Without Trumpets: Continuous Educational Improvement, Journey to Sustainability

Without Trumpets: Continuous Educational Improvement, Journey to Sustainability

Without Trumpets: Continuous Educational Improvement, Journey to Sustainability

Without Trumpets: Continuous Educational Improvement, Journey to Sustainability

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Overview

Empowering leaders at each level of the implementation of improvement processes is essential if public schools are to survive moving forward. The story of Kentucky’s continuous improvement can be evidenced from the Kentucky Education Reform Act (KERA) of 1990, and the intensive systems work since 2009 outlined in Senate Bill 1 and amended by House Bill 176 (2010). Even with a significantly different governance and support approach outlined in Senate Bill 1 (2017) by aligning federal statute regulation and initiatives, state statute and regulation, state school board goals, local school board policies and school improvement plans, a consistent message of expectation is clarified for schools and classrooms. Key core work processes aligned behind those policies lead to systems that can be flexible and adjust to the political and economic climates that surround the work of learning without total disruption of the system. The use of transparent design and common instruction while monitoring quality tools is making a recognizable difference. Funding from the sometimes-maligned School Improvement Grant (SIG) process from the United States Department of Education and work with key partners enables the establishing of sustainable systems for continuous improvement in the areas of planning, use of data, fiscal management, student support, and teacher support owned by leaders at each level of implementation. The pertinent data and reports, the human story, the tools used, and lessons learned are a continuous improvement story into sustainability which will resonate with all who lead in education at any level reaffirming that we can do this!

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781475843064
Publisher: Rowman & Littlefield Publishers, Inc.
Publication date: 06/06/2018
Pages: 216
Product dimensions: 6.24(w) x 9.07(h) x 0.87(d)

About the Author

Kelly Foster is a Kentucky native whose family has lived in Kentucky for generations. She attended public schools and public universities where she earned her BA and MA from Eastern Kentucky University and MA in Administration and EdD from Morehead State University. After teaching and administrative experience in schools and districts, she is an associate commissioner at the Kentucky Department of Education.

Susan Allred received a BA from UNC-Charlotte, MA from Gardner-Webb University and an EdS from Appalachian State University, all in NC. She taught in public middle and high schools for 20 years and was an administrator for 20 years at the school, district and state levels in NC,SC, and KY.

Table of Contents

Forward- Terry K. Holliday, PhD former Kentucky Commissioner of Education
Preface
Acknowledgements
Introduction
Part I. A National Context and How Sustainability Can Be Built and Measured
Chapter 1: A Perspective on Status of Low Performing Schools Intervention
Chapter 2: The Empowering Information and Data
Mass Insight
District 180 School Data
TELL Survey
National Recognition
Part II. The Kentucky Reality of Designing, Deploying and Monitoring Systems
Chapter 3: The Backstory. State Legislation
Chapter 4: Needs Assessment, Research, Visionary Leadership, A Plan
Chapter 5: From Theory into Action - Two Stories
Part III. Strategies and Tools to Empower for Sustainability
Chapter 6: State Strategies and Support
Technology Platform
Diagnostic Review Process
Alignment of Federal/State Laws and Regulations with Requirements
30-60-90 Day Planning
The Art of System Questioning/Data Questions
Professional Learning Communities
Use of PDSA Improvement Process
Special Two-Way Partnerships
Chapter 7: Building a Culture of Continuous Improvement Through Application of Quality Tools
Part IV. Case Studies and Lessons Learned with Continued Challenges
Chapter 8: Case Studies
A small rural high school and a district without capacity to support it
Two rural school districts with re-starts
A large urban traditional high school
The largest district in the state with the most priority schools
Chapter 9: Lessons Learned with Continued Challenges
Appendices
  1. Sustainability Plan Example
  2. 30-60-90 Day Plan Example
  3. A Guide for Using the Data Questions
  4. PLC Tools/Templates
  5. PDSA Examples-State multi-year, District and template
  6. Quality tools-plus/delta and linkage examples
  7. HUB School information
Glossary: The Letters Unscrambled
Bibliography
About the Authors
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