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Improve the school - International comparison on methods,
tools and practices of school improvement
Naples 14-15 May 2015
School improvement in practice –
learnings from ongoing research
Jan Håkansson
Linnaeus university, Sweden
Background
• This presentation is built on empirical data from
an ongoing school improvement project.
• In terms of ”ongoing evaluation” researchers, in
this project, study and support principals and
teachers school-based curriculum development
on five compulsory schools in Sweden
• In focus: learnings from principals and teachers
school based curriculum and improvement work
Purpose and research questions
• The purpose is to explore how local school actors
(principals and teachers) understand and handle the
parallel process of, on the one hand, external pressure
to improve students achievement and, on the other
hand, the local school-based improvement work.
• In the light of such a tension, what are the principals
and teachers understanding of:
- The selection of content areas for curriculum
development?
- Their own learning?
• How can the schools’ capacity building for school
improvement be understood through the concept of
”learning capital”?
The context of school improvement
work in Sweden (I)
EXTERNAL PRESSURE
• Increasing focus on students' academic achievement
and school results (like in many other countries).
• Reform initiatives aim to improve achievements for all
students and the equality between schools.
AND AT THE SAME TIME
• Schools are required to work with school
improvement and local curriculum innovation based
on scientific knowledge and proven experience.
• There is acting space for local school actors to make
decisions in their daily curriculum and improvement
work.
The context of school improvement work
in Sweden (II)
Increasing interest in the WHAT and HOW
WHAT?
• Students learning
and achievement in
focused curriculum
areas
• Teachers and
principals learning
• Teaching qualities
HOW?
• Systematic data-
collecting and analyze
of data on student and
teacher learning and
teaching qualities
• Evidence-informed
discussions on
teaching and learning
• Transparency in
planning,
implementation and
evaluation of teaching.
School improvement – what do we know?
”Evidence shows that schools in which teachers act
in collaborative settings to deeply examine teaching
and learning, and then discuss effective
instructional practices, show academic results for
students more quickly than schools that do not”
(Darling Hammond, 2004).
School improvement – what do we know?
• Strong evidence for local and school based learning supported
by literature reading and data collection from teaching and
learning.
• Also evidence for learning processes including self-evaluation
and investigations in school-practice supported by different
types of data, e.g. official data and locally produced data.
• The critical question – the movement from teachers individual
learning towards collective learning in professional learning
communities.
• So called instructional leadership seems to be connected to
(pupil/teacher) learning more than transformational leadership.
(Stoll et.al., 2006; Hallinger, 2011)
To understand school’s capacity
building through learning
• Shulman & Shulman (2004) distinguish between four different
aspects of the capital concept, i.e. types of learning qualities:.
1. Moral capital – to will
2. Curricular capital – to know
3. Venture capital – to change/take risks
4. Teaching capital – to do
• These distinctions make it possible to study and better
understand the local school-based improvement work:
- What forms of learning capital emerge in schools and
what forms seem to be most important, and why?
Methods
Different qualitative methods have been used:
- semi-structured group interviews with principals
and teachers
- sound recordings from several planning and follow-
up meetings with principals and teachers
- document analysis of school planning documents
Also a teacher survey at the beginning of the project – not
presented here.
The selection of content areas for curriculum
development and improved school results
• Two broad areas chosen: i) classroom management, ii)
development of language in all subjects.
• Need for specification of content areas became
gradually obvious – e.g. development of classroom
questioning, classroom interaction, formative
assessment, peer assessment, the use of homework to
strenghten pupil’s learning et cetera
• The specification of content areas a strategic choice for
school-leaders to motivate teachers in the
improvement work.
Principals leadership and learning
• Successive development of confidence in leading and
organizing improvement work:
- Keep focus and communicate connections between
different activities.
- Observe relations between school/teacher efforts
and pupils’ achievement.
- Strategic use of personnel resources and time:
”I use my development group more distinct giving them
tasks connected to these improvement efforts” (Principal 1)
- Courage to run long-term school development
Principals leadership and learning
• Extended repertoire of improvement strategies e.g.
collegial observations, pedagogical discussions, literature
reading, ”Study circles”.
• More frequent use of classroom observations from
principals.
• A growing consciousness of the meaning of school
improvement:
”It has been big changes in my thinking of what school
improvement work is. Before I didn’t see this
properly.” (Principal 2)
Teacher learning in school
improvement work
• More pedagogical discussions now than before – the
relationship between teaching and learning in focus.
• Collegial and focused classroom observations create the
content of discussions (4 of 5 schools).
• A common language is growing.
• Consciousness about teaching aspects (e.g. the way of
asking questions to pupils):
”You get incredibly conscious of how you ask questions.
Without collegial observations you never had set eyes on
that.” (Teacher 1)
• Confidence in testing teaching strategies connected to
content areas.
Collegial observations of teaching – learnings
from one of the improvement strategies
What is important?
• Concrete and explicit focus on what is being observed
(related to general curriculum area)
• A short observation is enough but you need
documentation (e.g. protocol, video-tape) for the
reflection and discussion
• A short common reflection after classroom observation
• Conversation with moderator, focused on:
1. Descriptions of observed situations.
2. General knowledge and learnings from observations.
3. Pedagogical consequences (for future teaching).
Schools capacity building through learning capital –
some learnings about change
Explicit changes of schools’:
Curricular capital – in terms
of deepened pedagogical
discussions from facts
(protocols, video-tapes,
literature) and curriculum.
Teaching capital – from
individual to collaborative
learning through classroom
observations and
discussions.
Less explicit changes of schools’:
Moral capital – more of common
development , BUT at the same
time ongoing negociations with
staff about the importance of
common ground instead of
individual solutions.
Venture capital – from learning to
action, the most difficult part in
this phase of the improvement
work!
Some general insights so far!
• Differences in schools readiness for improvement work (from
the survey results)
• School improvement takes time
• Principals learning and development during the process
important
• The importance of principals active participation –
instructional leadership rather ”new” in a Swedish context
• The importance of support in the process (e.g. from
municipality super visors, ”first teachers” et al)
• The need for conversations about teaching and learning
Some reflections for the future – summing up case studies
of ongoing school improvement at the end of 2015
• Principals ability to deal with the balance between top-down
and bottom up initiatives and strategies
• Initially the research and development design (R&D) seem
to support principals’ learning and leadership – what has
happened when researchers draw back?
• How can teachers’ learning from school improvement
activities maintain and be part of daily teaching? (from
teaching capital to venture capital)
• How visible are school improvement learnings on a pupil
level (teaching and learning in the classroom, national tests,
grades)?

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School improvement in practice. Learnings from ongoing research

  • 1. Improve the school - International comparison on methods, tools and practices of school improvement Naples 14-15 May 2015 School improvement in practice – learnings from ongoing research Jan Håkansson Linnaeus university, Sweden
  • 2. Background • This presentation is built on empirical data from an ongoing school improvement project. • In terms of ”ongoing evaluation” researchers, in this project, study and support principals and teachers school-based curriculum development on five compulsory schools in Sweden • In focus: learnings from principals and teachers school based curriculum and improvement work
  • 3. Purpose and research questions • The purpose is to explore how local school actors (principals and teachers) understand and handle the parallel process of, on the one hand, external pressure to improve students achievement and, on the other hand, the local school-based improvement work. • In the light of such a tension, what are the principals and teachers understanding of: - The selection of content areas for curriculum development? - Their own learning? • How can the schools’ capacity building for school improvement be understood through the concept of ”learning capital”?
  • 4. The context of school improvement work in Sweden (I) EXTERNAL PRESSURE • Increasing focus on students' academic achievement and school results (like in many other countries). • Reform initiatives aim to improve achievements for all students and the equality between schools. AND AT THE SAME TIME • Schools are required to work with school improvement and local curriculum innovation based on scientific knowledge and proven experience. • There is acting space for local school actors to make decisions in their daily curriculum and improvement work.
  • 5. The context of school improvement work in Sweden (II) Increasing interest in the WHAT and HOW WHAT? • Students learning and achievement in focused curriculum areas • Teachers and principals learning • Teaching qualities HOW? • Systematic data- collecting and analyze of data on student and teacher learning and teaching qualities • Evidence-informed discussions on teaching and learning • Transparency in planning, implementation and evaluation of teaching.
  • 6. School improvement – what do we know? ”Evidence shows that schools in which teachers act in collaborative settings to deeply examine teaching and learning, and then discuss effective instructional practices, show academic results for students more quickly than schools that do not” (Darling Hammond, 2004).
  • 7. School improvement – what do we know? • Strong evidence for local and school based learning supported by literature reading and data collection from teaching and learning. • Also evidence for learning processes including self-evaluation and investigations in school-practice supported by different types of data, e.g. official data and locally produced data. • The critical question – the movement from teachers individual learning towards collective learning in professional learning communities. • So called instructional leadership seems to be connected to (pupil/teacher) learning more than transformational leadership. (Stoll et.al., 2006; Hallinger, 2011)
  • 8. To understand school’s capacity building through learning • Shulman & Shulman (2004) distinguish between four different aspects of the capital concept, i.e. types of learning qualities:. 1. Moral capital – to will 2. Curricular capital – to know 3. Venture capital – to change/take risks 4. Teaching capital – to do • These distinctions make it possible to study and better understand the local school-based improvement work: - What forms of learning capital emerge in schools and what forms seem to be most important, and why?
  • 9. Methods Different qualitative methods have been used: - semi-structured group interviews with principals and teachers - sound recordings from several planning and follow- up meetings with principals and teachers - document analysis of school planning documents Also a teacher survey at the beginning of the project – not presented here.
  • 10. The selection of content areas for curriculum development and improved school results • Two broad areas chosen: i) classroom management, ii) development of language in all subjects. • Need for specification of content areas became gradually obvious – e.g. development of classroom questioning, classroom interaction, formative assessment, peer assessment, the use of homework to strenghten pupil’s learning et cetera • The specification of content areas a strategic choice for school-leaders to motivate teachers in the improvement work.
  • 11. Principals leadership and learning • Successive development of confidence in leading and organizing improvement work: - Keep focus and communicate connections between different activities. - Observe relations between school/teacher efforts and pupils’ achievement. - Strategic use of personnel resources and time: ”I use my development group more distinct giving them tasks connected to these improvement efforts” (Principal 1) - Courage to run long-term school development
  • 12. Principals leadership and learning • Extended repertoire of improvement strategies e.g. collegial observations, pedagogical discussions, literature reading, ”Study circles”. • More frequent use of classroom observations from principals. • A growing consciousness of the meaning of school improvement: ”It has been big changes in my thinking of what school improvement work is. Before I didn’t see this properly.” (Principal 2)
  • 13. Teacher learning in school improvement work • More pedagogical discussions now than before – the relationship between teaching and learning in focus. • Collegial and focused classroom observations create the content of discussions (4 of 5 schools). • A common language is growing. • Consciousness about teaching aspects (e.g. the way of asking questions to pupils): ”You get incredibly conscious of how you ask questions. Without collegial observations you never had set eyes on that.” (Teacher 1) • Confidence in testing teaching strategies connected to content areas.
  • 14. Collegial observations of teaching – learnings from one of the improvement strategies What is important? • Concrete and explicit focus on what is being observed (related to general curriculum area) • A short observation is enough but you need documentation (e.g. protocol, video-tape) for the reflection and discussion • A short common reflection after classroom observation • Conversation with moderator, focused on: 1. Descriptions of observed situations. 2. General knowledge and learnings from observations. 3. Pedagogical consequences (for future teaching).
  • 15. Schools capacity building through learning capital – some learnings about change Explicit changes of schools’: Curricular capital – in terms of deepened pedagogical discussions from facts (protocols, video-tapes, literature) and curriculum. Teaching capital – from individual to collaborative learning through classroom observations and discussions. Less explicit changes of schools’: Moral capital – more of common development , BUT at the same time ongoing negociations with staff about the importance of common ground instead of individual solutions. Venture capital – from learning to action, the most difficult part in this phase of the improvement work!
  • 16. Some general insights so far! • Differences in schools readiness for improvement work (from the survey results) • School improvement takes time • Principals learning and development during the process important • The importance of principals active participation – instructional leadership rather ”new” in a Swedish context • The importance of support in the process (e.g. from municipality super visors, ”first teachers” et al) • The need for conversations about teaching and learning
  • 17. Some reflections for the future – summing up case studies of ongoing school improvement at the end of 2015 • Principals ability to deal with the balance between top-down and bottom up initiatives and strategies • Initially the research and development design (R&D) seem to support principals’ learning and leadership – what has happened when researchers draw back? • How can teachers’ learning from school improvement activities maintain and be part of daily teaching? (from teaching capital to venture capital) • How visible are school improvement learnings on a pupil level (teaching and learning in the classroom, national tests, grades)?

Hinweis der Redaktion

  1. Also in focus: changes of understanding and learning over time This is half-time results. At the end of 2015 summing it up. Then also attention to changes in student achievement, grades and national tests.
  2. Tension between this top-down policy initiatives and the relative strong autonomy that exist on the schools. There are also top-down initiatives on municipality level.
  3. Big attention in Sweden (and in the Nordic countries) on research reviews about what influences student achievement (e.g. Hattie, Alexander + Swedish reviews Håkansson, and Sundberg, 2009; 2012) but also on school improvement research e.g. Professional learning communities (Stoll et.al., 2006).
  4. In condensed words you can express important evidence from school improvement research. But is this so easy…?
  5. Examples of important criterions for instructional leadership: Establishing goals and expectations: Sets, communicates and monitors learning goals, standards and expectations; involves staff and others in the process so that there is goal clarity and consensus ES . 0:42 (0.07) Planning, coordinating and evaluating teaching and the curriculum: Direct involvement in the support and evaluation of teaching through regular classroom visits and feedback to teachers. Direct oversight of curriculum ES . 0:42 (0.06) Promoting and taking part in teacher learning: Promotes and participates with teachers in formal or informal professional learning ES . 0:84 (0.14) Ensuring an orderly and supportive environment: Protects time for learning by reducing interruptions; established orderly and supportive environment ES 0.27) Formulerar, kommunicerar och följer upp lärandemål, kvalitetskriterier och förväntningar; involverar personal och andra i processen för att nå tydlighet och konsensus kring målen. Fokuserar på strategiskt resursutnyttjande inriktat mot undervisningsmål och lärarkvalitet. Planerar och koordinerar utvärdering av undervisning och läroplansmål. Direkt inblandning i stöd och utvärdering av undervisning genom regelbundna klassrumsbesök och återkoppling till lärare. Uppmuntrar och deltar med lärarna i formellt och informellt kollegialt lärande. ”Skyddar” undervisningstiden genom att minska avbrotten i skolarbetet; skapar en ordningsam och stödjande lärandemiljö (Hallinger, 2011, s. 134, Robinson m.fl., 2008).
  6. Specifications of focus important to success in school improvement work.
  7. On one of the schools the collegial observations was difficult to introduce (leadership??)
  8. This is supported by other research aiming of changing teaching patterns (Feeny, 2014). ”Teacher walk through” can support development of teacher leadership by: Reduce teacher talk, and questioning Increase student talk and questioning Deepen level of knowledge in the classroom
  9. The initiative to start up the local school improvement work emanated from the local authority (in order to improve pupils’ achievements) but one consequence has been that principals, after some years in the project, feel more autonomous in their relationship to the same local authority (eg. ability to deal with the balance between top-down and bottom up).