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How can school leaders build a strong learning-focused
environment in their school? High-Impact Leadership for High-Impact Schools:The Actions That Matter Most, by Pamela Salazar, presents specific knowledge
and practical strategies for school leaders to reach high standards of
excellence.
Strong learning-focused communities offer professional
support and provide learning opportunities and mutual accountability for
improving instruction. Principals must build a work culture that promotes
collaboration, knowledge sharing, and collective responsibility for improving
teaching and learning.
High-Impact Leaders Ask:
- When do teachers come together to talk about teaching
and learning?
- What are the expectations for teachers to continue their
professional development?
- Have we established a culture of questioning and
inquiry?
- Is professional development site-specific and aligned
with the needs assessment and goals of the school?
- Do teachers use assessment results to drive
instructional decisions on an ongoing basis?
- Do teachers have opportunities for looking at student
work?
- Do we see ourselves as a community of learners that can
continuously improve through collaboration, assessment of results, and
reflection?
A high-impact school is a community of practice in which
learning, experimentation, and reflection are the norm. There is a sense of
common purpose based on a collective understanding of the community served by
the school and the staff’s capacity to work together toward this common
purpose. Everyone works together to assure that diverse voices and beliefs are
heard and that consensus truly results in what is good for the whole school and
every student.
High-impact
schools are professional learning communities engaged in assessing and
improving instructional practice. These schools are equipped to meet the needs
of individual students and to accelerate the pace of learning. They do this
through a high level of communication about a variety of issues after
establishing opportunities for collaboration. These schools value the
exploration and improvement of teaching. They recognize and support innovative
efforts that contribute to creating a positive climate and culture in the
school. Collaborative work forms the backbone for developing an aligned
educational experience and expands a school’s vision and boundaries by
involving more people in essential processes related to student achievement and
school improvement.
High-impact leaders are proactive. They build a
supportive learning environment that is healthy and intellectually stimulating.
They create an environment characterized by a high level of professional
practice paired with a high level of student engagement in the construction of
new knowledge. Students feel respected and connected and they are engaged in
learning. Instruction is personalized to increase student contact with
teachers. Professional development supports collaboration and collegial
accountability.
The high-impact
school dedicates itself to developing everyone’s potential talents, centering
its attention on learning. It continuously seeks more effective ways to enhance
student achievement through careful design and evaluation of programs, teaching,
and learning environments. The school and staff both demonstrate an
enthusiastic commitment to organizational and personal learning as the route to
continuous improvement. Seeing itself as a community of learners that can
continuously improve through collaboration, assessment of results, and
reflection, the school designs practical means for gauging its students’ and
its own progress toward clearly identified goals.
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