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Teacher Quality and School Improvement in 2010: P-20 in Historical Perspective. Steve Tozer, UIC stozer@uic.edu. What we learned in graduate school. Schools don ’ t really affect student learning; it ’ s SES that does. Cultural Deficit Theory (Coleman, Jencks, 1960s).
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Teacher Quality and School Improvement in 2010:P-20 in Historical Perspective Steve Tozer, UIC stozer@uic.edu
What we learned in graduate school • Schools don’t really affect student learning; it’s SES that does. • Cultural Deficit Theory • (Coleman, Jencks, 1960s)
1970s Effective Schools Research (Edmonds) • "How many effective schools would you have to see to be persuaded of the educability of poor children? If your answer is more than one, then I submit that you have reasons of your own for preferring to believe that pupil performance derives from family background instead of school response to family background.”
1980s Nation at Risk • School Reform as a national priority • State legislation to improve schools • Beginning of the standards movement
1990s: The Standards Movement • What Matters Most . . . • The quality of classroom instruction • NBPTS, NCTAF, IPTS • PK-12 Learning Standards
2000s: Transforming Schools at Scale • Kati Haycock and the Education Trust • NCLB (2001) • Marzano: What Works in Schools (2003) • Chenoweth: It’s Being Done (2007) • CCSR: Five Essential Supports (2010)
The Big Three: Students, Teachers, and Leaders • Joanne Weiss (Race to the Top) • “. . . and that means we have to get the leadership right first.” (2010)
Improving Classroom Instruction at Scale • The importance and limits of teacher preparation and certification • Where does most teacher learning take place? • Schools as adult learning environments
Leadership Quality as essential to Teacher Quality • Are high quality principals born or made? • Eight years of results • New York School Leaders Academy • New Leaders for New Schools • UIC
What they have in common • Partnerships with school districts • High selectivity • Intensive, year-long internships • Integration of Theory and Practice • Results accountable to improved student learning
Sample Results from UIC • In the highest-need schools in CPS: • Improved test scores at elementary and secondary levels • Improved attendance in elementary and secondary schools • Improved freshman-on-track in large and small high schools • Reduced drop-out rates and increased graduation rates
What about the Market Model solutions? • Charters, alternative routes, turnarounds and “breaking the higher ed monopoly” • Absent good leadership, charter schools fail • Charter schools now seek strong leadership as the key to success • Evidence: Alternative routes to teaching are neither the solution nor a problem
Why is improved school leadership so essential? • Because high-quality instruction in every classroom cannot otherwise be attained • We have no viable alternative theory for improving teacher quality at scale
How do we know our principal work-force isn’t good enough? • Good principals dramatically improve student performance • Most principals do not • Principals have been caught in a historical paradigm shift
Keys to Improving School Leadership in Illinois • Must be highly selective • Must be clinically intensive • Must involve school districts and expert practitioners as partners • Systemic, cost effective approach to (a) changing higher ed’s relationship to PreK-12, and (b) improving learning outcomes
Higher Education has changed before • 1909: The Flexner Report • 1910-1920: Resulting revolution in medical education • (Highly selective, clinically intensive, partnership with hospitals) • Ratio of physicians to principals in Illinois is 3:1; it can be done
The P-20 challenge: • Paying attention to what we already know: because teaching matters, leadership matters • Marshalling the state leadership and political will • Pending school leadership legislation in Illinois: using our greatest levers systemically