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Global lessons for leadership development Higher School of Economics, Moscow

This article discusses the building blocks of world-class education, the importance of leadership in school systems, commonalities and differences among school leaders, talent development plans, learning through experience, the adoption of focused networks, and the impact of performance reviews. It also highlights the increasing global focus on school leadership and the role of leadership development in highly devolved systems.

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Global lessons for leadership development Higher School of Economics, Moscow

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  1. Global lessons for leadership developmentHigher School of Economics, Moscow Michael Barber October 2010

  2. The Building Blocks of World-Class Education • Standards and accountability • Human capital and collective capacity • Structure and organisation • Globally-benchmarked standards • Recruit great people and train them well • Effective, enabling central department and agencies • Good, transparent data and accountability • Continuous improvement of pedagogical skills and knowledge • Capacity to manage change and engage communities at every level • Every child on the agenda always in order to challenge inequality • Great leadership at school level • Operational responsibility and budgets significantly devolved to school level SOURCE: Barber 2008; Whelan 2009

  3. Known unknowns • 21st century curriculum? • The human capital model? • School and out-of-school? • Knowledge management? • Technology?

  4. We’ve undertaken the first international benchmarking of leadership development • Survey of 1,500 leaders around the world: • a representative sample • a high performing sample • middle tier leaders • Over 70 interviews • A literature review • Seven key messages

  5. Ontario Alberta New York New Zealand Netherlands Singapore Victoria The survey involves England and seven other school systems

  6. 1 Great school systems require great school leaders “One of the key revelations over the last ten years is that school leadership is not just an HR issue, it is a strategic issue.” “School leadership is second only to classroom teaching as an influence on pupil learning.” SOURCE: Interviews; Whelan F, “Lessons Learned” (2009)

  7. 2 Across diverse systems school leaders have much in common Principals saying that supporting the development of individual staff makes a major contribution to the success of their school% of respondents • Global • New Zealand • Ontario • New York • Nether-lands • Singapore • Alberta • Victoria

  8. d • 2 They also have significant differences High-performing group, % of principals working with teachers to support their development every day % of respondents • Global • New York • Ontario • Alberta • Victoria • Singapore • New Zealand

  9. There is a trend towards selecting earlier and more rigorously • 3 Ontario Singapore All school boards are required to have a succession and talent development plan. A number have developed sophisticated systems for identifying and nurturing leadership talent including York, which has identified 800 potential future leaders for its 200 schools Schools are responsible for identifying potential leaders, normally during their first five years of teaching. Once identified, teachers are put onto a “leadership track” which provides them with a series of opportunities to progressively take on greater leadership responsibilities, combined with a set of formal training programs. SOURCE: Interviews 8

  10. Formal qualifications sometimes contribute but are not universal • 4 Leadership focused? Available? Mandatory?    England    Ontario   Alberta   Singapore   New York New Zealand Netherlands Victoria SOURCE: Interviews

  11. 5 • Learning through experience • Learning from the experienced Learning by doing and discussions with peers are most helpful % of high-performing principals citing each experience as having a major impact on their development Being identified as a potential leader Opportunities to take on responsibility Discussions with peers Working as a deputy head Coaching Mentoring Formal training

  12. 69% • 5 1,600 schools 60 networks 6 clusters DSSI Focused networks are increasingly adopted to develop school leaders New York: Networks and clusters • A school joins one of 60 networks consisting of ~35 schools • A school can join any network in the city • Networks provide both operational and instructional support • Network staff include the Network Leader and 10–12 team members • Networks are accountable: • Upwards to cluster leaders • Downwards to schools SOURCE: Interviews

  13. 6 Formal performance reviews do not appear to make a major contribution except where they have consequences High-performing group, % of principals stating evaluations or performance reviews have made a major % of respondents • Global • Singapore • New York • New Zealand • Ontario • Alberta • Victoria

  14. 69% • 7 Middle tier plays five vital roles • Supporting weaker school leaders • Delivering effective professional development • Managing clusters and lateral learning • Strengthening succession planning • Strengthening and moderating accountability Barrier? Shock-absorber? Catalyst? SOURCE: Interviews

  15. Three final messages • School leadership is moving up the agenda around the world • There is a global trend towards school autonomy • Hence, the increasingly high priority given to leadership development around the world

  16. In relation to leadership development, what is the system-level role in a highly devolved system? One question

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