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Building System Capacity in the SEF Professor David Egan Professor Alma Harris Professor David Hopkins

Building System Capacity in the SEF Professor David Egan Professor Alma Harris Professor David Hopkins

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Page 1: Building System Capacity in the SEF Professor David Egan Professor Alma Harris Professor David Hopkins

Building System Capacity in the SEF

Professor David Egan

Professor Alma Harris

Professor David Hopkins

Page 2: Building System Capacity in the SEF Professor David Egan Professor Alma Harris Professor David Hopkins

Introduction and Context

System Leadership

The Model for School Improvement

Building System Capacity in the SEF

Page 3: Building System Capacity in the SEF Professor David Egan Professor Alma Harris Professor David Hopkins

INTRODUCTION AND CONTEXT

Page 4: Building System Capacity in the SEF Professor David Egan Professor Alma Harris Professor David Hopkins

Co-Construction• This presentation sets out our thinking on building the system capacity we will need to support the SEF and achieve its purposes.• Opportunity in the workshops that follow to test out this thinking and to modify it as a result.• This will continue after the conferences in a planned programme of work with LA Consortia and head-teachers. This has been agreed with ADEW.• So we will co-construct the modus operandi and the model of school improvement that will drive the SEF from September 2010.

Page 5: Building System Capacity in the SEF Professor David Egan Professor Alma Harris Professor David Hopkins

School Effectiveness Research: Ten Principles for System Reform

1. Ensuring that the achievement and learning of students is at the centre of all that we do.

2. The enhancement of the quality of teaching should be the central theme.

3. Selection policies that ensure that only the very best people become teachers

Page 6: Building System Capacity in the SEF Professor David Egan Professor Alma Harris Professor David Hopkins

4. Professional learning opportunities that develop a common ‘practice’

5. Leadership for student achievement

6. Clarity on standards.

7. Procedures to provide ongoing and transparent data.

8. School performance can be improved through early intervention.

9. Inequities in student performance must be relentlessly addressed.

10. System level structures should link the centre, the locality/region and schools/classrooms (tri-level reform).

Page 7: Building System Capacity in the SEF Professor David Egan Professor Alma Harris Professor David Hopkins

A Contemporary ‘School Effectiveness’ FrameworkA Contemporary ‘School Effectiveness’ Framework

Page 8: Building System Capacity in the SEF Professor David Egan Professor Alma Harris Professor David Hopkins

SEF Stage Two Model

LocalLocalAuthoritiesAuthorities

School EffectivenessFramework

DCELLSDCELLS

Classrooms and Classrooms and SchoolsSchools

Page 9: Building System Capacity in the SEF Professor David Egan Professor Alma Harris Professor David Hopkins

DCELLS: Strategic Direction • Provide strategic direction for SEF within a narrative that is well communicated to all parties, including politicians, key members of governance, teachers, students and parents.

• Coordinate under the umbrella of SEF key policy areas in order to strengthen teaching, leadership and curriculum.

• Develop rigorous qualitative and quantitative outcomes that are sought through SEF and align these to the new Common Inspection Framework.

• Continue to develop high quality data sets.

Page 10: Building System Capacity in the SEF Professor David Egan Professor Alma Harris Professor David Hopkins

Local Authorities: Operational Capacity

• Take the SEF forward through the four regional Consortia.

• Each Consortia develops a discrete SEF programme (to be agreed with DCELLS) allowing for regional needs, within the overall national strategy for SEF.

• Each Consortia to have in place a System Leadership Team to lead the operational implementation of SEF at school level.

• This will require extensive capacity building from September 2009 to prepare for SEF roll-out from September 2010.

Page 11: Building System Capacity in the SEF Professor David Egan Professor Alma Harris Professor David Hopkins

Schools and Classrooms: SEF Impact• Focus on within-school variations.

• Concentrate on improving teacher pedagogy to promote enhanced student learning.

• Build instructional leadership capacity.Seek external support as appropriate.

• Adopt new qualitative and quantitative approaches to self-evaluation aligned to CIF.

• Participate in school-to-school professional networks.

Page 12: Building System Capacity in the SEF Professor David Egan Professor Alma Harris Professor David Hopkins

SYSTEM LEADERSHIP

Page 13: Building System Capacity in the SEF Professor David Egan Professor Alma Harris Professor David Hopkins

Defining system leadership• ‘A system leader is a head-teacher or senior teacher who works directly for the success and well-being of students in other schools as well as their own.’

• Higham, Hopkins and Matthews ( 2009) System Leadership in Practice

Page 14: Building System Capacity in the SEF Professor David Egan Professor Alma Harris Professor David Hopkins

System leaders share five striking characteristics, they:

• Measure their success in terms of improving student learning and strive to both raise the bar and narrow the gap(s).

• Are fundamentally committed to the improvement of teaching and learning.

• Develop their schools as personal and professional learning communities.

• Strive for equity and inclusion through acting on context and culture.

• Understand that in order to change the larger system you have to engage with it in a meaningful way.

Page 15: Building System Capacity in the SEF Professor David Egan Professor Alma Harris Professor David Hopkins

Adapting system leadership for SEF• Majority of system leaders drawn from existing head-teachers.

• Remainder would be drawn from other senior leaders in our system who meet the criteria for system leadership, including recently retired head-teachers, current and recently retired LA Officers and recently retired HMI.

• System leaders would be deployed in System Leadership Teams within each LA Consortia as the key operational cadre who take forward SEF in their regions.

Page 16: Building System Capacity in the SEF Professor David Egan Professor Alma Harris Professor David Hopkins

Taking forward system leadership for SEF

• Identifying and recruiting system leaders using robust criteria.

• Development of roles and responsibilities.

• Training of system leaders.

• Possible development of a Staff College.

Page 17: Building System Capacity in the SEF Professor David Egan Professor Alma Harris Professor David Hopkins

THE MODEL FOR SCHOOL IMPROVEMENT

Page 18: Building System Capacity in the SEF Professor David Egan Professor Alma Harris Professor David Hopkins

The model for school improvement

SCHOOL IMPROVEMENT THROUGH SEF

A theory of action

Component parts of the SI

model Differentiated strategies

System Leadership

System Leadership

Page 19: Building System Capacity in the SEF Professor David Egan Professor Alma Harris Professor David Hopkins

A theory of action: Diana’s Line of SuccessA theory of action: Diana’s Line of Success

1999 2000

1. Coming out of special measures

(1999-2000)

Enriching teaching and learning environment

Making school secure

Improving teaching and learning in

classrooms

Leading by example

Establishing a student behaviour policy and improving

attendance

Vision and values

Developing resources

Success of leadership in

terms of effect upon broad pupil outcomes

Ofsted Inspection 1998

(Special Measures)

2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 onward

2. Taking ownership: an inclusive agenda (2000–

2002)

Vision and values: developing school’s mission

Distributing leadership

Persisting priority on teaching and learning:

• becoming a thinking school

• curriculum development

Performance management and CPD

Inclusivity: integrating students from different

social and cultural backgrounds

Focus on monitoring and evaluation

4. Everyone a leader (2005-

present)

Creative partnership

and creativity

Self evaluation

Personalised learning

3. Developing creativity (2002-2005)

Restructuring leadership

Involving community

Assessment (personalised)

Placing staff well-being at centre of school

improvement

Broadening horizons

Ofsted Inspection 2002

(Very Good)

Ofsted Inspection

2007 (Outstanding)

Page 20: Building System Capacity in the SEF Professor David Egan Professor Alma Harris Professor David Hopkins

The component parts of the model• High quality teaching and pedagogy that is focused on student learning and achievement.• Distributed leadership that is focused on improving student outcomes.• A curriculum that engages and motivates students• Intelligent accountability that is focused on self evaluation and school improvement• Exploiting rich data to assist student and school improvement.• Reducing within and between school/LA variations.• Aligning the work of the school to wider strategies designed to improve student wellbeing.

Page 21: Building System Capacity in the SEF Professor David Egan Professor Alma Harris Professor David Hopkins

Differentiated strategies

• SEF cannot be a ‘one size fits all model’.

• It must have discrete strands that are responsive and aligned to where schools are in the improvement journey.

Page 22: Building System Capacity in the SEF Professor David Egan Professor Alma Harris Professor David Hopkins

Differentiated strategies: one approachType of School

Highly effective

Effective school but with internal

variations

Low performing school

Schools in Estyn category

SEF Strategy

- Become curriculum and pedagogic innovators and thereby continue to strengthen their own performance

- Support other schools through system leadership and Learning Communities

- Focus on specific teaching and leadership issues and build capacity to address.

- Through support of system leaders and involvement in Learning Communities utilise external support.

- Rely on external support to identify issues and provide support.

- Formal local authority support utilising capacity within System leadership teams and Learning Communities.

Page 23: Building System Capacity in the SEF Professor David Egan Professor Alma Harris Professor David Hopkins

Professional Learning communities• The building of learning capacity within, between and across schools and the system.• A focus on:✓ Supportive and distributed leadership.✓ Collective enquiry.✓ Student learning.✓ Supportive conditions.✓ Sharing effective practice. • Based on an action enquiry model as piloted in 2008-09.

Page 24: Building System Capacity in the SEF Professor David Egan Professor Alma Harris Professor David Hopkins

Final thoughts•‘ Successful systems have fewer but better teachers, get the right people to become teachers, develop effective leadership, have high standards, establish structures that empower and hold people accountable, embed professional knowledge and skills and continuously challenge inequity.’ ( Barber and Fullan,2009)

•‘There are only three ways to improve student learning to scale. You can raise the level of the content that students are taught. You can increase the skill and knowledge that teachers bring to the teaching of that content. And you can increase the level of students’ active learning of the content. That’s it. Everything else is instrumental. That is, everything that is not in the instructional core can only affect student learning and performance by, in some way, influencing what goes on inside the core. Schools don’t improve through political and managerial incantation: they improve through the complex and demanding work of teaching and learning’.( Elmore, 2008)

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