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CREATIVE LEAPS:
Journal for the Arts in Leadership and Interdisciplinary
Learning
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Tackling an Impossible Job
By Jeff Archer
appears courtesy of

http://www.edweek.org
Kelly Griffith’s job description is most notable for what it doesn’t include.
The principal at Easton Elementary School in Easton, Md., doesn’t
handle maintenance. She doesn’t help arrange field trips. She doesn’t
oversee her building’s cafeteria workers. Nor does she supervise
the buses before and after school.
Instead, she spends her time in classrooms, observing educators and
showing them new methods of instruction. She analyzes test scores. She
plans professional-development activities for her teachers aimed at boosting
student achievement.
Griffith can focus on teaching and learning because school leaders
in her district made a conscious effort to let principals do so. Two
years ago, the 4,500-student Talbot County system put "school managers" in
its buildings to free principals of administrative duties and let them
concentrate on raising student performance.
"It really has given me more of a hands-on approach to being an
instructional leader," says Griffith, who’s been a principal
for 13 years. Before her building got a school manager, she says, "you
were putting your fingers in the holes in the dike."
After years of hearing that a principal’s main job should be
to raise the quality of instruction, districts and states are experimenting
with ways to make that ideal a reality. New policies are emerging to
give principals more of the time, training, and tools to become leaders
of school improvement, rather than managers of operations.
Like Talbot County, some school systems are lightening the load for
principals, particularly when it comes to noninstructional matters. Others
are grounding the preparation of new administrators more in the real
work of improving school performance, as in Massachusetts, where state
policymakers have empowered districts to run their own licensing programs
for principals.
There’s also renewed talk of giving building leaders more decisionmaking
authority. An agreement with the teachers’ union in Memphis, Tenn.,
for example, will give principals in low-performing schools more flexibility
on personnel issues. And across the country, evaluation systems and professional-development
efforts for administrators are placing a greater premium on raising student
achievement.
"There really is a growing consensus about what the center of
education administration is supposed to be about," says Joseph F.
Murphy, an expert on educational leadership at Vanderbilt University. "Ten
years ago, even seven years ago, I wouldn’t have said that."
To be sure, such changes are hardly the norm. Surveys suggest that
many of the nation’s 84,000 public school principals remain largely
caught up in the "administrivia" of the job, lacking the authority
and wherewithal to carry out significant changes in their schools.
But the press to re-engineer the work of principals has never been
stronger. Under the federal No Child Left Behind Act, school leaders
are judged on their ability to raise test scores for all groups of students.
Some of the law’s stiffest sanctions for low-performing schools
kick in this year.
Marc S. Tucker, the president of the National Center on Education and
the Economy, a Washington-based policy group that runs a training program
for principals, says the federal law underscores a sea change in the
expectations for administrators. No longer is it enough for school leaders
to keep things running smoothly.
"For the first time in the history of American education, with
the advent of the accountability movement, bad things happen to school
leaders who don’t improve student performance, and good things
happen to those who do," he says.
Principals don’t teach students, but they do affect student
achievement. Kenneth Leithwood, a professor of educational
leadership and policy at the University of Toronto who co-wrote a new
review of research on leadership effectiveness, says leadership characteristics
are the second- strongest predictor of a school’s effect on student
results. Only classroom factors, such as teacher quality, are stronger.
"It’s not that those in leadership roles are having a dramatic
direct influence," says Leithwood. "But those things that do
have a direct influence are quite substantially affected by what people
in leadership do."
Another recent research summary by Mid- Continent Research for Education
and Learning shows how good principals leave their mark. Based in Aurora,
Colo., McREL analyzed 70 studies and identified the most critical parts
of a principal’s job. Among them: fostering shared beliefs, monitoring
the effectiveness of school practices, and involving teachers in implementing
policy.
The bad news is that many principals have little opportunity to perform
those functions. Their days are consumed with student discipline, parent
complaints, maintenance problems, and paperwork. A 1998 poll by the National
Association of Elementary School Principals showed that 72 percent of
building leaders nationwide agreed that "fragmentation of my time" was
a major concern.
Such frustrations are why the Talbot County system, located on the
eastern shore of the Chesapeake Bay in Maryland, created its "school
manager" position in 2002. Eight of its nine schools now have such
managers, who handle virtually all of their buildings’ noninstructional
administrative tasks. They order supplies and repairs, supervise the
food service and custodial workers, and track staff attendance.
Griffith, the principal at Easton Elementary, says the change has been
a godsend. Her school serves 610 pupils in grades 2-5 on a campus that
includes a separate school for prekindergarten through 1st grade. The
benefits of the managerial position were clear last year, when a new
roof at the school kept leaking—a problem that, in the old days,
Griffith would have had to resolve herself.
Not only is Griffith able to spend more time modeling instruction for
her teachers, but she also can cover their classes herself so the teachers
can observe colleagues elsewhere in the building. Districtwide, the number
of teacher observations by principals has tripled since the schools got
their managers, district officials say.
"I’m in the classrooms every day," says Griffith.
Other districts have tried similar steps to make principals’ jobs
more doable. For the past four years, the 4,900- student Mansfield, Mass.,
public schools have had two principals at each elementary school. In
California, the 97,000-student Long Beach Unified uses pairs of "co-principals" at
its six regular high schools.
The tactic isn’t without challenges. Talbot County lost two of
its school managers the first year of the system, when leaders discovered
that the intense multi-tasking demanded of the position requires a special
temperament. Also, district leaders say, some principals were so used
to acting as managers that they found it hard to shed their administrative
roles.
"There are some principals that would not benefit from having
a school manager," says Griffith. "They are very comfortable
being a school manager themselves."
Indeed, many of today’s principals feel ill-prepared for the
role of instructional leader. They do know instruction: More than 99
percent of them are former teachers. But a common complaint is that traditional
administrator-preparation programs don’t focus on how to carry
out the kind of organizational change that’s needed to significantly
improve a school’s performance.
Frederick M. Hess, an education expert at the American Enterprise Institute
in Washington, has surveyed the course content of university-based preparation
programs, and he’s been struck, he says, by their emphasis on "what
principals are allowed." They stress the mechanics of school law,
finance, and teacher evaluation, but not how to restructure academic
programs, he says.
"They’re being trained to nibble around the edges," he
contends.
Hess’ answer is to infuse the profession with new blood. He argues
that states should pare back licensure rules to allow leaders from fields
other than teaching to serve as principals, as Florida and Michigan have
done. Other experts counter that some exposure to teaching, while not
sufficient, is nonetheless critical for anyone charged with improving
instruction.
Regardless, there’s little disagreement in the field that administrator
preparation in the United States needs an overhaul. Says Tucker of the
National Center on Education and the Economy: "The quality of leadership
and management training in our schools of education is, on the whole,
terrible."
Some districts are taking matters into their own hands. Last year,
the 60,000-student Boston public schools launched an initiative that
trains principal-candidates in one-year "residencies," during
which participants work as administrators under the tutelage of practicing
school leaders in the city. The program graduated its first class of
10 " Boston principal fellows" this summer.
One of them is Oscar Santos, who spent his residency at Irving Middle
School, which serves a diverse student enrollment in the southwest part
of the city. While there, he helped disaggregate student test scores
for staff members working on the school’s improvement plan. He
also organized a Saturday mathematics camp to offer extra help for struggling
students.
"I was fully involved in the change process," says Santos,
32, who has since become the headmaster—as principals in Boston
are called—at a district high school.
A key objective of the fellowship program is to produce principals
who understand Boston’s own brand of school improvement. Fellows
take part in seminars that teach such skills as how to use the district’s
data-management system. With funding from the Los Angeles-based Broad
Foundation and a federal grant, Boston pays full salaries to the trainees
during the year.
Other district-led principal-training programs have sprung up recently
in Los Angeles and Springfield, Mass. New Leaders for New Schools, a
3-year-old nonprofit group that trains aspiring principals through a
one-year residency, has contracts with the school districts in Chicago,
the District of Columbia, Memphis, and its headquarters of New York City.
Meanwhile, some states are prodding universities to change how they
train school leaders. Louisiana’s administrator-preparation programs
have until next July to redesign themselves or face closure. State officials
there have required that the programs strengthen candidates’ field
experience by forming closer ties with districts. A similar push is under
way in Iowa.
Elsewhere, there’s been less progress. The Southern Regional
Education Board, an Atlanta-based policy group, recently surveyed 126
higher education institutions that prepare administrators, and it found
them lacking in offering practical experience. Fewer than one-quarter
have participants lead activities aimed at improving instruction. Shadowing
experienced principals is more often the norm.
"What colleges tell us is that when the state requires something
different, they will do differently," says Betty Fry, who directs
an SREB project that advises universities on the redesign of their educational
leadership programs. "But as long as they’re able to get principals
licensed and get them jobs, there’s not much real compelling reason
for them to do differently."
Funding for the project comes from the New York City-based Wallace
Foundation.
Preservice training programs can’t take all the blame for the
way many principals go about their work. For most of the past century,
building administrators have been hired, rewarded, and promoted based
on considerations other than their ability to raise the level of instruction
in their schools.
"A lot of what a principal is, is what their school board wants
them to be," says Carole Kennedy, a principal-in-residence at the
National Board for Professional Teaching Standards, a private group based
in Arlington, Va., that offers a process for recognizing highly skilled
teachers. "If they’re satisfied with management, that’s
what they’ll get."
Gradually, though, principals are being held more accountable for students’ learning.
In a national survey last year by Public Agenda, a New York City-based
polling group, 29 percent of principals said they were much more likely
than in the past to be reassigned because of student performance. And
almost twice as many, 57 percent, said they were evaluated based on "their
ability to judge and improve teacher quality."
As one example of what states are doing to alter principals’ behavior,
Delaware is now pilot-testing what state policymakers say will become
a mandatory, statewide evaluation system for school administrators. While
requiring principals to show that they’ve mastered the state’s
standards for educational leadership, the plan also demands evidence
of improved student performance.
Kennedy cites the 140,000- student San Diego school system as a district
that has largely transformed its expectations for school-level administrators.
There, specialists in instruction from the central office regularly take
principals on "walk- throughs" in their own buildings to show
them how to identify effective teaching.
"If you don’t know how to analyze instruction in pretty
sophisticated ways, then I don’t believe you can plan for change
in a school," says Ann Van Sickle, who directs the district’s
Leadership Academy, which provides training to aspiring and current principals.
Of course, principals can’t change their schools if they’re
not allowed to, and many building leaders say they’re not. A 2001
Public Agenda poll showed that only 30 percent of the nation’s
principals agreed that "the system helps you get things done." In
contrast, 48 percent said they had to "work around" the system
to accomplish their goals.
That climate represents a major barrier to school improvement, contends
William G. Ouchi, the author of Making Schools Work: A Revolutionary
Plan to Get Your Children the Education They Need. He favors strategies
used in Seattle, Houston, and Edmonton, Alberta, all of which have shifted
much decisionmaking authority over budget and personnel issues to the
school level.
"Every school has a different mixture of children with different
kinds of educational needs," says Ouchi, who is a professor of management
at the University of California, Los Angeles. "If you impose on
every school the same formula for the number of 8th grade science teachers
or 3rd grade reading teachers, then you’re necessarily giving them
something different from what they need."
Memphis offers another model for giving school leaders more authority.
In hiring New Leaders for New Schools to train 60 new principals over
the next three years, the district struck a deal with the local teachers’ union
that will give graduates of the program greater latitude in their staffing
decisions if they agree to lead one of the district’s lowest-performing
schools.
"If you have a strong instructional leader at the school-site
level, you want to give them as much flexibility as possible, as long
as they get results," says Carol R. Johnson, the superintendent
of the 118,000-student district.
Johnson says she learned the importance of doing so in her former job
as the chief of the 50,000-student Minneapolis school district. While
there, she let Patrick Henry High School use money designated for two
assistant-principal positions to release five teachers from the classroom
so they could work with other educators at the school to improve their
instruction.
The school was, and continues to be, one of the best-performing in
the city. The lesson underscores another point many experts make about
instructional leadership: Fostering improvements in teaching and learning
often requires that principals elevate others in their buildings to leadership
positions.
"It’s about principals," says Johnson, "but it’s
also about empowering the school site so that teachers and others own
the results and the decisions around the changes."

As first appeared in Education Week, September 15, 2004. Reprinted with
permission.
http://www.edweek.org/ew/articles/2004/09/15/03overview.h24
The Learning Arts offers Professional Development opportunities for educational leaders and teachers:
http://www.learningarts.org/profdev/for_leaders.htm
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