Prichard Committee Unpacks “Black Box”
of High-Performing, High-Poverty Schools
In February 2005, the Prichard
Committee for Academic Excellence released “Inside
the Black Box of High-Performing, High-Poverty Schools.”
The study examines eight urban and rural Kentucky elementary
schools, both individually and in the context of other
high-poverty schools, in an attempt to pinpoint those
factors that allow these schools to succeed within such
challenging parameters. The researchers found that the
schools, selected for high performance on the state’s
academic indicators, as well as consistently improving
scores and a smaller-than-average achievement gap between
disaggregated student groups, all boasted high expectations
for teachers and students, high morale, positive and
nurturing communities within the schools, a sharp focus
on instruction, and careful, constant programs of student
assessment.
Low test scores in high-poverty schools is a national
problem, but, the researchers write, “There are
enough schools that defy the trend to prove that the
background of the student body does not have to determine
achievement results.” The study sample was too
small for the researchers to make any broad policy recommendations,
so they instead chose to focus on those elements of
the high-performing schools that differentiated them
from their lower-performing counterparts. This was accomplished
by using both quantitative and qualitative analyses
that sought to answer two research questions:
1) What common characteristics that seem to contribute
to high student performance are shared by a set of
high-performing, high-poverty schools?
2) What characteristics and practices differentiate
a set of high-performing, high-poverty schools with
a small achievement gap from similar high-poverty
schools that are neither high-performing, nor have
a small achievement gap? (2)
The researchers had access to extensive state documentation
of low-performing schools, gathered in scholastic audits
performed by the Kentucky Department of Education. These
audits served both as a model for the audits that the
researchers would perform at the high-performing schools,
and as a basis for comparing high- and low-performing
schools facing similar circumstances. A statistical
analysis of the numeric findings of these audits revealed
several indicators in which the high-performing schools
scored significantly higher than the low-performing
schools. These indicators are concentrated within the
categories of Curriculum and School Culture, and generally
serve to reinforce the findings of the more extensive
qualitative analyses of the high-performing schools.
The qualitative analysis of the eight high-performing
elementary schools combines the audit findings with
the impressions formed by extensive visits to the schools
and follow-up interviews with the schools’ principals.
Through these three steps the researchers compiled a
list of the most outstanding characteristics that likely
contributed to school success. These included:
School-wide
ethic of high expectations for faculty, staff, and
students;
Caring,
respectful relationships;
Strong
academic, instructional focus;
Systems
for assessing individual students on a regular basis;
Collaborative
decision-making led by non-authoritarian principals;
Strong
work ethic and high faculty morale;
Recruitment,
hiring, and assignment strategy for teachers. (14)
The researchers describe schools with powerful cultures
of mutual respect and learning. Each school shares a
special respect amongst faculty members and students
that contributes to high morale and is fostered by high
expectations and the sincere belief that every student
can, and will, learn because every teacher can, and
will, help them succeed. These goals are aided by the
successful recruitment of skilled and committed teachers,
collaboration amongst administrators and faculty members,
and coordinated, strong academic programs that feature
constant individual assessments. Many of the auditors,
accustomed to auditing low-performing schools, were
effusive of their praise of these schools, and indeed
the study glowingly describes each as a nurturing community
of successful learning.
The researchers were surprised by some of their findings.
None of the schools boasted particularly forceful principals,
instead crediting collaborative decision making and
positive guidance with creating strong faculty and staff
morale. The schools also exhibited areas of weakness,
including lackluster use of technology and failure to
produce Comprehensive School Improvement Plans, part
of the “state-recommended planning process.”
The researchers note that poor scores on these indicators
are, at least in part, reflective of the assumption
that particular types of leadership and improvement
planning will be most successful. Indeed, several of
the auditors remarked that the choice to implement,
rather than document, comprehensive plans for achievement
may have been a decisive factor in the success of those
plans.
Though the focus of the Prichard Committee’s
study was small, the researchers illustrate powerful
examples of schools that succeed in educating “at-risk”
children. Though all of these schools went through transition
periods, in which recognition of failure inspired the
leadership and the faculty to begin making significant
changes, none placed particular emphasis on classifying
their students as “low-income,” “minority,”
or “at-risk.” Instead, these schools turned
their commitment to learning into consistent programs
of academic achievement, and provide many positive lessons
for dedicated educators in low-income schools.
Prepared by Nelly Ward, February 28, 2005 |