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1. Effective Schools Transforming Resources into Results at the School Level
3. Messages from Grand Baie (1) Implementation is of the essence: high level political leadership, systematic well organized participation and sustained support to front line implementers
The quantity of resources does not by itself ensure performance
Quality improvement is a process that lives or dies in the classroom
Teachers are at the heart of the quality improvement process
4. Messages from Grand Baie (2) Good teaching incorporates a range of instructional and assessment strategies
Head teachers are the transformational leaders on the path towards quality
Teacher support systems are a key element of the quality improvement process
Support of communities and organized civil society often is central to school effectiveness
5. Continuing the Quest for Quality: Central Questions: What are the features of effective schools in SSA?
What are the central elements of the process of school improvement?
How to transform poorly performing schools into effective ones
6. ADEA Follow-Up Assembling and reviewing evidence on
Effective schools in Africa
Cost effective resource allocations
Effective head teacher leadership
Issues in teacher development and deployment
Curriculum challenges: Language of instruction, gender sensitive pedagogy and competency based instruction
Decentralization and parental and civil society involvement
Equity of access and quality
7. Thinking about Educational Effectiveness:Main Features Classroom factors (time, grouping procedures, instructional strategies) are key
School factors (leadership, emphasis on order, academic achievement) enable and reinforce
System factors (vision, standards, resources, incentives) provide direction
Community factors ensure local relevance and ownership
8. Consistent Findings: Key Factors of Effectiveness
9. Lessons from Effective Schools Research Emphasis on:
Learners’ educability – it is possible for all children to learn
Outcomes – examining indicators of learning
Taking responsibility for students – don’t blame the victim (the student) for the shortcomings of the school; schools should take a fair share of the responsibility for students’ learning performance
Consistency throughout the school community – treat the school as an organic whole, – more than the sum of it’s parts – and don’t focus on only the parts
(Hopkins, 2001)
10. Effective Schools in Sub Saharan Africa (1) Overall learning levels remain low;
several schools demonstrate that even when the existing level of school inputs is less than desired, improvements are possible.
Improvement is essentially a local process that can be supported through local capacity building
11. Effective schools in Africa (2) Good learning outcomes:
Teachers who plan for teaching, put into practice what they have learned and correct and remediate students’ work regularly;
Head teachers who emphasize teaching and learning; and
Communities that actively support their school.
12. Effective schools in Africa (3) Low learning outcomes:
Overcrowded classrooms,
Perfunctory school level and external pedagogical oversight
Continued use of ineffective teaching practices in spite of training in alternative approaches
13. Effective schools: Resources and Institutions Textbooks, teachers guides and time are the most cost-effective inputs;
Class size up to 60 does not affect student performance.
Repetition is not an efficient way to enhance learning.
Long pre-service programs show little evidence of improved learning, but do imply higher salary cost.
Contract-teacher programs do not necessarily affect quality..
Incentive systems can increase staff motivation
Decentralized management can help improve schools
14. Effective Teaching the Key to Powerful Leaning But …
Many rural schools serve disadvantaged populations and have great difficulty attracting and retaining qualified teachers
Pre service and in service training often do not affect classroom practice
Teacher support systems often are barely functional
New technologies may help with teacher development
15. Educational Leadership in African schools Management systems in high performing schools:
Well structured, visible and transparent school management involving all staff
Regular monitoring of student performance and teaching practices combined with support for professional development and training of staff.
Student learning as the central concern of school management.
Effective management of the involvement of external partners
16. Curriculum Language of instruction stock taking:
Existing language-in-education policies need radical reform to build high performance education systems;
From bilingual model early exit model to “additive model” with African languages as the language of instruction for 6-8 years plus high quality instruction in a second international/official language;
Reforms will increase education budgets by 1-5% and are feasible building on existing experience and mobilizing local institutions with specialist knowledge.
17. Curriculum (2)
18. Parental and civil society participation Considerable parental or civic participation at the school level, but little involvement at higher levels.
National organizations rarely involved in national level policy making.
Different civic groups with different views on governance and management issues,
Many civil society actors only have a limited capacity to participate in policy-making processes.
Effective use of direct support to schools requires local level capacity building
19. Effective Schools for All: Equity in Access and Quality Providing rural people with equitable access to quality learning with often require non-traditional approaches and additional resources
Complementary education programs currently provide access to more than 3 million children, many of these provide cost-effective and equivalent opportunities to children who do not have access to formal schools
Effective teaching recognizes and responds to gender differences in learning style, takes place in a gender sensitive school environment, adopts girl friendly classroom management practices and recognizes the impact of culture and tradition on girls’ performance
20. Implementation is of the essence Some key findings
Continued use of ineffective teaching practices in spite of training in alternative approaches
Capacity problems that limit the effectiveness of decentralization and school based management reforms
21. Conventional Wisdom about Reform (1) Good curriculum is largely self explanatory and self-implementing
Success of reforms depends mainly on the quality of the reform ideas
Key variable is teacher motivation not instructional methods
22. Conventional Wisdom about Reform (2) Schools and teachers are generally resistant to reforms
Tight inspection and control are essential
Materials need to be designed so well that that it can be implemented faithfully with minimal training
High-stakes tests and public accountability will drive instruction and improve achievement
23. Outcomes Outcomes:
Implementation only by highly motivated teachers
Often watered-down versions were implemented
Little increase in student learning
Classroom remain largely as they were
24. Experience with School Improvement in Developing Countries Education reform is a local process
The reform process is a learning process
Teachers need to be seen as learners
Central support is vital
Effective system linkages are vital
Focus on classroom practice is key
Both local and central initiation can work
Parent and community participation is a key element of success
(Dalin, “ How Schools Improve’, 1994
25. Responding to the Challenge of Learning: Priority to School Improvement …. But …
Weak local capacity for planning and management constrains the transfer of authority, resources and accountability.
Pre-service and in-service teacher education programs and supervision have little impact on instructional strategies and classroom practice.
Strengthening school management is a key to school improvement that still requires much attention and action.
Foreign language of instruction has a clear negative impact on student learning; yet teachers are ill prepared to deal with this reality
Few attempts to recognize gender and other differences in instructional strategies and classroom management.
Limited transfer of experience between formal and complementary programs.