Programa Icsei 2017 . Ottawa. 30th annual International Congress for School Effectiveness and Improvement..
Collaborative Partnerships for System-Wide Educational Improvement
3. 1ICSEI 2017 | Collaborative Partnerships for System-Wide Educational Improvement
The National Institute of Education (NIE) is a national teacher training
institute in Singapore that plays an integral part in the educational
service. NIE is committed to its vision of being an institute of distinction
and its mission of creating a world-class institute renowned for its
excellence in teacher education and research excellence.
Image Courtesy of Singapore Tourism Board, Andrew Tan
4. 2 Collaborative Partnerships for System-Wide Educational Improvement | ICSEI 2017
WELCOME DELEGATES
Hello! And welcome to Ottawa, Ontario, Canada – we’re so glad you’ve joined us for this 30th annual International
Congress for School Effectiveness and Improvement. As your co-hosts, we are thrilled that this event we’ve been
planning for such a long time is finally upon us!
There’s a lot of excitement around our theme for this Congress - “Collaborative Partnerships for System-Wide Educational
Improvement” – as evidenced by the calibre of the international speakers and the hundreds of submissions we received
last summer! When you look at the program, you’ll see that we’ve provided you with a huge sampling of formats and
content, organized under our sub-themes and connected to ICSEI’s networks. Note, too, that we have dozens of posters
on display - and they’ll be changing regularly so that work connected to each of the networks is featured all at once - so be
sure to drop by the poster lounge often.
Whichever sessions you attend, we hope you’ll see the thread of partnerships between and among the various participants
in international education systems – students, parents, communities, schools, districts, government, and academics – and
the power they have to inform and impact student learning, practitioner professional learning, and system leadership.
We would like to express our sincere appreciation to the many people who made this conference possible. First, to the
ICSEI board led by President Michael Schratz and managed by Executive Director Jenny Lewis - thank you for giving us
the opportunity to host this momentous event. Thanks also to the dozens who volunteered to review proposals and to
chair sessions. They are too numerous to name! The Congress Organizing Committee was made up of sub-committees led
by the following colleagues:
• Joan Oracheski – Registration, Venue & Logistics • Linda Nicolson – PR & Advertising
• Gilles Latour – Partnerships and Finance • Chris Suurtamm & Doris McWhorter –
• Sarah Russell – Hospitality/School Connections Education Program
The work of each of these sub-committees was carried out by volunteers from across the province and around the world,
representing dozens of supporting organizations.
We owe a debt of gratitude to Ottawa Tourism - they have been a huge support right from the start! And thanks also to
the staff of the Delta Ottawa City Centre and the Marriott Ottawa for working with us over the past many months to make
this a great place to gather. We are also grateful for the outstanding support of our event planners from Enterprise Canada
– Dave and Margaret and the team stepped in this fall and have helped us pull it all together.
Please be sure to connect with our sponsors – we greatly value their monetary and in-kind support. There is more
information about them later in the program.
And finally, thank you to all the educators, policy makers and scholars who have taken the time to network and share their
work with all of us. We appreciate the chance to learn from and with you. And ultimately, that is what ICSEI is all about. To
quote ICSEI President Michael Schratz: “it takes the wisdom and experience of many to create a better world.” We dare to
hope this conference takes us all one step further down the path of better outcomes for all.
Sincerely,
Christine Suurtamm Doris McWhorter
ICSEI 2017 Co-Chair & Professor, University of Ottawa ICSEI 2017 Co-Chair & Director (retired),
Ontario Ministry of Education
5. 3ICSEI 2017 | Collaborative Partnerships for System-Wide Educational Improvement
President’s Message
Welcome to ICSEI 2017 in Ottawa, Canada’s capital. Both Canada and ICSEI will celebrate significant events this year
– Canada its 150th anniversary of Confederation, ICSEI its 30th anniversary of becoming a committed global network
of diverse expertise and professional capital. Ontario has a unique tradition in educational reform and is internationally
recognized as an equitable, high-achieving and continuously improving province. Since its visionary beginning, ICSEI
has grown into a global organization and resilient network. It focuses on making schools around the world excellent and
equitable by bringing together researchers, policy makers and educators, and creating the space for creative thinking and
prototyping innovative practices for learning on all system levels.
This year, colleagues from 41 countries will gather at this event and share knowledge and experience from various
perspectives, each motivated by a vigorous commitment to improve educational opportunities for all. This year’s
conference theme, “Collaborative Partnerships for System-Wide Educational Improvement,” will offer a multitude of
opportunities to question how schools and education systems position their future in the decisions they make today.
Participating in this Ottawa Congress offers us the chance to share our wealth of profound expertise in education, and
enables the ICSEI network to grow and enhance a collective body of wisdom. Complex social challenges - as we are
experiencing them around the globe in a rapidly increasing pace - demand new forms of learning to find adequate
solutions. Networks as resilient webs of shared expertise based on collaboration and believing in co-creation, offer
complex learning environments that shape pathways to robust next practice: the more variable the environments
get, the more variable an organization needs to be to be able to respond to unpredictable phenomena or unexpected
happenstances in the emerging future.
As educators, in our roles as policy makers, teachers, principals, facilitators, networkers, teacher educators or researchers,
we need to question the “how,” the “what,” and the “what for” of education, in relation to its impact on the lives and well-
being of children as capable agents of their lives, as citizens of a global world, and as future decision makers and power
brokers.
The organizing team have put together an inspiring program which offers plentiful learning experiences in the search
for new questions and creative answers with regard to equity, engagement and professional learning. This conference
provides a space for profoundly addressing the challenges of school effectiveness and improvement, educational
innovation and transformation, excellence and equity from the perspectives of educational policy, theory and practice. It
holds the space to question how to enhance educative experiences which enable young people to become the persons
they can be with dignity, respect, trust and honour. Let us share ideas about enabling learners and educators alike to
embrace diversity while reaching out for yet unknown possibilities.
A warm thank you to the Ottawa team for all their effort, and a warm welcome to all participating in an exciting and
effective conference, and for sharing their knowledge and wisdom in making “excellent education for all” our ultimate goal.
Professor Dr. Michael Schratz
Dean, School of Education, University of Innsbruck
ICSEI President 2015-2017
6. 4 Collaborative Partnerships for System-Wide Educational Improvement | ICSEI 2017
Session Descriptions
Presentations are formatted in one of seven ways:
Symposium
A symposium provides an opportunity to examine specific research issues, problems, or topics from a variety of
perspectives. They may present alternative solutions, interpretations, or contrasting points of view on a specific
subject, or in relation to a common theme. Often they feature a panel discussion format. Frequently interactive,
a large portion of the session may be devoted to dialogue among the presenters and discussant, questions and
discussion among all those present, or small-group interaction. Symposia are 90 minutes in length.
Innovate
Innovate sessions provide an opportunity to showcase innovative and creative approaches to practice.
Presenters are encouraged to consider alternative formats if a traditional mode isn’t ideal. Innovate sessions
last 30 minutes.
Paper
In this format, authors present abbreviated versions of their papers, followed by comments/critique and
audience discussion. A typical structure for a session with four or five papers is approximately five minutes
for the chair’s introduction, 10 minutes per author presentation, 20 minutes for critique, and 15 minutes for
discussion. Paper sessions are scheduled for one hour.
Poster
Poster sessions combine the graphic display of materials with the opportunity for individualized, informal
discussion of the research. Individual presenters set up displays representing their papers in a large area with
other presenters. This year, posters are displayed together based on network affiliation.
Workshop
Workshops offer a forum for discussion of a broad range of emerging and specialized topics of interest
to the ICSEI community. Workshops are more interactive and informal than paper sessions, and they can
involve extended discussion, group brainstorming sessions, mini-tutorials around key ideas, and
proof-of-concept demonstration sessions. Workshops last for one hour.
Roundtable
Roundtable presentations allow for extended discussion among a small group. Roundtables are excellent
venues for giving and receiving targeted feedback, engaging in in-depth discussions, and meeting
colleagues with similar interests. Roundtables are one hour in length.
Showcase
Each year, we highlight some of the many countries that comprise ICSEI, wherein participants attending from
that country can focus on its national educational achievements and issues. This year, we are featuring Singapore,
hosts of ICSEI 2018, and countries from Africa and Asia engaged with the Aga Khan Development Network.
7. 5ICSEI 2017 | Collaborative Partnerships for System-Wide Educational Improvement
Conference Sub-Themes
Engaging Students, Families and Communities
This strand focuses on the shared interests of schools, families and communities in advancing student learning,
development and well-being. There is a particular emphasis in this strand on collaborative strategies to engage
students, to invite and respect student voice, and to involve families and communities as integral partners in
enhancing school and systems effectiveness.
Increasing Equity and Challenging Disadvantage
ICSEI has a long standing interest in identifying and addressing inequities and disadvantage in and through
schooling. This strand is concerned with global and current perspectives on persisting and emerging inequities
in education, and the reciprocal learning and action required to address these inequities. In particular, there is a
focus on valuing learning that can be drawn from Indigenous perspectives as a way to enhance understanding
and shared perspectives.
Connecting Research, Policy and Practice
This strand speaks to increasing opportunities in education for practitioners, researchers, political leaders and
policy makers to engage with one another to understand and respect one another’s contexts, and to make
more effective use of assets and experiences through reciprocal relationships. We will also seek to establish
greater clarity on the nature of knowledge mobilization, how it can be useful to support and scale up effective
practices in context-sensitive ways, and its level of uptake and usefulness for evidence-informed decision-
making in education.
System and School Improvement
This strand focuses on contemporary evidence concerning school and system improvements from a range of
localities, sectors and international contexts. This strand encourages research attending to specific cultural,
political, social and economic educational contexts, processes and outcomes, for local communities, schools
and classrooms.
Developing Professional Capital
The development of professional capital – the human, social and decisional capital – of educators is central
to debates concerning new forms of professionalism and the development of formal and informal leadership
throughout education systems. Increasingly teacher leadership is an important area of development, alongside
school and system leadership. In order to support students to succeed, appropriate professional learning
is required to assist school improvement and effectiveness. This strand is concerned with all aspects of
educational leadership and professional learning.
Measuring Educational Effectiveness
Global discussions on defining and measuring educational effectiveness have been long standing; recent
methodological, theoretical and empirical advances have further contributed to these debates. This strand
seeks papers that explore the ‘what’ and ‘how’ of measuring educational effectiveness, including broader
measures of learning, equity, well-being and achievement. The strand includes original studies presenting new
methods and evidence concerning school and system effectiveness.
8. 6 Collaborative Partnerships for System-Wide Educational Improvement | ICSEI 2017
ICSEI Networks
ICSEI networks provide an international forum for the exchange of information and dialogue on critical issues
though active discussion among researchers, practitioners, and policy makers, both online and at ICSEI
conferences.
There are five active networks (described below).The networks consist of groups within ICSEI that were already
forming and holding events between regular annual meetings. Since 2006 the networks have been officially
recognized and more closely tied to ICSEI. During annual conferences, each network hosts meetings open to
preregistered conference participants, organizes preconference workshops (held this year on January 7), and
supports the presentation of papers and symposia specific to their focus areas. ICSEI members are encouraged
to join the networks to strengthen and facilitate the sharing of thoughts, experiences, and challenges, and to
build professional learning communities.
The Five Networks
Educational Leadership (EL)
The Educational Leadership (EL) Network is for leaders at all levels: in practice, policy, and research. The focus
is on sharing and advancing the creation of knowledge in the field of educational leadership, drawing on
perspectives from around the globe. The network includes members from all over the world, who currently
strive to examine how educational leadership aimed at school effectiveness and strengthening the quality of
teaching and learning is enacted and studied in various country contexts. The aim of this work is to identify
emerging themes of interest in the field of educational leadership, in and around schools, for policy, practice,
and research.
Methods of Researching Educational Effectiveness (MoRE)
The Methods of Researching Educational Effectiveness (MoRE) Network focuses on presenting and interpreting
results of empirical studies in educational effectiveness; exchanging ideas for research in effectiveness and
evaluation of improvement programs; developing research proposals for studies in educational effectiveness,
especially international comparative studies; discussing problems encountered in educational effectiveness
research and identifying possible solutions; identifying new research methods for issues unique to educational
effectiveness; and contributing to the establishment of a databank of research instruments used in educational
effectiveness studies.
Early Childhood Education and Care (ECEC)
The Early Childhood Education and Care (ECEC) Network consists of a conglomerate of practitioners,
researchers and policy makers having attended ICSEI since the beginning of the network in 2008. Globally,
there’s an increased focus on the economic, as well as human, benefits of children attending quality ECEC-
institutions at a young age. The degree of expansion varies tremendously leaving room for co-national learning.
The ECEC network serves as a platform for getting quick access to, and exchanging knowledge about, the rapid
development of Early Childhood Education and Care around the world, and especially in the countries that
network members represent. Since most members are unable to attend the Congress on a regular basis, the
network is updated once a year and Congress participants, working with ECEC matters, are welcome to join
the network.
9. 7ICSEI 2017 | Collaborative Partnerships for System-Wide Educational Improvement
3P (Policymakers, Politicians, and Practitioners)
Practitioners (e.g., teachers, principals, administrators, consultants, and trainers) often work in isolation, but
frequently they are required to collaborate with policy makers and politicians. Partnerships among these
groups are the focus of the 3P (Policymakers, Politicians, and Practitioners) Network. It is important to
emphasize capacity building so that as local educational and children’s services policies are developed, they
stimulate and facilitate school improvement, which then becomes integrated into the broader construct of
health, well-being, and community and lifelong learning. The 3P Network is a professional practice and research
network for all professionals engaged in the policy determination, planning, and delivery of educational and
other services to children, young people, and families.
Data Use
The Data Use Network brings together researchers, policy makers, and practitioners working in the field of
data-based decision making. The focus is on the use of data, such as assessments, observations, and surveys,
to improve education at the school, classroom, and individual student levels. Important topics for the network
are aspects of policy or practice with regard to data use that have positive impacts in different countries’
contexts; factors that hinder or enable the use of data; effects and side effects of data use; definitions of
effective data use (i.e., what does data use in different countries look like); support of schools in the use of data;
and characteristics of effective professional development in the use of data.
10. 8 Collaborative Partnerships for System-Wide Educational Improvement | ICSEI 2017
All Day ICSEI Lounge Delta Ottawa Penthouse
7:00 Registration Opens Delta Ottawa Ballroom Lobby
ICSEI Networks Pre-Conference
• Early Childhood Education and Care (ECEC)
9:00 – 11:15 • Educational Leadership Grand Salon
• 3P
• MoRE
• Data Use
* Advance registration required
11:15 – 12:50 Early Career Researcher Forum Chaudiere
* Advance registration required
OPENING CEREMONY
Welcome
Michael Schratz, ICSEI President
13:00 – 15:00 Delta Ottawa Ballroom
Keynote
Collaborative Partnerships for System-Wide
Improvements: Framing the Narrative
Karen Seashore
Conference Rooms:
15:10 – 18:20 Parallel Session 1 Delta Ottawa - Convention Level
Marriott Ottawa Lower Floor
(See Parallel Session 1 – Page 9)
19:00 – 20:30 Welcoming Reception Delta Ottawa Penthouse
George Elliott-Clarke, Poet Laureate of Parliament
SATURDAY, JANUARY 7, 2017
TIME FUNCTION LOCATION
AD SPACE
DAILY PROGRAM: SATURDAY, JANUARY 7, 2017
SUPPORTING STUDENT-CENTERED
TEACHER LEADERSHIP
• Teacher Training
• Curriculum Design
• Resource Development
11. 9ICSEI 2017 | Collaborative Partnerships for System-Wide Educational Improvement
WORKSHOP 530
Student and Parent
Census: Understanding
Student Needs to Ensure
Equity in Education t
Maria Yau, Janet O’Reilly
WORKSHOP 649
NORCAN: School
Improvement through
Boundary Crossing w
Roar Grøttvik,
J.C. Couture,
Lindy Amato,
Dennis Shirley,
P. Jean Stiles
Chaudiere
Capitale
Richelieu
Frontenac
Joliet
ROUNDTABLE 412
The Impact of
Collaborative
Innovation on
Student Progress and
Achievement e
Mary Sinclair,
Laurayne Tafa,
country representatives
ROUNDTABLE 615
Effective Use of Large
Scale Assessment
Census Data t
Erica van Roosmalen,
Lisa Walsh
SYMPOSIUM 616
Why Is It So Difficult, But Possible, That Schools
Improve and Sustain Improvement: Learning About
Sustainability Improvement from Chilean Schools e
Stephen Anderson (Discussant)
SYMPOSIUM 505
Professional Learning Networks for System and
School Improvement e
Chris Brown, Pierre Tulowitzki, Hannah R. Chestnutt,
Lorna Earl (Discussant)
SYMPOSIUM 582
The State of Educators: Professional Learning in
Canada w
Carol Campbell, Brenton Faubert, Michael Fullan,
Stephanie Hirsh, Audrey Hobbs-Johnson,
Pamela Osmond-Johnson
SYMPOSIUM 598
Strengthening Education Systems in East Africa:
The Research qwr
Stephen Anderson, Rose Iminza, Anne Wade,
Enos Kiforo, Don Klinger, Nicholas Wachira,
Frances Aboud
SYMPOSIUM 488
Learning How to Use Data: Data Literacy, Personal
Knowledge, and Beliefs t
Kim Schildkamp (Chair), Amanda Datnow (Discussant),
Erik Bolhuis, Joke Voogt, Hans Luyten,
Ellen B. Mandinach, Wilma Kippers, Cindy Poortman,
Adrie Visscher, Kristin Vanlommel, Roos Van Gasse,
Jan Vanhoof, Peter Van Petegem
SYMPOSIUM 725
Spirals of Inquiry for School and System
Transformation w
Judy Halbert, Linda Kaser, Michael Hopkinson,
Helen Timperley, Karen Stewart, Simon Heath
ROUNDTABLE 424
Putting Theory into Action through Collaborative
Partnerships w
Catherine L. Meyer-Looze, Richard Vandermolen
ROUNDTABLE 699
Learning Without Borders: A Co-Learning Journey
Between Two Schools From Two Different Areas
wr
Yvonne Chan, Melissa Dean
PARALLEL SESSION 1 – Saturday, January 7 | 15:10 – 18:20
START TIME
15:10 16:15 16:45 17:20 LOCATION
THEME (colour coded)
Engaging Students, Families and Communities
Increasing Equity and Challenging Disadvantage
Connecting Research, Policy and Practice
System and School Improvement
Developing Professional Capital
Measuring Educational Effectiveness
NETWORK (after presentation title)
q Early Childhood Education and Care (ECEC)
w Educational Leadership
e 3P
r MoRE
t Data Use
PARALLEL SESSION KEY
12. 10 Collaborative Partnerships for System-Wide Educational Improvement | ICSEI 2017
Cartier 1
(Marriott)
Cartier 2
(Marriott)
Cartier 3
(Marriott)
Ballroom B
Ballroom C
Bytowne
SYMPOSIUM 609
Measuring What Matters: Creating a Complementary
System of Measurement for Broad Areas of Student
Success at Local and Central Levels In Ontario,
Canada: The Pitfalls and the Possibilities e
David Cameron, Annie Kidder
SYMPOSIUM 625
Leadership for Learning as Collaborative
Partnership w
Michael Schratz, Jorunn Møller, Wilfried Schley,
Enikö Zala, Christian Wiesner, Malte Gregorzewski,
Niels Anderegg
SYMPOSIUM 642
Diverse Channels to Access and Inclusion: Striving
Towards Equity w
Nahid Nariman, Sheena Ghanbari, Karina M. Viaud
SYMPOSIUM 423
Understanding and Using Social Networks for
School, District and School System Transformation
e
Chris Brown, Joelle Rodway, Alan Daly, Yi-Hwa Liou
SYMPOSIUM 621
Policy, Research, Practice Collaborations Creating
Innovative System Designs to Support Professional
Learning and Development e
Helen Timperley, Pauline Cleaver, Carol Campbell,
Pamela Osmond-Johnson, Tony Mackay
SYMPOSIUM 704
Modeling Pre-Service Teachers’ Content
Knowledge and Beliefs About Mathematics rt
Malcolm Cunningham, Monique Herbert,
Hervé Jodouin, Saad Chahine
PARALLEL SESSION 1 – Saturday, January 7 | 15:10 – 18:20
START TIME
15:10 16:15 16:45 17:20 LOCATION
WORKSHOP 431
Increasing Collaboration
for Improvement
Across the New Zealand
Education System:
the Communities of
Learning Initiative e
Ro Parsons,
Pauline Cleaver
WORKSHOP 536
Community Schools
are an Integral
Strategy to Engage
Students, Families, and
Communities e
Helen Janc Malone
WORKSHOP 676
Using an App to
Support Learning
Based on Children’s
Perspectives qt
Persille Schwartz,
Laura Detlefsen
WORKSHOP 524
Building Global Citizens from the Comfort of the
Classroom. A Global Education Experience r
Taciana de Lira e Silva
ROUNDTABLE 656 (en français)
Le développement professionnel et la mobilisation
des compétences de leadership des directions
d’école, de la théorie à la pratique! w
Bean Lamadeleine, Guillaume Racine,
Lynn McDonald, Sandra Newton
PAPER SESSION
• 690 Learning
Activities and
Learning Outcomes
for Junior
Kindergarten between
Parents and Teachers:
Recommendations to
Assist the Transition
to Junior
Kindergarten
Tiziana Ceccato
• 701 Is There A “Good”
App for That? A
Framework for
Critiquing Early
Counting Apps
Ann LeSage
PAPER SESSION
• 480 Building a Caring and Engaging School
Climate: A Cross-Case Analysis
Jeff Walls
• 504 Family Involvement in Primary Schools In
China: Implications for School Principals on
Promoting Social Emotional Learning
Du Yuan, Mao Yaqing
• 559 Evaluation of a Meditation and Mindfulness
Program to Enhance Students’ Wellbeing
and Engagement in Learning
Peter Hart
PAPER SESSION
• 468 Support
Structures Effect
on Principals’ Work
Situation
Mette Liljenberg,
Klas Andersson
• 489 Improving the
Emotional
Intelligence
Competencies
of Principals and
Vice-Principals
in an Educational
Organization: An
Exploratory Study
Graham Shantz
• 550 Determining
How Principals are
Influenced by School
Evaluations
Kerrie Ikin,
Peter McClenaghan
13. 11ICSEI 2017 | Collaborative Partnerships for System-Wide Educational Improvement
Seigniory
Laurentian
PARALLEL SESSION 1 – Saturday, January 7 | 15:10 – 18:20
START TIME
15:10 16:15 16:45 17:20 LOCATION
PAPER SESSION
• 455 School
Leadership in
Culturally Diverse
Schools
Panayiotis Angelides
• 635 Leading
Transformational
Racial Equity Work in
and Around a U.S.
Urban High School:
Setting Long-Term
Goals and Building
Robust Partnerships
Peter Demerath,
Douglas Revsbeck
PAPER SESSION
• 523 The Effect of an
Accountability
Context and
Motivation on School
Self-Evaluation Scores
Jerich Faddar
• 551 Improving Data
Driven Schools’ Self-
evaluation by
Applying Data
on Students’
Socioeconomic Status
Nace Čebulj,
Gašper Cankar,
Darko Zupanc,
Matevž Bren
• 653 Program for
Learning Leadership:
Data- and Research-
Informed Professional
Competence
Development
Correlates With
Students’ Learning
Achievements and
Wellbeing
Lars Qvortrup
PAPER SESSION
• 492 Improving Low-Performing Schools:
“The Interplay of District and School Leadership,
Organizational Culture and Student
Achievement” A Norwegian Example
Jorunn Møller, Marit Aas
• 583 School Effectiveness in One of the Richest
Regions of Brazil
Paulo S. Garcia
• 612 Exploring Elementary School Students’
Perspectives about School Success in Schools
with Challenging Circumstances
Eunice Eunhee Jang, Gina Park, Jeanne Sinclair
PAPER SESSION
• 426 Enhancing Professional Learning in Initial
Teacher Education
Elaine Munthe, Raymond Bjuland, Nina Helgevold
• 471 Target Oriented Lesson Study (TOLS)
Combining Lesson Study with an Integrated
Impact Evaluation Model
David Godfrey, Sarah Seleznyov
• 473 Leading the Development Towards
Professional Learning in an Inquiry-Based
Culture
Angela Giezen, Marco van der Zwaard
14. 12 Collaborative Partnerships for System-Wide Educational Improvement | ICSEI 2017
PARALLEL SESSION 1 – Saturday, January 7 | 15:10 – 18:20
START TIME
15:10 16:15 16:45 17:20 LOCATION
PAPER SESSION
• 495 Give Us A Voice:
Student and Teacher-
Researchers Have
Their Say
Kathryn Riley
• 661 Inviting Young
Adolescent Students’
Voices Through the
Landscapes of Their
Journal Entries
Nectaria Karagiozis
PAPER SESSION
• 397 Ensuring Quality
Education through
Parents’ Involvement:
A Case Study of
Nepalese Schools
Toyanath Sharma,
Trilochan Sharma
• 459 Leveraging
a School District-
University Partnership
to Support Family
Engagement Practices
Rebecca Lowenhaupt,
Nicholl Montgomery,
Sarah Bradley,
Joi Dallas
• 675 Leadership
Actions for Engaging
Students and Families
in Reading
Tony Townsend
PAPER SESSION
• 456 Partnership
Working to Address
Attainment in
Scotland, General
Teaching Council of
Scotland
Charlaine Simpson,
Ellen Doherty
• 668 Toward
Flourishing in
Schools: Researching
School Improvement
from a Positive
Organizational
Perspective
Sabre Cherkowski;
Keith Walker
• 602 Evaluating and
Leading Collegial
Learning: How Do We
Know That What We
Do Is Right?
Marie Sjoblom,
Jens Ideland,
Eva Bringeus
PAPER SESSION
• 425 The Relationships Among Organizational
Innovation Climate, Principal Instructional
Leadership and Teacher Teaching Expertise
Cai Yonghong, Shen Xiaoyue
• 435 Principals Leadership to Enhance Internal
Capacity Building in Schools Through
Collaborative Partnerships
Susanne Sahlin
• 556 System Level School Improvement:
Evaluation of an Evidence-Based Action Learning
Strategy to Bring about Sustained Improvements
in School Effectiveness
Hamish Valentine
PAPER SESSION
• 525 An Exploration of Post-Secondary Education
Pathways in Ontario
Greg Rousell, Chris Conley, Brandy Doan,
Kelly Roberts, Robert S. Brown
• 567 Closing The Gap from Within: Reframing
Assessment through Integral Understanding
Niall Mackinnon
• 613 Large Scale Efforts to Improve Equity: An
Analysis of 775 School District Policies in Ontario
Canada
Samantha Shewchuk, Amanda Cooper
PAPER SESSION
• 624 Effects of International Students’ School
Experiences on Their School Engagement,
Wellbeing, Academic Attainment, and
Post-Secondary Destinations
Samuel Zheng
• 519 The Status Quo and the Features of School
Effectiveness Research in China
Hechuan Sun
• 716 What Can China Learn From the Evaluation
Indicator System of the Dutch Educational
Inspectorate?
Hechuan Sun
York
Confederation
Cartier
15. 13ICSEI 2017 | Collaborative Partnerships for System-Wide Educational Improvement
DAILY PROGRAM: SUNDAY, JANUARY 8, 2017
SUNDAY, JANUARY 8, 2017
TIME FUNCTION LOCATION
All Day ICSEI Lounge Delta Ottawa Penthouse
7:00 Registration Opens Delta Ottawa Ballroom Lobby
7:00 – 8:30 Buffet Breakfast Delta Ottawa Ballroom
Network Breakfast Meetings
7:15 – 8:15 Early Childhood Education and Care (ECEC) Joliet
MoRE Frontenac
3P Richelieu
Keynote
Addressing Equity and Diversity as a Lever for
8:30 – 9:30 Achievement: Lessons from K-12 Education Delta Ottawa Ballroom
Reform in the U.S.
Warren Simmons
Panel
9:30 – 10:30 Defining, Measuring & Understanding Delta Ottawa Ballroom
Outcomes That Matter
Moderated by Lorna Earl
Conference Rooms:
10:50 – 12:25 Parallel Session 2 Delta Ottawa - Convention Level
Marriott Ottawa Lower Floor
(See Parallel Session 2– Page 14)
12:30 – 13:00 Buffet Lunch Delta Ottawa Ballroom
Network Lunch Meetings
12:15 – 13:00 Data Use Joliet
Educational Leadership Richelieu
Conference Rooms:
13:15 – 15:30 Parallel Session 3 Delta Ottawa - Convention Level
Marriott Ottawa Lower Floor
(See Parallel Session 3– Page 17)
Panel
The State of Professional Learning in the
Learning Profession: Debates in Research,
15:45 – 17:00 Policy and Practice for Teachers’ Professional Delta Ottawa Ballroom
Development
Moderated by Carol Campbell
18:00 – 19:00 Gala Reception Marriott Summit
* Ticket required
19:00 – 23:00 Gala Dinner Marriott Victoria Ballroom
* Ticket required
16. 14 Collaborative Partnerships for System-Wide Educational Improvement | ICSEI 2017
Ballroom B
Ballroom C
Richelieu
Frontenac
Pinnacle
(Penthouse)
Cartier 1
(Marriott)
Cartier 2
(Marriott)
Cartier 3
(Marriott)
PANEL FOLLOW-UP 1
Defining, Measuring & Understanding Outcomes
That Matter
Jennifer Adams
PANEL FOLLOW-UP 3
Defining, Measuring & Understanding Outcomes
That Matter
Annie Kidder
SYMPOSIUM 481
A Tale of 3 Countries: Bridging The Research to Policy and Practice Divide e
Sofya Malik, Tim Cain, Jonathan Supovitz, Chris Brown (Chair)
SYMPOSIUM 511
Leading Inquiry-Based Working in Primary and Secondary Education w
Meta Krüger, Judith Amels, Lisette Uiterwijk, Kees van der Vloed, Marco van der Zwaard,
Lorna Earl (Discussant)
SYMPOSIUM 577
Bridging the Gap: Transnational Perspectives of Policy Enactment e
Christian Kraler, Vasileios Symeonidis, Livia Roessler, Hans Anand Pant, Roman Rösch
SYMPOSIUM 493
Structuring Equity within Urban School Systems: Case Studies from the Toronto District School Board
wert
Robert S. Brown, Chris Conley, Erhan Sinay, Samuel Zheng, Roula Anastasakos, Karen L. Robson,
Paul Anisef, Janet O’Reilly, Gillian Parekh, Margaret Douglin
SYMPOSIUM 651
Global Perspectives of Educational Leadership: The Context Imperative w
Pierre Tulowitzki, Jacob Easley II, Jeroen Imants, Mohammed Elmeski, Niels Anderegg, David Godfrey
SYMPOSIUM 709
School-Based Collaborative Partnerships for System-Wide Improvement: Supporting Principals as
‘Learning Leaders’w
Ruth Kane, Helen McGregor, Tina Jones, Bonnie Campbell, Anne Clifton, principal TBA
PANEL FOLLOW-UP 2
Defining, Measuring & Understanding Outcomes
That Matter
Yngve Lindvig
PANEL FOLLOW-UP 4
Defining, Measuring & Understanding Outcomes
That Matter
Doug Willms
PARALLEL SESSION 2 – Sunday, January 8 | 10:50 – 12:25
START TIME
10:50 11:35 11:55 LOCATION
THEME (colour coded)
Engaging Students, Families and Communities
Increasing Equity and Challenging Disadvantage
Connecting Research, Policy and Practice
System and School Improvement
Developing Professional Capital
Measuring Educational Effectiveness
NETWORK (after presentation title)
q Early Childhood Education and Care (ECEC)
w Educational Leadership
e 3P
r MoRE
t Data Use
PARALLEL SESSION KEY
17. 15ICSEI 2017 | Collaborative Partnerships for System-Wide Educational Improvement
INNOVATE 433
Changing the Nature
of Learning Support
Intervention to
Incorporate an Allied
Heath Partnership in the
Early Years of School to
Improve Literacy and
Numeracy Skills for all
Children in Later Years
q
Donna Anderson,
Liz Anderson
INNOVATE 458
Mobilizing Assessment
for Learning – Closing
The Gap Between Policy
and Practice Across a
System w
Angela Harvey,
Laura Maclellan
INNOVATE 496
Creating Place &
Belonging in the
Classroom: The Art of
Possibilities w
Kathryn Riley
INNOVATE 584
Foundations for Healthy
Schools: Interweaving
Theory, Practice and
Research ert
Athena Goodfellow
Joliet
Chaudiere
Capitale
Cartier
Bytowne
Seigniory
WORKSHOP 407
Forward Focus: Implementing and Monitoring Changes to
Improve Learning w
Dominc Beaudry, Beverley Freedman, Mark Gibeault
WORKSHOP 553
Collaborative Partnerships for System-Wide Educational Improvement in
New Zealand w
Joanne Robinson, Jan Martin
WORKSHOP 537
Inquiring Districts: Activating Learning and Changing Lives w
Catherine McGregor, Judy Halbert, Linda Kaser, Terry Taylor, Dianne Turner,
Lynne Tomlinson, Nancy Gordon, Lynn Archer, Bev Young, Katherine McIntosh
INNOVATE 508
Both Sides of the Educational Fence: Exploring the
Narrative of 21st Century Women Leaders w
Lisa J. Starr, Charlie Kraig
WORKSHOP 517
Benefits of a Collaborative Inquiry Team in Education: The CITE Initiative r
Ermelinda Luis, Stefanie McArthur, Heather Papp, Sherrie Rellinger,
Shayna Smith
PARALLEL SESSION 2 – Sunday, January 8 | 10:50 – 12:25
START TIME
10:50 11:35 11:55 LOCATION
PAPER SESSION
• 392 School Principals Leading Successful Turnaround: What the
Evidence Says
Coby V. Meyers
• 396 Supporting School Leaders in Their Role as Change Facilitators:
Perceptions of Experienced Principals
Karen S. Acton
• 490 Strategic Task Allocation: Successful Instructional Leaders Operating
Within External Constraints
Craig Hochbein, Linda K. Mayger
• 539 Vice-Principals’ Roles and Challenges in Improving Schools
Paula Kwan
18. 16 Collaborative Partnerships for System-Wide Educational Improvement | ICSEI 2017
Laurentian
York
Panorama
(Penthouse)
PARALLEL SESSION 2 – Sunday, January 8 | 10:50 – 12:25
START TIME
10:50 11:35 11:55 LOCATION
PAPER SESSION
• 390 Competency-Based Curricular Reform in British Columbia: A Framework
for Professional Learning
Alison O’Marra-Armstrong
• 449 Unravelling Data Use in Teacher Teams: The Development of
Co-Operation and Collaboration Through Different Phases in Teachers’
Data Use
Roos Van Gasse
• 702 Collaborating to Engage All Learners
Leyton Schnellert, Terry Taylor
• 721 The Effect of Principals’ Ethical Leadership on Teachers’ Voice Behavior:
The Mediating Role of Leader-Member Exchange
Sen Zhang, Yaqing Mao
PAPER SESSION (en français)
• 457 Facteurs d’engagement à une communauté de développement
professionnel en ligne
Mélanie Tremblay, Justine Dion-Routhier
• 674 Stratégies de recrutement, rétention et réussite (RRR) scolaires des
filles en milieu défavorisé : cas de la République Démocratique du Congo
Marie-Joséphine Ibanda
• 696 Coopération commissions scolaires/université pour faire coopérer
directions et enseignants : une recherche-action-formation
Yamina Bouchamma, Daniel April, Marc Giguère, Marc Basque
• 707 Le leadership scolaire et l’équité en mathématiques
Jhonel Morvan
POSTER SESSION
NETWORK: EARLY CHILDHOOD EDUCATION AND CARE (ECEC)
• 388 Reflecting on International Placement Facilitation
Christine Cho, Maria Cantalini-Williams, Julie Corkett
• 399 Students as Agents of Change: The Use of Mathematics to Reorganize Society to be More
Ethical and Just
Nancy Steinhauer, Gianna Helling
• 401 An Examination on the Importance of Self-Determination and Academic Motivation in
High School Students
Charlie Ohayon
• 428 Principal Autonomy and Entrepreneurial Orientation
Keith Feit
• 443 School Leadership in Developing Nations: Strengthening the Capacity of Low-Fee Private Schools
Paula A. Cordeiro, Corinne Brion
• 474 Fostering Meaningful Parent Engagement in Their Children’s Mathematics Learning and Success
Penny Patrician, Lynda Colgan
• 478 A Mixed Method Analysis of Community School Coordinator Time Use
Craig Hochbein
• 483 The Power of Narrative: A Contact Based Educational Intervention to Reduce Stigma in
Undergraduate Medical Students
Amanda Sauve, Jeremy Chitpin, Robert White, Stephanie Chitpin, Javeed Sukhera
• 499 How to Help the Left-behind Children in China: A Perspective of Public Welfare Service
Yuwei Deng
• 509 Fostering Meaningful Parent/Child Engagement in Teens’ Mathematics Planning, Pathways and
Pursuits
Lynda Colgan, Penny Patrician
• 622 FASD as a Mobilizer in Education Change: The Keewatin Patricia Experience
Joan Kantola
• 665 Student Led Learning Walk
Mirella Rossi
• 713 Preservice Teacher Training in Relation to Children with Special Needs
Tahmina Shayan, Karima Rehmani
• 729 Enhancing Teachers’ Understanding and Implementation of Project Based Learning in Primary
Schools in Trinidad and Tobago
Joann Neaves, Cheryl Bowrin
19. 17ICSEI 2017 | Collaborative Partnerships for System-Wide Educational Improvement
Ballroom C
Richelieu
Frontenac
Pinnacle
(Penthouse)
Cartier 1
(Marriott)
Cartier 2
(Marriott)
Cartier 3
(Marriott)
PARALLEL SESSION 3 – Sunday, January 8 | 13:15 – 15:30
START TIME
13:15 14:20 14:50 LOCATION
SHOWCASE: Aga Khan
SYMPOSIUM 494
Place, Identity and Belonging in A Changing World: Exploring Contemporary
Issues for Policy, Practice and Leadership w
Kathryn Riley, Mohammed Elmeski, Romina Madrid Miranda,
David H. Eddy Spicer, Karen Seashore Louis
SYMPOSIUM 581
Advancing Professionalism for School Effectiveness and Improvement:
Professional Standards and Teacher Professional Development e
Margery McMahon, Maria Assunção Flores Fernandes, Roza Valeeva
SYMPOSIUM 400
How We Lead Matters - What is Collaboration’s Impact? w
Beate Planche, Lyn Sharratt, Alan Boyle
SYMPOSIUM 663
System Transformation: Deep Learning in Action w
Joanne Quinn, Joanne McEachen, Michael Fullan, Anita Simpson, Mag Gardner
SYMPOSIUM 647
Building Trusting Relationships with Indigenous Partners to Engage Students,
Families and Communities wert
Helen Kennedy, Sean Monteith, Scott Urquhart, Jennifer McMaster,
Kieran McMonagle, Sandy Yep, Melissa Weyland, Susan Palijan,
Keiko Kuji-Shikatani
SYMPOSIUM 603
Teacher Learning and Leadership: Of, By and For Teachers e
Carol Campbell, Lindy Amato, Demetra Saldaris, Jim Strachan, Anna Yashkina,
Joelle Rodway, Karen Grose, Julia Graydon, Alison Radley-Walters, Kyle Gleason
INNOVATE 554
Mobilizing Professional
Capital
Bruce Drewett,
Bruce Shaw
INNOVATE 684
The Internationalization
of School Reform:
The Finland-Alberta
Partnership w
P. Jean Stiles, Sue Bell,
Chelsea Erdmann,
Sandra Stoddard
INNOVATE 736
Creating the Conditions
for Successful
Implementation of
a Play-Based
Kindergarten Program
q
Usha James,
John Dickson,
Karen Lewskiw-Janvary,
Cory Belliveau
INNOVATE 669
Using Social Media to
Build Collaborative
Partnerships to
Mobilize and Exchange
Knowledge for System-
Wide Educational
Improvement wer
Virginia Brown,
Christie Ledgley
20. 18 Collaborative Partnerships for System-Wide Educational Improvement | ICSEI 2017
ROUNDTABLE 506
Being Mindful of Teachers’ and Leaders’
Wellbeing: A Challenge for School and System
Improvement? w
Louise Stoll, Karen Seashore Louis, Alan Daly,
Katina Pollock
ROUNDTABLE 604
From Research and Policy to Practice: A Discussion
About Implementing a Language Policy in
Different Practices we
Eva Bringeus, Marie Sjöblom, Jens Ideland
WORKSHOP 655
Mindset for Successful Teaching - Exchange of
Experience and New Ideas w
Bitte Sundin, Bengt Lennartsson
ROUNDTABLE 544
Leveraging the Power of “WE”: System-School
Partnerships Enhancing and Sustaining School
Improvementw
Joan Conway, Dorothy Andrews, Lindy Abawi,
Cheryl Bauman, Shauna Petersen, Lyn Smith
WORKSHOP 486 (en français)
L’engagement des élèves pour appuyer la réussite
scolaire: programmes, projets, recherches et
ressources en langue française w
Barbara-Audrey Bergeron, Bianca Girard,
Roman Nowak
WORKSHOP 745
Releasing the Potential for Improving Educational
Outcomes through Partnership School Programmes
w
John Rutter
Chaudiere
Bytowne
Joliet
Capitale
Seigniory
Laurentian
PARALLEL SESSION 3 – Sunday, January 8 | 13:15 – 15:30
START TIME
13:15 14:20 14:50 LOCATION
WORKSHOP 712
From Compliance to Transformation: A Framework
for Enhancing Student Learning e
Dean Goodman, Lynne Tomlinson, Terry Taylor
WORKSHOP 714
Reggio Emilia Philosophy-Documentation q
Karima Rehmani, Tahmina Shayan
PAPER SESSION
• 606 Generation X and the Teaching Career: A
Generational Exploration of Professional
Capital Development
Corrie Stone-Johnson
• 552 Measuring Classroom Interactions Between
Teachers and Students
Elsa Westergård, Frank Rafaelsen
• 672 What a Difference a City Makes: Exploring
the Influence of the Wider Social and
Educational Policy Infrastructure on the
Lives and Careers of Generation X Global
City School Leaders
Karen Edge
PAPER SESSION
• 521 Implementing Distributed Leadership -
Documentation of Challenges in School
Improvement Projects
Sibylle Rahm, Anke Penczek
• 415 Transforming Rural Primary Turnaround
Schools in China: A Joint School-Based
Research Approach
Peng Liu, Ting Yin Wong
• 720 Are We Making A Difference?: Examining
the Impact of a Coaching and Mentoring
Program on the Culture of a School District
in Western Quebec, Canada
Trista Hollweck
PAPER SESSION
• 591 Vertical Coherence and School-level
Outcomes: Lessons from a Realist Synthesis
of Standardized Assessment in Low- and
Middle-Income Countries
David H. Eddy Spicer
• 658 What Can School Leaders Do to Establish
Evidence-Informed Schools? Assessing the
Effectiveness of Potential Policy Options
Chris Brown
• 681 The Teacher as Learner in Collaborative
Partnerships: Rethinking Learning, Change
and Improvement in Education
Mary Kooy, Mimi Masson, Carlos Ossa
PAPER SESSION
• 438 Delphi Study into the Advisability and
Feasibility of Central Standardized Systems
to Monitor Pupils’ Learning Outcomes
Maarten Penninckx
• 472 Research Informed Practices in English
Schools: Educational Excellence
Everywhere?
David Godfrey
• 589 Innovative Learning with Students’
Mobile Phones
Torbjörn Ott, Anita Grigic Magnusson
21. 19ICSEI 2017 | Collaborative Partnerships for System-Wide Educational Improvement
Panorama
(Penthouse)
PARALLEL SESSION 3 – Sunday, January 8 | 13:15 – 15:30
START TIME
13:15 14:20 14:50 LOCATION
POSTER SESSION
NETWORK: EDUCATIONAL LEADERSHIP
• 389 Supporting Early Career Teachers: An international Systematic Review of Research on Induction
and Mentoring Programs
Benjamin Kutsyuruba, Keith Walker, Lorraine Godden
• 410 School Success and Well-Being for Lesbian, Gay, and Bisexual Adolescents: An Exploratory Study
Enoch Leung
• 462 Understand Teacher Leadership in Hong Kong Schools: A Review
Ting Ying Wong, Peng Liu
• 466 Inquiry-Based Working, Distributed Leadership and Change Capacity in Dutch Primary Schools
Judith Amels
• 467 Effect of Transformational Leadership on Organizational Citizenship Behavior of Teachers
Fu Shujing
• 475 Enrichment Learning Experiences for Migrant Students: Exploring Pathways to Increase Equity
and Challenge Disadvantage
Nahid Nariman, Janet Chrispeels
• 503 The Effect of Interventions From School Leadership for Stimulating Inquiry-Based Working in a
Secondary School in the Netherlands
Susanne Görlich
• 547 Girls’and Boys’ Learning in High School Science Laboratories
Hsieh, Hsiao-chin
• 574 Exploring How Teachers’ Professional Networks Enhance Patterns of Distributed Instructional
Leadership in international Schools
Warangkana Lin
• 610 Regional Languages in Education in the Context of Globalization: Theory, Practice and Policy in
Russia and Europe
Ilshat Gafurov, Jamila Mustafina
• 636 Tolerance, Intercultural Understanding and the Dialogical Imagination: Reflections on the
Emerging Research-Led Education of Young Teaching Professionals in the Russian Federation
Aydar Kalimullin, Tatiana Baklashova
• 705 Effective Practices in Grade 9 Applied Mathematics
Alison Macaulay
• 724 Introducing of Performance Appraisal Criterion for TVET Teachers in Sri Lanka
Korale Kankanamge Jayasena, Handunge Sugath Premasiri Perera, Nihal Elesinghe, HU Kariyawasam,
WA Ranaweera, Chandana Vidana Pathirana, Choolangani Perera
• 730 Leveraging Collaboration for Supporting Student Achievement
Margie Johnson
22. 20 Collaborative Partnerships for System-Wide Educational Improvement | ICSEI 2017
All Day ICSEI Lounge Delta Ottawa Penthouse
7:00 – 8:30 Buffet Breakfast Delta Ottawa Ballroom
8:30 – 8:45 Keynote Delta Ottawa Ballroom
Hon. Mitzie Hunter, Ontario Minister of Education
Keynote
Improving Educational Outcomes for
8:30 – 9:30 Indigenous and Other Minoritized Students: Delta Ottawa Ballroom
System Change at the School Level
Russell Bishop
Keynote
9:30 – 10:30 Course Correction for a Nation: Our Journey Delta Ottawa Ballroom
from Truth to Reconciliation
Charlene Bearhead
Conference Rooms:
10:45 – 12:25 Parallel Session 4 Delta Ottawa - Convention Level
Marriott Ottawa Lower Floor
(See Parallel Session 4 – Page 21)
12:30 – 13:00 Buffet Lunch Delta Ottawa Ballroom
Conference Rooms:
13:10 – 15:30 Parallel Session 5 Delta Ottawa - Convention Level
Marriott Ottawa Lower Floor
(See Parallel Session 5 – Page 24)
15:45 – 17:00 ICSEI AGM Delta Ottawa Ballroom
18:00 – 20:00 Reception Hosted by the University of Ottawa Chateau Laurier
* Ticket required
** Transportation from Delta Ottawa available
MONDAY, JANUARY 9, 2017
TIME FUNCTION LOCATION
DAILY PROGRAM: MONDAY, JANUARY 9, 2017
algonquincollege.com
OTTAWA
CANADA
GAIN PRACTICAL EXPERIENCE.
GET INSPIRED. BE CAREER READY.
Our diploma, degree and postgraduate
programs mean more than adding another
credential to your résumé. It’s the opportunity
to expand your knowledge, be inspired, gain
a career-focused specialization in your chosen
field and live in one of the best countries to
grow: Canada!
23. 21ICSEI 2017 | Collaborative Partnerships for System-Wide Educational Improvement
THEME (colour coded)
Engaging Students, Families and Communities
Increasing Equity and Challenging Disadvantage
Connecting Research, Policy and Practice
System and School Improvement
Developing Professional Capital
Measuring Educational Effectiveness
NETWORK (after presentation title)
q Early Childhood Education and Care (ECEC)
w Educational Leadership
e 3P
r MoRE
t Data Use
PARALLEL SESSION KEY
Ballroom C
Richelieu
Frontenac
Cartier 1
(Marriott)
Cartier 2
(Marriott)
Cartier 3
(Marriott)
Joliet
Chaudiere
PARALLEL SESSION 4 – Monday, January 9 | 10:50 – 12:25
START TIME
10:50 11:55 LOCATION
SHOWCASE: Singapore
SYMPOSIUM 482
Communicating Relationships with Data for Student Achievement t
Kate Baker, Alexandre Dibon, Daniel Dubbale, Lorna Earl (Discussant)
SYMPOSIUM 515
Exploring the Role of Schooling in Developing Community Capital and Responsible Citizenship e
Anton Florek, Erica van Roosmalen, Wilfried Schley
SYMPOSIUM 571
Evidence-Informed Practice in Education: Developing Conceptualizations and Applications t
Carol Campbell, Julie Nelson, Chris Brown, Kim Schildkamp, Mirielle Hubers, Katina Pollock,
Shasta Carr-Harris, Kelly Bairos, Louise Stoll
SYMPOSIUM 548
Fostering the Emerging Future of Learning Leadership and Innovative Learning Environments:
Strategies and Cultural Considerations for Local Net-Working with the ILE as a Global Framework w
David Istance, Niels Anderegg, Tanja Westfall-Greiter, Livia Roessler, Andreas Schubert, Melanie Bonitz,
Kerstin Baumgart, Michaela Gläser-Zikuda, Simone Poss, Thomas Berliner, Kathrin Uplegger,
Barbara Schratz, Tony MacKay
SYMPOSIUM 648
Engaging Student Voice and Action Across Four Urban Schools in Ottawa/Gatineau w
Trista Hollweck, Kate James, Linda Radford, Ruth Kane, teachers, students
WORKSHOP 409
Preparing Principals and Developing School
Leadership Associations: Lessons from Around the
World w
Joanne Robinson
WORKSHOP 640
Leading Student Achievement: Networks for
Learning and Knowledge Building: The Story of an
Ontario Collaborative Partnership w
Ken Leithwood, Marlene Scardamalia, Linda Massey,
Bruce Shaw
INNOVATE 605
Community Literacy
Catalyst Model to
Support Indigenous
Communities e
Mélanie Valcin,
Maureen Anglin,
Cathy Mehagan
INNOVATE 470
Promoting an Inquiry-
Based Habit of Mind in
Educational Programs
for School Leaders w
Meta Krüger,
Lisette Uiterwijk
24. 22 Collaborative Partnerships for System-Wide Educational Improvement | ICSEI 2017
Capitale
Bytowne
Pinnacle
(Penthouse)
Seigniory
Laurentian
York
PARALLEL SESSION 4 – Monday, January 9 | 10:50 – 12:25
START TIME
10:50 11:55 LOCATION
WORKSHOP 479
Knowledge Mobilization at the Other End of the
Fire Hose e
Donald Buchanan
WORKSHOP 487
Cultivating Interconnections for Vibrant and
Equitable Learning Ecosystems we
Katherine Prince
WORKSHOP 510
Building System Leadership for Innovation and
Improvement: Leaders Learning From and With
Each Other w
Michelle Forge, Michael O’Keefe, 2 School
Board Superintendents, Ministry of Education
representative, Boston College Team representative
INNOVATE 513
Leveraging Standards
to Advance Professional
Learning e
Joanne Quinn
INNOVATE 569
Professional Profiles for
School Leaders in the
Netherlands w
Meta Krüger
PAPER SESSION
• 557 Scaling Personalization: Exploring the Implementation and Spread of an Academic and Social
Emotional Innovation in High Schools
Stacey Rutledge, Stephanie Brown, Kitchka Petrova
• 562 The Regulation of Professionalism in School-to-school Development: Collaboration as
Mediated Diffusion
David H. Eddy Spicer
• 682 The Role of the ‘The Middle Leader’: Supporting Evidence-use in Networked Educator
Professional Learning
Danielle LaPointe-McEwan, Christopher DeLuca, Don A. Klinger
• 715 Research-Practice Partnership and Education Improvement: Generating System Improvement
in Language and Education
Saskia Stille
PAPER SESSION
• 429 Relational Sustainability Within the University of Guelph-Humber Partnership
Glenn Hanna
• 477 Designing for Learning: Innovations to Expand Capital in a Community School
Martin Scanlan, Haerin Park
PAPER SESSION
• 500 Tenets of Teacher Mentorship: How a Joint Research Initiative Impacts the Capacity of Associate
Teachers and Faculty Advisors in Effectively Mentoring Pre-Service Teacher Candidates
Sara Shahbazi, Geri Salinitri, Alyssa Palazzolo
• 516 Developing Professional Capital for School Leaders through Case-based Instruction
Marit Aas, Kirsten Vennebo, Kristin Helstad
• 568 Supporting Teacher Leaders in Defining and Addressing Local Professional Learning Needs:
A University - Board Collaboration
Avril Aitken
• 620 Learning from Teachers’ Professional Learning: How Can Evaluation Be a Tool to Support
Ongoing Peer Learning? w
Jens Ideland, Marie Sjoblom
25. 23ICSEI 2017 | Collaborative Partnerships for System-Wide Educational Improvement
Confederation
Cartier
Panorama
(Penthouse)
PARALLEL SESSION 4 – Monday, January 9 | 10:50 – 12:25
START TIME
10:50 11:55 LOCATION
PAPER SESSION
• 391 Sustainable School Development in Deprived Areas: Potentials of Collaboration between Schools,
Science and Administration
Nina Bremm, Veronika Manitius
• 405 Collaborative Partnerships for Equitable Math Education: Exploring Connections Between
Algonquin and Western Ways of Knowing
Ruth Beatty, Jody Alexander, Christina Ruddy
• 413 Who Benefits from Studying in Higher Socioeconomic Status Schools? An Examination of
Individual Differences in Science Achievement in Developed Economies
Cheng Yong Tan
PAPER SESSION (en français)
• 633 Les méthodes Lean: des outils d’amélioration de la performance en education
Alain Huot, Pascal Forget
• 644 eCAP : pour un soutien aux CAP!
Claire IsaBelle
• 652 Discours et rendement en mathématiques: la place centrale des leaders scolaires
Jhonel Morvan & Roger Lozon
• 529 Comment les parents et les enseignants coopèrent-ils pour soutenir la réussite académique des
élèves au primaire ?
Enkeleda Arapi
POSTER SESSION
NETWORK: 3P
• 386 Altered Books: Engaging Students, Families, and Communities in Creative Ways To Promote and
Increase Family Involvement in Education
J. Elizabeth Casey, Paula Schubert
• 421 “Three-E classroom”: A Brand-New Theory of Classroom Reform
Miantao Sun, Chunxiao Ma
• 437 Systems Collaboration
Malcolm Payton
• 439 Transformative Pedagogies Meet Practice
Stan Kozak, Julie Morris
• 441 Grasping the Scope of School Autonomy: A Classification Scheme for School Policy Practice
Annemarie Neeleman
• 450 Specialization as a Strategy for School Improvement in China: Experts’ Perspectives
Yongfeng Fan, Naiqing Song
• 461 Working Toward a System Observation Tool
Whitney Hegseth
• 463 Facilitating Knowledge Mobilization through Collaborative Inquires
Dave Noble, Angela Harvey, Peter Bertelsen, Melissa Dubeau, Phil Dawes, Marilyn Kasian
• 485 Disciplinary Literacy - A Collaborative Approach
Kelly Denneny, Babe Santucci, Colette Fraser, Eunice Jang
• 498 How the External Evaluation Influences the Principal’s Engagement for the School Improvement?
Donatella Poliandri, Graziana Epifani
• 535 In-The-Moment Decisions: Investigation of Observations and Conversations as Assessment in the
Secondary Mathematics Classroom
Jimmy Pai
• 558 A Comparison Between the Massive Education and Elite Education in China and the USA
Jing Pan, Hechuan Sun
• 572 Inclusive Education at the Transition from School to Occupation Challenges for the
Professionalization of Teacher Training in Germany
Marianne Friese
• 579 How Educational Landscapes Affect the Development and Quality of Schools
Arila Feurich
• 614 What’sNextWhentheFundingEnds?AQualitativeStudyofACollege-ReadinessProgramAcross60Schools
Marlene Darwin
• 631 Building Educator Capacity for Inclusive Education
Camille Chenier
• 632 Teacher Influence on Student Achievements in the City of the Highest Brazilian HDI
Paulo Garcia
• 706 The Listening Stone Project: Learning from the FNMI Collaborative Inquiry
Susan Dion, Debra Cormier
• 741 Ground-Up School Transformation Efforts in Malaysia: A Case-study of Five Secondary Schools
Vanessa Edna Lee
26. 24 Collaborative Partnerships for System-Wide Educational Improvement | ICSEI 2017
INNOVATE 416
System and School
Improvement –
Scotland’s Approach
– National Improvement
Framework qwert
Elizabeth Morrison,
Katie Beattie
INNOVATE 491
A Journey from Old
to New – A Trajectory
Towards Establishing
a School Improvement
Culture wt
Vicki Bell, Lee Macmaster
INNOVATE 560
Out of the Box Parent
Engagement w
Lisa Riegel
INNOVATE 657
Global and Local
Thoughts Welcome:
An Open Public
Engagement in a
Developmental
Evaluation of Ontario’s
Renewed Math
Strategy e
Barnabas Emenogu,
Louise Gormley,
Keiko Kuji-Shikatani,
Michael Nisky,
Rachel Ryerson
INNOVATE 703
(en français)
Modèles économiques
de collaboration
internationale pour la
production de contenus
éducatifs w
Julie Caron
Richelieu
Frontenac
Cartier 1
(Marriott)
Cartier 2
(Marriott)
Cartier 3
(Marriott)
Ballroom C
Joliet
SYMPOSIUM 469
(Antecedents Of) Effects of Data Use by Teachers t
Gert Gelderblom, Amanda Datnow, Roos Van Gasse
SYMPOSIUM 531
Multiple Identities, Evolving Well-being(s): New Research Findings
from Ontario we
Mark D’Angelo, Shaneé Wangia, Chris Bacon (Chair: Dennis Shirley,
Discussant: Carol Campbell)
SYMPOSIUM 586
“All Hands on Deck!” Expanding Engagement Through Integration
and Inclusion r
Suzanne de Castell, Janette Hughes, Wendy Barber, Maurice di Giuseppe,
Carole-Doyle-Jones, Ann LeSage
SYMPOSIUM 592
A Tale of Three Districts: Developing Learning Partnerships in Support of
New Pedagogies for Deep Learning w
Joelle Rodway, Santiago Rincon-Gallardo, Michael Fullan, Anita Simpson,
Mag Gardner, Denise Andre
SYMPOSIUM 542
Developing Professional Capital in Professional Learning Networks w
Floor Binkhorst, Andrea Barraugh, Paige Fisher, Leyton Schnellert,
Cindy Poortman, Chris Brown (Chair)
WORKSHOP 545
How Do I Know What to Focus on for Enhancing
School Outcomes?: Using a Diagnostic Tool with a
Focus on What Really Matters w
Dorothy Andrews, Joan Conway, Lindy Abawi,
Shauna Petersen
WORKSHOP 585
Assessing the Impact of Innovation in Mathematics
Learning In Luxembourg Schools: Balancing
Research Requirements, Evaluation Methodology,
School and Policy-Making Needs e
Amina Kafai-Afif, Catalina Lomos, Thierry Rocher
WORKSHOP 597
Create Your Own E-Learning! Teachers Channel:
A Blended Professional Development Platform e
Naomi Mertens, Stefan van Goor
PARALLEL SESSION 5 – Monday, January 9 | 13:10 – 15:30
START TIME
13:15 14:20 14:50 LOCATION
WORKSHOP 664
Education Partnerships Program Building Multi-
jurisdictional Relationships e
Shirley Carder, Lynnita-Jo Guillet,
Dobi-Dawn Frenette, Kathy Beardy,
Odette Johnston, Cheryl Kylander
27. 25ICSEI 2017 | Collaborative Partnerships for System-Wide Educational Improvement
Capitale
Pinnacle
(Penthouse)
Chaudiere
Seigniory
Laurentian
WORKSHOP 623
Ontario On The Move Towards Global
Competencies e
Brenda Sherry, Ziyaad Vahed
WORKSHOP 677
Creating Possibilities: Studying the Student
Experience r
Chantal Fournier, Rachel Ryerson
WORKSHOP 731
Using Data Use Standards for Building Educators’
Capacity to Use Data t
Margie Johnson, Vicky Smith
WORKSHOP 617
Teacher Education and 21st Century Competencies:
Ontario’s Enhanced Teacher Education Program e
Michael Salvatori
PARALLEL SESSION 5 – Monday, January 9 | 13:10 – 15:30
START TIME
13:15 14:20 14:50 LOCATION
PAPER SESSION
• 527 An Evaluation of the School Improvement
Networks Strategy in Chile
Alvaro Gonzalez, Mauricio Pino,
Carmen Montecinos
• 570 Shared Academic Governance In
Transnational Higher Education Partnership
Via Learning Outcomes: Examining a
British Model
Thai Van Vu
PAPER SESSION
• 549 Improving Language Support for
Multilingual Children: An ECEC Practice
Example
Kristina Westlund
• 573 Peer Observation of Teaching as a Tool for
School Improvement in a K-5 School, in the
Areas of Collaboration, Staff Development,
and Leadership
Lena Ivarsson
• 599 The Plan for Systematic Quality Work
at Preschools Through the Lens of School
Improvement
Maria Styf
PAPER SESSION
• 454 Educational Equity for Refugee Populations:
A Review of Literature
Martin Scanlan, Francesca Lopez,
Rebecca Lowenhaupt
• 595 Citizenship Education in a Diverse Urban
High School: A Case Study of Policy
Enactment
Jesse K. Butler
• 683 The Global Education Equity Research
Initiative: Overview & Progress to Date
Stephen Luke
PAPER SESSION
• 619 An Examination of Leadership and Other
School Processes in Effective and Less
Effective Traditional High Schools in Jamaica
Tamara King
• 626 Engaging School Districts in Research-Based
Inquiry to Advance 21st Century Learning in
Ontario
Safa Zaki, Shirley Kendrick
• 670 Reciprocal Learning Teams: Teacher-Led
Professional Inquiry for Team and School
Change
Sabre Cherkowsk, Leyton Schnellert
PAPER SESSION
• 395 The Role of Contextual Challenges and
Constraints on the Relationship Between
Principal Leadership and Student
Achievement
Cheng Yong Tan
• 411 Principals Leadership as an Internal Capacity
for School Improvement – Principals and
Teachers Views in Three Swedish Schools
Susanne Sahlin, Conny Björkman
• 419 Playing the Long Game in Shifting Sands:
Exploring the Links of Leadership Behaviours
and Continuous Improvement in Education
Sean Starr
PAPER SESSION
• 526 Effects of Student Demographics and
Educators’ Early Interventions on
Kindergarten Children’s Foundational
Numeracy Skills
Samuel Zheng, Stefanie De Jesus,
Roula Anastasakos
• 686 Putting School-Community Partnership
Policies into Practice: Promoting Educational
Effectiveness Through Community
Involvement in Education
Catherine Hands
• 688 How Can We All Win? Engaging the
Community to Find a New CPS Magnet
School Application Policy
Mona M. Jenkins, Francis Larkin,
Nina Lewis-Chapelle
28. 26 Collaborative Partnerships for System-Wide Educational Improvement | ICSEI 2017
York
Confederation
Cartier
Panorama
(Penthouse)
PARALLEL SESSION 5 – Monday, January 9 | 13:10 – 15:30
START TIME
13:15 14:20 14:50 LOCATION
PAPER SESSION
• 685 Interpreting Documents and Implementing
Policy for Career Development In England
and Ontario Schools: A Multi-Perspective
Comparative Study
Lorraine Godden
• 697 Partnerships for Development of Concept-
Based On-Line Courses and Program
Development with High Yield Strategies for
Learners
Rodney D. Hutto, Nora Hutto
PAPER SESSION
• 432 It’s Not Just About Academics: Professional
Learning Networks in Schools Serving
Disadvantaged Communities
Esther Dominique Klein
• 440 Precision in Professional Learning:
Emerging Tensions in Collaborative
Inquiries that Explore and Address
Adolescent Literacy Needs
Heather Walters
• 507 Connected Voices: A Comparative Case
Study on Gender Dynamics and Networks
in Three State-Controlled School Districts
Mary Bridget Burns
PAPER SESSION
• 417 Professional Learning Communities: An
Exploration Into the Humanness of
Community
Jennifer Kelly
• 430 Social and Academic Correlates of
Trajectories in Teachers’ Instructional
Support
Sigrun K. Ertesvåg
• 666 Generation X Leaders From London, New
York and Toronto: Conceptions of Social
Identity and the Articulation of Influence on
Leadership Practice
Karen Edge
PAPER SESSION
• 594 Developing Professional Capital With Clinical
Supervision: A View From Trinidad and
Tobago
Freddy James
• 698 Teaching in Context: How Social Aspects of
Schools and School Systems Shape Teacher
Quality
Esther Quintero
PAPER SESSION
• 534 ResponseAbility Lab: Using a Multilateral
Accountabilities Framework to Track and
Enhance School Adaptive Capacity
P. Jean Stiles, JC Couture
• 575 Fostering Resilience: A Multi-level
Collaboration Supporting Adolescent
Readers
Brian Weishar, Heather Walters,
Saskia Van Viegen Stille, Eunice Jang
• 446 Two Steps Forward, One Step Back: The
Successes and Challenges of Break-the-Mold
Educational Reform
Lea Hubbard, Amanda Datnow
POSTER SESSION
NETWORK: MoRE
• 387 Integrating CALL in English Vocabulary Acquisition Among Iranian EFL Learners
Hadi Salehi
• 422 “Three-E Classroom”: A Real and Effective Education
Gongming Wu
• 448 Comparative Exploration on the International Competitiveness of Foreign-Oriented Postgraduate
Training Mode and Its Practical Ways – With the Anglo-American Graduate Education System as
an Example
Jinping Song, Chunzhi Liu
• 512 Action Research to Improve Teaching Practice in Primary And Secondary Classroom in Latin
America and Spain: A Literature Review
Carmen Diaz Bazo
• 514 Effectiveness Improvement of Family Education in China
Pingting Chen, Hechuan Sun
29. 27ICSEI 2017 | Collaborative Partnerships for System-Wide Educational Improvement
Panorama
(Penthouse)
PARALLEL SESSION 5 – Monday, January 9 | 13:10 – 15:30
START TIME
13:15 14:20 14:50 LOCATION
POSTER SESSION (con’t)
NETWORK: MoRE
• 528 Effectiveness of Internationalization through the Interaction of Students in IaE Program – Case
Study of the Experience of Local Students In Renmin University of China
XU Jia
• 555 The Decomposition Principle of Education Indicators
Jing Pan, Hechuan Sun
• 607 Igniting a ‘SPARK’ in Student Learning, Executive Functioning and Fitness Levels
Trisha Woehrle
• 662 Theoretical Characterization of School Effectiveness in High School in Unfavorable Conditions. The
Case of Mexico.
Rubi Surema Peniche Cetzal
• 667 Les pratiques relationnelles du mentorat et leurs bienfaits (en français)
Roula Hadchiti
• 689 Educator Voice + Student Voice + Vocabulary: Key Components for Developing a School Boards’
Math Strategy
Ann McKerlie, Mary Elliott, Kathryn Hayes-Waldhuber, Christine Nichol Skirrow, John Leyzer
• 695 A Systematic Review of Principal Time Use Research External and Construct Validity
Abby Mahone, Craig Hochbein
• 708 International Stories on School Improvement
Helen Evans
• 717 Exploring the Deep Integration of Traditional Teaching and Modern Information Technology
Yan Li, Rong Long
• 727 Modelling School Climate Effectiveness
Tarmidi Dadeh
• 737 Glocalization of Learner-centred Approach: An Explorative Blend and a Crowdsourcing Call
Nafisat A. Adedokun-Shittu, Ome V. Mejabi, Mudasiru O. Yusuf, Abdul Jaleel K. Shittu,
Abdulrahman E. Al-Lily, Tunku Badariah Tunku Ahmad, Omotayo O. Obielodan, Fatimah O. Bolaji
The District School Board of Niagara
provides quality public education to over
36,000 students from junior kindergarten
to grade 12. We operate 98 schools in the
12 municipalities that make up the Niagara
Region and are governed by a board of 11
elected trustees. The District School Board
of Niagara is one of the largest employers in
the Niagara Region, employing over 4,700
staffconsistingof:2,300teachingstaff;1,400
support staff and 1,000 casual staff. At the
District School Board of Niagara, we value
relationships, respect and responsibility. It is
these core values that guide us as we work
with our partners and develop innovative
new programs and supports to meet the
needs of today’s youth.
30. 28 Collaborative Partnerships for System-Wide Educational Improvement | ICSEI 2017
All Day ICSEI Lounge Delta Ottawa Penthouse
7:00 – 8:30 Buffet Breakfast Delta Ottawa Ballroom
Network Breakfast Meeting
7:15 – 8:15 Early Childhood Education and Care (ECEC) Joliet
Keynote
8:30 – 9:30 The Deeper Meaning of Deep Learning Delta Ottawa Ballroom
Michael Fullan
Keynote
9:30 – 10:30 Partnerships for Student Impact: Connected Delta Ottawa Ballroom
North and Education for Social Innovation
Moderated by Jennifer Corriero
Conference Rooms:
10:50 – 13:00 Parallel Session 6 Delta Ottawa - Convention Level
Marriott Ottawa Lower Floor
(See Parallel Session 6– Page 29)
12:30 – 13:00 Buffet Lunch Delta Ottawa Ballroom
ICSEI Awards Ceremony
14:00 – 15:00 Closing Ceremony and Handover Delta Ottawa Ballroom
Launch of 2018 Conference
School Visits: Family Math Night
* Advance registration required
18:00 – 20:30 ** Transportation provided. Please meet in the Centennial School
Delta hotel lobby at 17:50. Buses will leave at 18:00.
TUESDAY, JANUARY 10, 2017
TIME FUNCTION LOCATION
DAILY PROGRAM: TUESDAY, JANUARY 10, 2017
Learning that works for you!
Education Law
Mentoring
Special Education
Additional Qualifications
Aspiring School Leaders
Online Learning
Speaker Events
Workshops
www.principals.ca
31. 29ICSEI 2017 | Collaborative Partnerships for System-Wide Educational Improvement
Richelieu
Frontenac
Cartier 1
(Marriott)
Cartier 2
(Marriott)
Cartier 3
(Marriott)
PARALLEL SESSION 6 – Tuesday, January 10 | 10:50 – 13:00
START TIME
10:50 11:55 12:25 LOCATION
SYMPOSIUM 518
Exploring the Diverse Modalities of Network Design: Regional, National,
and International Exemplars e
Dennis Shirley (Chair), Steve Fleischman (Discussant), Danette Parsley,
Michael T. O’Connor, Roman Rösch, JC Couture, Lindy Amato, Roar Grøttvik
SYMPOSIUM 694
Enablers of the Teaching of the 21st Century Competencies: Teacher
Development and Supportive Policy Changes r
Longkai Wu, Paul Chua
SYMPOSIUM 600
Evaluative Thinking in Educational Innovation e
Lorna Earl, Helen Timperley, Josephine Wise, Amelia Peterson, Simon Heath,
Karen Stewart
SYMPOSIUM 641
Improving Educational Outcomes in Turbulent Times: Redefining the Role
and Function of the “Middle Tier” e
Anton Florek, Boudewijn Van Velzen, Karen Seashore
SYMPOSIUM 660
Challenges and Opportunities for Non-Cognitive Assessments r
Nicole Walter-Rowan, Donna Randall, Mike Nisky, Barnabas Emenogu,
Talwinder Aheer, Jaqueline Herman, Marcella Jenkins
THEME (colour coded)
Engaging Students, Families and Communities
Increasing Equity and Challenging Disadvantage
Connecting Research, Policy and Practice
System and School Improvement
Developing Professional Capital
Measuring Educational Effectiveness
NETWORK (after presentation title)
q Early Childhood Education and Care (ECEC)
w Educational Leadership
e 3P
r MoRE
t Data Use
PARALLEL SESSION KEY
INNOVATE 645
Parents Reaching Out
(PRO) Grants: Engaging
Parents in their
Children’s Learning and
Well-Being e
Ayn Posada, Raj Cheema
INNOVATE 719
Inviting Principals to
Adopt an Inquiry Stance
w
Usha James, Wes Hahn,
John Dickson, Pam Spero,
Jay MacJanet, Patti Lott,
Mary Zwolak
INNOVATE 611
A Digital Learning
Environment Developed
to Address Inequity and
Enhance Differentiated
Learning of Mathematics
e
Lomos Catalina,
Amina Kafaï-Afif
INNOVATE 746
A Whole School
Approach to Closing the
Attainment Gap q
Lynda McDonald
32. 30 Collaborative Partnerships for System-Wide Educational Improvement | ICSEI 2017
Pinnacle
(Penthouse)
Ballroom B
Ballroom C
Joliet
Chaudiere
Bytowne
York
PARALLEL SESSION 6 – Tuesday, January 10 | 10:50 – 13:00
START TIME
10:50 11:55 12:25 LOCATION
WORKSHOP 414
School Leader Decision-Making and the Role
of Evidence: An Interactive Exploration of the
Findings of Comparative Analysis From England
and the Netherlands w
Annemarie Neeleman, Chris Brown
WORKSHOP 408
Schooling Redesigned: Towards Innovative
Learning Systems in Peru (Innova Schools) w
Joanne Robinson, Gonzalo Conti Perochena,
Amy Coupal
WORKSHOP 541
Increasing Equity and Challenging the
Disadvantage in Afghanistan & Pakistan q
Tahmina Shayan, Karima Rehmani
WORKSHOP 608
What We Learned in Norway r
Christopher Cuddy, Leanne Oliver, Paul Bisson,
Craig Guthrie, Kyle Pearce, Lindy Amato,
Jim Strachan and friends
WORKSHOP 691
From Exclusive to Inclusive: Equity for All –
Rhetoric Or Reality? e
Sandra Fonseca
WORKSHOP 497
Partnerships for Transformative Education e
Paige Fisher, Leyton Schnellert, Debbie Koehn,
MaryLynn Epps, Rachel Moll
WORKSHOP 711
Measuring Educational Effectiveness with
Emerging Educational Settings r
Tim Stranske
WORKSHOP 693
Partnerships in a Time of Democratic Change:
Research and Practice Towards Youth Civic
Engagement in Hybrid Spaces e
Lorna McLean, June Creelman, Sandra Baranek,
Francine Jobin, Tracy Crowe, Jenn Bergen,
Jenn Rottmann, Jamilee Baroud, Mary Enns
WORKSHOP 601
Leading from the Middle: Collaborative Inquiry for
Disciplined Innovation w
Michael O’Keefe
WORKSHOP 637
Doing Whatever It Takes to Support the First
Nations, Métis and Inuit Students’ Success and
Wellbeing wrt
Keiko Kuji-Shikatani, Sean Monteith, Scott Urquhart,
Jennifer McMaster, Kieran McMonagle
PAPER SESSION
• 402 Flexible Learning Communities: Challenging
Disadvantage, Enacting Equity
Dale Murray, Joseph Thomas, Michelle Murray
• 593 InclusionofElementaryStudentswithSpecial
EducationNeedsfromaSegregatedHome
SchoolProgramintoRegularClassInstruction
Anne Seymour
INNOVATE 639
Shifting Mindsets
Changing Cultures:
Building Resiliency and
Positive Mental Health
w
Donaleen Hawes,
Paula Perrault
SYMPOSIUM 738
Translating Educational Leadership Policies into Practices through
Collaborative Partnership Working: Policy Actors’ Perspectives One
Year On w
Valerie Drew, Margery McMahon, Lesley Whelan, Alison Allan, Andrew Travis
33. 31ICSEI 2017 | Collaborative Partnerships for System-Wide Educational Improvement
Seigniory
Laurentian
Panorama
(Penthouse)
PARALLEL SESSION 6 – Tuesday, January 10 | 10:50 – 13:00
START TIME
10:50 11:55 12:25 LOCATION
PAPER SESSION
• 445 Engaging Students and Honouring
Indigenous Voices: A Strategic
Collaborative Inquiry
Joseph Curto, Annie Gojmerac, Lyn Trudeau,
Lorenzo Cherubini
• 520 Nunatsiavut and Memorial University – A
Collaborative Teacher Development
Partnership That Revitalizes Inuit Culture
and the Inuktitut Language
Kirk Anderson, Sylvia Moore, Jodie Lane
• 564 Centering Indigenous Voices in University -
Community Partnerships
Avril Aitken, Loretta Robinson
PAPER SESSION
• 460 The Five Cs of Professional Capital:
Transforming Teaching at Los Alamos, Peru
Jorge Camacho, Amy Coupal
• 680 Challenging the Potential for Instructional
Leadership Distribution in a Context of
Education Reform: Chilean Case Studies
Stephen Anderson
POSTER SESSION
NETWORK: EDUCATIONAL LEADERSHIP
• 394 A Case Study on Collaborative Leadership’s Practice Among Instructional Leaders To Enhance
Mathematics For Elementary School
Wan Noor Adzmin Binti Mohd Sabri
• 436 Collaborative Partnerships and School Leadership to Enhance Internal Capacity Building in Schools
– Theoretical Considerations
Susanne Sahlin
• 453 Becoming a Principal in Chile: Learning the Role of School Improvement
Magdalena Fernandez-Hermosilla
• 501 A Model Research on Teaching Reflection Culture of Dulangkou Middle School
Mingliang Huang, Hechuan Sun
• 546 System Instructional Leadership for Collaborative Partnerships for Improvement within Emerging
Multi-Academy Trusts (Mats) in England
Maria Kaparou, Daniel Muijs
• 566 Managing Development of Qualitative Accountability
Fred Beekers
• 638 Will How We Think Predict the Learning Outcome?
Tore Skandsen, Anders Ruud Fosnaes
• 643 An Analysis of the Parents’ Perception about the School’s Role in the City of the Highest HDI of Brazil
Paulo S. Garcia
• 654 New Light on the Work of Headteachers in Secondary Education in Seoul, Korea
Yoonjeong Lee
• 726 Authentic Learning in a Caring Environment: Lessons Learned from Changing a School’s Mission
Renee Corneille
• 739 Coaching for Instructional Leadership and Collaborative Professional Learning
Jan Coomber
PAPER SESSION
• 484 Changes from the Classroom to the System
Level: Active Schools in El Salvador and
Equatorial Guinea
Ana Florez, James Hahn, Kirsten Galisson,
Marina Solano, John Gillies
• 580 Links Between Classroom Goal Structures
and Student Learning During Sixth Grade:
The Moderating Role of Social Isolation
Within the Classroom
Stefania Sette, Emanuela Vinci
• 659 Assessing the Impact of Research Learning
Communities through the Perspective of
“Value-Added Transformational Practice”
Chris Brown
PAPER SESSION
• 444 Scholars as Partners to Schools – Challenges
and Gains
Unni Vere Midthassel
• 538 Collaboration for Innovation: Implementing
Inquiry into a Teacher Education Program
Rachel Moll
• 687 DevelopingProfessionalCapitalthrough
CollaborativeInquiry:WorkingThroughTensions
Dragana Martinovic, Kelly Winney,
Ziad Dabaja
34. 32 Collaborative Partnerships for System-Wide Educational Improvement | ICSEI 2017
School Visits
* Advance registration required.
9:30-14:30 ** Transportation provided. Please meet in the Various schools
Delta lobby at 9:20. Buses will leave at 9:30.
*** Lunch provided.
Skating Party and Social (Weather Permitting)
* Advance registration required.
14:30-16:30 ** Please meet in the Delta lobby starting at 14.15; Dows Lake
$10 taxi rides available.
*** Skate and Sleigh rental available at the lake.
WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 11, 2017
TIME FUNCTION LOCATION
DAILY PROGRAM: WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 11, 2017
CPIDC, a subsidiary of CPCO, provides internationally accredited principal
and teacher leadership development programs, that:
• are fully integrated with gospel values;
• build the skills, knowledge and attitudes of great education leaders; and
• are grounded in cutting-edge research and of the highest professional standard.
International Catholic
School Leadership
For more information, visit www.cpco.on.ca or email info@cpco.on.ca
CATHOLIC
PRINCIPALS’
INSTITUTEfor
DEVELOPMENT
CANADA
Come visit us in the Vendor’s Exhibit Hall during the conference
and enter our draws for valuable leadership resources.
CPCO is Canada’s largest professional
association serving principals and
vice-principals in Catholic schools.
35. 33ICSEI 2017 | Collaborative Partnerships for System-Wide Educational Improvement
ICSEI 2017 would like to thank the following sponsors for their
generous support:
HOST PARTNERS
IN-KIND (Delegate Bag Sponsor)
LEADER PARTNERS
The Ontario Ministry of Education (EDU) is the provincial body that oversees child care, elementary,
secondary and adult education for the province of Ontario, in Canada. Vibrant communities and a
prosperous society are built on the foundation of a strong education system. By focusing on the four
key goals outlined in Achieving Excellence, A Renewed Vision for Education in Ontario (achieving
excellence, ensuring equity, promoting well-being, enhancing public confidence), the ministry will
maintain and enhance Ontario’s reputation as a world leader in education. www.edu.gov.on.ca
CPCO is Canada’s largest professional association serving principals and vice-principals in Catholic
schools. CPIDC, a subsidiary of CPCO, provides internationally accredited leadership development
programs for principals, vice-principals and teachers that are:
• fully integrated with gospel values
• build the skills, knowledge and attitudes of great education leaders
• grounded in cutting-edge research and of the highest professional standard.
For more information go to www.cpco.on.ca
The Ontario Principals’ Council (OPC) is a voluntary professional association that represents the
interests of principals and vice-principals in Ontario’s publicly funded school system. Currently, OPC
represents 5,000 practising school leaders in elementary and secondary schools, as well as over 600
associates within the education community.
We believe that exemplary leadership results in outstanding schools and improved student
achievement. To this end, we foster quality leadership through world-class professional services and
supports. Through our ISO 9001 registered quality management system, the OPC and its professional
development division, Education Leadership Canada, strive to continuously achieve “quality
leadership - our principal product.” For information about OPC visit www.principals.ca.
International School Leadership, a subsidiary of the Ontario Principals’ Council, is one of the world’s
preeminent authorities on student-centred leadership. International School Leadership provides
its professional consulting services, training and certification programs to K-12 school and system
leaders around the world. Visit our website to explore many exciting learning opportunities and
upcoming events, www.internationalschoolleadership.com.
The University of Ottawa is the largest bilingual (English-French) university in the world. Located
at the heart of Canada’s capital, we have ready access to the great institutions of our country. Our
advances in social sciences, health, science and the humanities make uOttawa a unique place to
learn, grow and excel.
L’Université d’Ottawa est la plus grande université bilingue (français-anglais) du monde. Située au
cœur de la capitale du Canada, notre université jouit d’un accès direct aux plus grandes institutions
du pays. Ses avancées en sciences sociales, en santé, en sciences et en sciences humaines font d’elle
un endroit sans pareil où apprendre, s’épanouir et exceller.
THANK YOU
36. 34 Collaborative Partnerships for System-Wide Educational Improvement | ICSEI 2017
LEADER PARTNERS
EXHIBITOR PARTNERS
The Office of Academic Partnerships at Algonquin College is focused on helping Grade 11 and 12
high school students find and follow their vocational pathways. We work to create links between
secondary learning and college opportunities, helping prepare students to transition successfully
into postsecondary and beyond. Through funding from the School College Work initiative, we partner
with school boards to provide two broad categories of experiences, Dual Credits and Activities. Dual
Credits allow students to register in college courses or apprenticeship training while still in high
school, potentially earning a credit at both institutions. Activities offer students in Grades 7-10 an
opportunity to take part in hands-on experiences within various fields of study.
Our goal is to work collaboratively with our school board partners to provide students with engaging
programs and appropriate supports to ensure both secondary and postsecondary success.
At the Ottawa Catholic School Board, all students are inspired and guided to realize their spiritual,
social and academic potential, and to take their place in the world as thoughtful, well-rounded citizens.
The mission of the Ottawa Catholic School Board is to provide all our students with quality education
for the mind, body and spirit, through an emphasis on academic excellence, social responsibility and
Catholic values. The Ottawa Catholic School Board’s balanced approach to preparing students for
leadership, fulfillment and lifelong learning in a rapidly changing world is founded on four pillars.
• We support the whole person’s spiritual, mental, physical and emotional well-being in a safe,
diverse and respectful community.
• We deliver academic excellence in vibrant English and French programs.
• We respect the universal values of all faiths and proclaim Catholic principles of faith and
service to others in all our teaching.
• We use innovative methods and technologies to support all learning styles and to help our
students develop a love of learning in order to thrive in a changing world.
Curriculum Services Canada (CSC) partners with ministries of education, university faculties of
education, teacher associations, and schools around the world to build teacher capacity and impact
student learning. Since 1993, CSC has played a fundamental role in education in Ontario and across
Canada. We work hard to deliver the highest in quality resources and learning services that result
in the greatest positive impact for learners. As communities around the world invest in education
reform, CSC has committed itself to serving our growing international community. CSC provides
student-centred curriculum consultation, teacher development, and resource development to
improve student achievement.
The Ottawa-Carleton District School Board (OCDSB) is a dynamic, creative learning organization
that fosters the achievement, well-being and dignity of every student. Our mission is educating for
success, inspiring learning and building citizenship, focusing on our priority areas of well-being,
engagement, equity and stewardship. The district encompasses urban, suburban and rural areas
in the city of Ottawa covering 2,760 square kilometres. The OCDSB is the largest school district in
eastern Ontario and 7th largest by population in Ontario. All of our schools are vibrant, enthusiastic
learning communities where staff members nurture creativity and challenge students to achieve their
best. Our parents play an active role in schools and in supporting their children’s learning, through
school councils and the Parent Involvement Committee.
Celebrating its 125th anniversary in 2016, CEA is a not-for-profit research and action centre. With
members representing the entire spectrum of stakeholder groups in education, CEA’s strength lies
in the strategic roles it plays in the Canadian education scene: as a thought and action leader, a
connector, and a knowledge mobilizer. www.cea-ace.ca
37. 35ICSEI 2017 | Collaborative Partnerships for System-Wide Educational Improvement
SUPPORTER PARTNERS
EXHIBITOR PARTNERS
The Learning Bar is dedicated to improving the outcomes of children and those vulnerable at school.
Our powerful evaluation tools are designed using in-house research to provide educators with the
insight they need to deliver informed school initiatives. We are passionate about equality, equity and
educational prosperity for all students and aim to enhance student success and school climate in
everything we do.
• OurSCHOOL: Evidence-driven school improvement: Act on the voices of students, parents and
teachers to deliver informed initiatives to increase student achievement.
• Early Years Evaluation: Supporting a successful transition to school: Assess a child’s
strengths and developmental skills prior to the start of formal schooling. Use the results to
align programming, target resource allocation and support to prepare each child for school.
• Confident Learners: Plan, develop and make progress visible with this evidence-based,
whole-school program aimed at improving the literacy skills of Indigenous children during the
primary grades.
Faculté d’éducation | Faculty of Education
educom@uOttawa.ca
education.uOttawa.ca
Université d’Ottawa |
University of Ottawa
50 ans d’excellence et
d’innovation en éducation
50 years of Excellence and
Innovation in Education
38. CONVENTION LEVEL I NIVEAU DES CONGRES
INDOOR
SWIMMINGPOOL/
PISCINE
INTERIEURE
FITNESSCENTRE/
CENTRE DE
CONDrTIONNEMENT
TERRACE/
TERRASSE
PENTHOUSE LEVE
TERRACE/
TERRASSE
PENTHOUSE LEVEL I NIVEAU PENTHOUSE
/
/
NT
TERRACE/
TERRASSE
PENTHOUSE LEVEL I NIVEAU PENTHOUSE
FLOOR PLANS: THE DELTA OTTAWA CITY CENTRE