Myth-Dispelling Schools Have Keys to Success
All too often, it is alleged problems with public education
that make headlines, but recently the Education Trust
put the media’s focus on school success stories.
In November, five public schools received the Education
Trust’s annual “Dispelling the Myth”
awards, which honor high-performing schools that serve
large populations of low-income and minority students.
These five schools – and others across the country
– are lessons in how capacity-building, strong
leadership, and more resources can turn around poorly
performing schools.
The “Dispelling
the Myth” schools also provide examples of
strategies and reforms are needed to help all schools
improve. The honored schools, for example, all emphasize
assessment systems that provide regular feedback for
both students and teachers. This emphasis on instructionally
supportive assessment is also a statewide focus for
educators in Nebraska, where the state has been granted
an exception to the requirements of the No Child Left
Behind Act and uses a system of “classroom-based
assessment” in place of high-stakes standardized
tests.
Finally, the success of these schools demonstrates
the importance of adequate support and resources. For
these schools, success has been achieved with the help
of new technology, supplementary programs for struggling
students, and directed support from school districts,
including curriculum standards and meaningful professional
development.
Five Themes for Success
The schools honored by EdTrust
are diverse, but they all serve students who are traditionally
thought of as “left behind” in public education.
The schools range from an urban school that serves almost
entirely students who are African-American, many of
whom live in poverty, to a school near the Mexican border,
where most students are from immigrant families and
are English Language Learners, to a rural school that
serves large numbers of families that dealing with the
challenges poverty and unemployment. All of them, however,
defy the stereotypes for such schools and perform at
extraordinary levels, showing huge jumps in achievement
or boasting student bodies in which 90 – and in
some cases 100 – percent of students are proficient
on state standardized tests.
While each of the schools honored by EdTrust –
Capitol View Elementary School in Atlanta, East Millsboro
Elementary School in Millsboro, DE, Imperial High School
in Imperial Valley, CA, M. Hall Stanton Elementary School
in Philadelphia, and Port Chester Middle School in Port
Chester, NY – have unique strategies and methods
of instruction, EdTrust identified what they saw as
five common themes in the schools’ efforts to
improve achievement:
-   High expectations of all students;
-   The analysis and use of data to track student
progress;
-   Identification of individual student needs;
-   Rich curricula aligned with state standards;
and
-   Purposeful professional development.
While critics of NCLB often claim it causes a narrowing
and “dumbing down” of curricula, the successful
schools identified by EdTrust all emphasize high expectations
and rich curricula. In Port Chester, teachers work together
on interdisciplinary units that approach a topic in
depth from multiple angles. Capitol View similarly uses
interdisciplinary curriculums, where teachers focus
on building vocabulary and understanding in a particular
concept area. Teachers in Capitol View report that the
focus on achievement has caused them to broaden
their curricula; engaged and curious students, they
feel, learn more.
If anything shines through in the descriptions
of the successful schools, however, it is their
leadership and their environment. The schools honored
by EdTrust have dedicated, hard-working principals who
put a great deal of time and energy into turning their
schools around. In many of the schools, teachers work
in teams and meet weekly to discuss everything from
developing lesson plans to how to help individual students.
Furthermore, the principals have tried to create environments
where teachers feel they have a support system. In Stanton
Elementary, Principal Barbara Adderly has the school’s
best teachers act as coaches for other teachers so that
teachers can learn from each other; in East Millsboro,
teachers who have students whose actions are interfering
with other children’s learning have a network
of support staff to whom they can turn for help. In
Port Chester Middle School, where teachers used to quickly
leave for higher-paying jobs at wealthier Westchester
County schools, the faculty now considers itself a “family,”
and many teachers have stayed at the school years longer
than they expected.
Using Assessment as a Tool
Another reform that educators in the schools say contributes
to their success is the collection and analysis of assessment
data. In Stanton Elementary School, for example, students
are given “checkpoint” tests every two weeks
and district-wide “benchmark” tests every
six weeks; the data from these tests is prominently
displayed in classrooms on graphs and charts, so both
students and teachers can identify their strengths and
weakness and so teachers can determine which students
need additional time and instruction on which topics.
Several of the other “Dispelling the Myth”
schools follow this same strategy, and teachers report
that this feedback helps students become engaged and
focused in their learning.
The use of assessment as a tool that informs day-to-day
instruction in the classroom is a common theme in reports
on capacity-building (see also Education Week’s
“Leading
for Learning” report), and nowhere is this
more apparent than in Nebraska. Nebraska’s School-based
Teacher-led Assessment and Reporting System (STARS)
does not use a single statewide standardized test to
assess students. Each district adopts its own local
assessment system, which is reviewed and rated for quality
by external assessment experts. As George Wood of the
Forum of Education and Democracy explains,
the system provides feedback to teachers on how well
students are learning material, allowing teachers to
understand what is effective and ineffective in classroom
instruction.
At the Nebraska Leadership for Classroom Assessment
Conference in September, the system’s creator,
Commissioner of Education Doug Christensen, explained
that in every school where he has seen classroom-based
assessment, “the change in the culture of the
school is nothing less than dramatic.” Avoiding
the “toxic
culture” of high-stakes tests, he believes,
helps educators focus on the real needs of students.
Best Practices Needed at All Levels
The Education Trust is just one of many organizations
trying to identify the practices it associates with
successful schools. The National Center for Educational
Accountability, along with the organization Just For
The Kids, released a report in July that brought together
research from nearly 200 schools in 20 states. The report
used three years of performance data to identify schools
that are high-performing relative to demographically
similar schools and identified common practices used
in those schools.
The report found five
major themes, all of which are similar to EdTrust’s
themes:
-   Clear curriculum and academic goals;
-   Capacity-building through staff selection and leadership;
-   Evidence-based instructional practices;
-   Compilation and analysis of student data; and
-   Recognition of problem areas and targeted intervention
for both schools and students.
The report emphasized that these practices applied
to all levels of education, with districts and states
providing the necessary resources and support for these
capacity-building techniques and schools implementing
the practices in the classroom.
The Need for Resources
While high expectations and strong leadership are important
components of these schools’ success, it is impossible
for all of the nation’s schools to rely on extraordinary
leadership. It will never be the case that all schools
have the charismatic principals and faculty camaraderie
that keeps the best teachers from taking higher-paying
jobs; providing additional resources to the schools
with the most need is a critical component of building
and maintaining the capacity to succeed.
At the schools honored by EdTrust, resources provided
by school districts were a key component of the schools’
success. Educators at Stanton Elementary, for example,
partially attribute their success to effective, district-provided
professional development for teachers as well as district-developed
core curriculum standards. Stanton’s success was
also the result of a targeted district intervention,
where the Philadelphia School District provided coaches,
supervision, materials, teacher training, and professional
development; teachers at the school believe that the
intervention has greatly improved their ability to teach
students. Philadelphia’s Chief Academic Officer,
Greg Thornton, says that this level of intervention
and capacity-building can only be provided for a limited
number of schools, and that with more money, much more
could be done. In addition, Stanton has received help
from the Eagle Eye Foundation – sponsored by the
Philadelphia Eagles – which provides students
with eye exams and eyeglasses. Clinics such as these
have a positive effect on student achievement, and not
all schools have access to this kind of philanthropy.
Furthermore, teachers at East Millsboro and Stanton
claim that their ability to instruct has benefited greatly
from new technology such as “Smart Boards”
– electronic boards that function as computers,
blackboards, and overhead projectors. Other schools
credit before- and after-school programs, as well as
enrichment classes on Saturdays, with increases in student
achievement. Capitol View has used its Title I funding
to install new science facilities, and its students
now participate in hands-on science activities three
times a week.
The capacity to succeed comes from many quarters, and
the Education Trust’s “Dispelling the Myth”
schools show that building that capacity is within our
grasp, even for schools with histories of low performance.
With proper leadership and adequate resources, any school
can become a success story.
Prepared by Matthew Samberg, November 29, 2006
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