- What do we want?
- How do we get there?
- What do our stakeholders want?
- How will we know?
School counselors have data, but data needs a
focus and a plan. If we want our students to be
successful we need a map to get them there and a
way of measuring how well that map worked.
15Change
- How do we attain sustainable growth in our school
counseling programs and in our students
development of secondary plans? - Embracing change
- Expectations of students and programs
- Embedded intentionality strategy maps and/or
action plans - Effectiveness of strategies
16Questions for Radical Change
- Is the status quo really good enough? Can we just
collect and report? - What assumptions do we have of students that may
actually cost us their success? - Do we really have a plan to move school
counseling beyond maintenance of data? - Can we say we are sustaining a level of long-term
effectiveness if we have no data? - Should we look at leading indicators of student
success?
17Mind the gap
- What do we need?
- Long term sustainability
- Strategy map that measures performance
- Intentional actions plans of action that lead to
student success - Indicators of what we might be doing in the
future
- What do we have?
- Data driven Accountable programs
- Single measures based on interventions
- Multiple measures based on program
- Current indicators
Are we as a profession dressed up with no place
to go?
18Small Group Discussion (2)Forward Movement
- So What? How are our students different as a
result of our programs? What are current
indicators? - TO
- So what next? What do we want our students to
become? What are leading indicators?
19How would you measure your school counseling
program performance?
20Balanced Scorecard Concepts
- Program effectiveness relies upon the bottom
line what has happened. - A balanced scorecard measures not just how well
youve been doing, but also how well you are
doing and can expect to do in the future. - Balanced inclusion of data and non-data
21Measurement Indicators
- Lagging Indicator Measures what you have done
(ex. post-secondary admissions, follow-up
studies). - Current Indicator Measures what you are doing
(pre-post tests, outcomes data). - Leading Indicator Measures what you can expect
to do in the future (post secondary completion,
workforce indicators, life long learning).
22Scorecards
- Developed business to move beyond simple
numerical indicators toward performance measures
and combined viewpoints. - Scorecards support strategy execution by
providing organizations with leverage, visibility
and responsiveness - the key enablers of
consistent strategy execution. If the scorecard
truly measures the internal and organizational
drivers of financial and customer outcomes, then
by definition it is shining a spotlight on the
leverage points of the strategy - the process,
people and information priorities that are most
important to create significant change. (Veth,
G. , 2006)
23What is the balanced scorecard?
- The balanced scorecard is a way of
- measuring CSCGP success
- balancing long-term and short-term actions
- balancing different measures of success
- Financial What is our gain? Customer
Students and Alumni Internal Operations --
Delivery System - Human Resource Systems Development (learning
and growth) - A way of tying strategy to measures to action
Adapted from source http//www.organizedchange.co
m/balancedscorecard.htm
24Kinds of Measures
- Customer Satisfaction, growth and retention.
- Internal operations (efficiency, speed, reducing
non-value added work, minimizing quality
problems). - Human resource systems and development.
25Context and Strategy
- A mission, strategy and objectives must be
defined, measures of that strategy must be agreed
to and actions need to be performed for a
measurement system to be fully effective.
26Drivers or Causes
- Drivers are the causes behind movement (up and
down) of indicators on balanced scorecard. - Example Applications for Post Secondary
Admission - Awareness
- Applications must be available
- Deadlines must be met
27Four Driver categories
- Environmental - those factors outside the
influence of your organization, such as community
norms, governmental regulations, the economic
cycle, local, national and global politics, etc. - Organizational - systems inside the organization
such as district strategy, human resource
systems, policies, procedures, organizational
structure, etc. - Group service delivery processes, group
relationships, work responsibilities, work
assignments - Individual - personality, management style,
skills, behaviors.
28Strategy MapThe Cause and Effect Relationships
Financial What do we want to gain?
Customer Students, Parents, Alumni
InternalService Delivery Framework/Components
LearningHuman Resources, Collaborations
The secret ingredient is focus.
29(No Transcript)
30CSCGP Strategy Maps
- Choose a theme/focus for your CSCGP or Context.
- Identify outcome or gain.
- What must be achieved to reach this outcome?
- How will success in achieving the strategy be
measured? - What level of performance or improvement is
needed? - Identify key actions required to achieve the
target?
31Creating SMART targets - Objectives
- A SMART target is
- Specific
- Measurable
- Agreed upon
- Realistic
- Time-bound
32Sustainability
- How do we intend to help students sustain what
they have learned through their participation in
our CSCGPs? - Are we capable of instilling sustainability?
33Balanced Scorecards in the Real World
- Scorecards can be used at various levels.
- Community (Environmental)
- District (Organizational)
- Group (Program)
- Individual (Student or School Counselor)
34Support Personnel Accountability Report Card
(SPARC) B. Tyra
- The Support Personnel Accountability Report Card
(SPARC) is a continuous improvement tool that
gives a school site an opportunity to demonstrate
effective communication and a commitment to
getting results. Modeled after the School
Accountability Report Card (SARC), the SPARC has
been developed by an advisory group of Los
Angeles County counselors, counselor supervisors,
counselor educators, and California Department of
Education consultants.
35Future Directions
- Implement a action plan for continuous evaluation
of the new project or program. - Be accountable
- Market (local, state, region, national,
international) - Keep program on the radar for administrators
36References
- Veth, G. (2006, June). Scorecards Translating
Strategy to Action. DM Review Magazine. Retrieved
May 29, 2008 from www.dmreview.com/issues