Thursday, May 25, 2017

A Check List for School Improvement

The Quality of Delivered Instruction Is No Longer Enough.

I’ll repeat that. The quality of delivered instruction is no longer enough to ensure adequate student performance.  But why? 

The brutal, yet consistently ignored truth is that the expert delivery of the wrong content will not produce improved student performance.  Which means that student success is now a function of system and delivery.  Below is the checklist for school success in the accountability era.

The Sequential Check List for School Improvement

1. A Scope and Sequence aligned to the standards

2. Pacing fidelity to the Scope and Sequence

3. Rigor fidelity to the Scope and Sequence

4. Frequent instructional planning that is aligned to the pacing and rigor of the Scope and Sequence

5. Short-cycle common assessments that are aligned to the pace and rigor of the Scope and Sequence.

6. Timely, strategic, and surgical review, re-teach and remediation strategies.

7. Data use to determine three critical instructional dynamics. A. Are we on pace? B. What strategies work? C. What strategies do not work?

8. Leadership lives in classrooms to cue practice, and ensure fidelity to planning.

9. On-going teacher training

10. Leadership committed to coaching staff up or coaching staff out, based on attitude and capacity.

Think. Work. Achieve.

Your turn...
  • Call Jo at (832) 477-LEAD to order your campus set of “The Fundamental 5: The Formula for Quality Instruction.” Individual copies available on Amazon.com!  http://tinyurl.com/Fundamental5 
  • Upcoming Conference Presentations: Texas ASCD Summer Conference, TASSP Summer Conference, Virginia Middle and High School Principals Conference; The National Principals Conference; The Fundamental 5 National Summit (Keynote) 
  • Now at the Apple App Store: Fun 5 Timer (Fundamental 5 Delivery Tool); PowerWalks CLC (Networked Formative Observation Tool) 
  • Follow Sean Cain and LYS on www.Twitter.com/LYSNation  and like Lead Your School on Facebook

Wednesday, May 24, 2017

A Superintendent Writes... The Homemade Walk-thru System - Part 1

In response to the 5/23/2017 post, “The Homemade Walk-thru System,” an old school LYS Superintendent writes:

SC,

I’m still laughing after reading your post today.  It’s funny on two different levels.

1. People asking you to critique their systems, not knowing that you are one of the grandfathers of formative observations systems.  Kind of like asking Orville Redenbacher to taste test your home grown popcorn.

2. You are a great teacher, but a horrible marketer.  Here’s how you should have finished your post.  “You can play at instructional leadership. Or you can use PowerWalks.”

Drop the Mic.

Think. Work. Achieve.

Your turn...
  • Call Jo at (832) 477-LEAD to order your campus set of “The Fundamental 5: The Formula for Quality Instruction.” Individual copies available on Amazon.com!  http://tinyurl.com/Fundamental5 
  • Upcoming Conference Presentations: Texas ASCD Summer Conference, TASSP Summer Conference, Virginia Middle and High School Principals Conference; The National Principals Conference; The Fundamental 5 National Summit (Keynote) 
  • Now at the Apple App Store: Fun 5 Timer (Fundamental 5 Delivery Tool); PowerWalks CLC (Networked Formative Observation Tool) 
  • Follow Sean Cain and LYS on www.Twitter.com/LYSNation  and like Lead Your School on Facebook

Tuesday, May 23, 2017

The Homemade Classroom Walk-thru System

On a monthly basis, someone will ask me to critique their homemade (campus or district made) walk-thru form and system.  And in terms of quality, the count is now 0 for each one I have looked at. 

This is not a function of smarts or good intentions.  The people who try to come up with their own tools are plenty smart and have great intentions.  This issue is that they are amateurs trying to play a pro game.  The learning curve is too steep and the stakes are too high for that person to learn from their mistakes.

So, what are the common mistakes? They come in five major categories.

Mistake #1: The “look for’s” aren’t important, in terms of effective instruction and/or student performance. For example: Is the teacher sitting or standing?  Who cares? Show me where sitting or standing has a measureable effect on teacher / student / class performance.  It doesn’t. So why track it?

Mistake #2: The “looks for’s” are subjective instead of objective. For example: Students are engaged / excited / compliant / reflective.  No matter what you think, the observer can’t get inside the student’s head to measure relative engagement.  Do enough classroom observations and you realize there is no value in trying to track a guess.

Mistake #3: The “look for’s” aren’t truly observable in a three to five-minute observation. For example: The teacher planned for instruction.  Walk into a classroom at a random time and you have no idea if what is occurring is planned or not. You can tell if the class is in control or not.  And that may be correlated to planning or the lack thereof.  But repeat after me... Correlation is not causation.

Mistake #4: The observations of multiple observers cannot be aggregated, either at all or not easily.  This is a big problem that gets bigger with each additional walk-thru. 

Mistake #5: The collected walk-thru data cannot be disaggregated.  Congratulations, this is what it was like to be a principal before 2002.

Mistakes 1, 2 and 3 can either be fixed with on-going failure and experience. A slow and painful process. Or by bootlegging (a polite way to say stealing) components of existing observation protocols. Sadly, this is a common practice.  If you do this, we know who you are and shame on you.

Mistakes 4 and 5 can be corrected with a staff of programmers and a data base management system that makes NASA jealous.  If you don’t have those resources on hand, you don’t have anything close to a winning hand. 

All of this to say, don’t be penny wise and pound foolish.  Buy a right tool for the job and then spend your time and energy on using the tool to greater effect.

Think. Work. Achieve.

Your turn...
  • Call Jo at (832) 477-LEAD to order your campus set of “The Fundamental 5: The Formula for Quality Instruction.” Individual copies available on Amazon.com!  http://tinyurl.com/Fundamental5 
  • Upcoming Conference Presentations: Texas ASCD Summer Conference, TASSP Summer Conference, Virginia Middle and High School Principals Conference; The National Principals Conference; The Fundamental 5 National Summit (Keynote) 
  • Now at the Apple App Store: Fun 5 Timer (Fundamental 5 Delivery Tool); PowerWalks CLC (Networked Formative Observation Tool) 
  • Follow Sean Cain and LYS on www.Twitter.com/LYSNation  and like Lead Your School on Facebook