- were responsible for setting the direction of the school through an educational plan, unprecedented hiring authority, and increased control in budgeting.
- could seek waivers regarding practices that impeded innovation in school reform.
- could access a wide variety of professional development activities.
A Collaborative Approach
- Develop the capacity of each school site council to effectively manage the educational direction of its school.
- Help central office staff define supporting procedures, and develop a cadre of internal facilitators who would be available to each council.
Profile of an Effective Council
Figure 1. Profile of an Effective School Site Council
IMPROVING STUDENT LEARNING.
Educational Direction of the School
The School Site Council develops a manageable work plan each year focused on student learning.
The council spends its time on activities that have a significant impact on student learning.
The council has a shared vision and mission with the school that focuses on student learning.
The council oversees development and implementation of the school's educational plan.
The council ensures that the school regularly assesses itself and revises plans as needed.
ENABLING FUNCTIONS.
Meeting Mastery
School Site Council meetings are held at least monthly.
Meetings are scheduled in advance and members are notified of meeting times.
Members are in regular attendance.
Minutes are kept of all meetings and made available to members and key constituencies.
Members conduct work in between meetings, as needed.
Ability to Work Together as a Team
Council members effectively communicate with one another.
Members use consensual decision making.
Members resolve problems and conflicts effectively.
Members work together as a well functioning team.
The council regularly assesses itself.
Management of Team Diversity
The council composition is balanced, as specified in the contract, by role group and race/ethnicity.
The council uses its members' individual skills and areas of expertise.
All members participate in discussions and decisions, identifying different interests and working to bring them together.
The council works to ensure that all members feel included and valued.
Communications
The School Site Council seeks input from school constituencies (teachers, parents, students, community).
The council informs the school community of its activities and outcomes.
The council communicates with district and central offices.
Team Leadership
The principal/headmaster and the co-chair work together to lead the council.
The principal/headmaster works with the team members to clarify their roles and responsibilities.
The co-chairs ensure that all council members have the information they need to make timely decisions.
The principal/headmaster acts as a facilitative leader in decision-making.
Members share leadership and responsibility for the council's work.
Source: Hergert 1994.
The following comment typifies participant reaction to the profile. [It] helped us focus on what we need to do as a team. It is good to have a guide. It's as if we are in a jungle, a little lost, but now we have a map. It [doing the profile together] felt a little risky at first, but it was worth it.
- Parents, school partners, and students must become more aware and knowledgeable about educational issues; they must be enabled to participate if they are to be effective.
- Teachers must expand their focus beyond the needs of their class and begin to think about the school as a whole.
- Administrators (who traditionally are rewarded for keeping things under control) must share information and encourage thoughtful discussion and meaningful decision making.
Focusing on Key Issues
Figure 2. Educational Impact of Decisions by Site-Based Councils
Boston Revisits School-Based Management - table
Zero-Impact Decisions | Minimal-Impact Decisions | Core-Impact Decisions | Comprehensive Impact Decisions |
---|---|---|---|
Parking spaces | Textbook adoption | Curriculum | School budget |
Lunchroom supervision | Parent programs | Staff development | Hiring of personnel |
Faculty lounge | Inservice days | Coaching | Deployment of personnel |
Sunshine fund | Small budgets | Instructional programs | Personnel evaluation |
Adult recreation | Discipline policy | Student assessment | |
Bus duties | Instructional budget | ||
Refreshments |
- “What about parent programs? They are critical. We know that!” A statement like this can trigger a discussion of different types of parent involvement and which ones have the greatest impact on student learning.
- “Discipline is not a minimal impact issue!” This statement can result in a discussion of which issues directly affect teaching and learning and which indirectly support student success.
- “What is the difference between inservice and professional development?” This question can help a council begin to differentiate between one-shot events and an ongoing program for improvement.
As participants begin to discuss the relative merits and significance of various items, they also begin to construct their understanding of how the council can best spend its time. Once they have thought about the range of issues they might address, council members can tackle the next question: “What issues should we address in the next six months to a year?” These issues will form the agendas for future council meetings. Here's an example of one school struggling to set priorities. Setting Priorities: A Case Study. Council members brainstorm to develop a list of priority issues. Their initial list includes staff development, reading, school safety, student assessment, parent involvement, the budget, the three-year plan, 2nd grade math, and fund-raising. The group's consensus is, “We need to do all of these! They are all priorities.”The facilitator takes up the issue of overload, asking, “What would it take to focus in depth on one of these, such as parent involvement?” One participant suggests starting a parent class on curriculum. Another jumps to open houses. The facilitator redirects the discussion, asking, “What would it take to do the parent class on curriculum?”Council members contribute ideas: organizing, recruiting, course development, logistics, and more. Looking at the many tasks related to one issue helps council members see that their timelines must be expanded or their list shortened. There is too much to do, to do everything well.The group discusses the various issues and develops a list of its top five priorities. Discussion continues, rankings are assigned and averaged, and rankings changed. For example, while safety is initially at the top of each member's list, discussion reveals that a recent incident sparked widespread concern. Some council members don't know that the crisis has passed and steps have been taken to prevent similar incidents from occurring in the future. Safety drops to number eight on the final tally.The Council's final list is: three-year plan (1.2), parent involvement (2.4), staff development (2.6), and student assessment process review (3.6). Council members note that none of their issues is in Glickman's “Maximum Impact” column. They don't feel the system has given them the authority to make meaningful decisions in that column, so they shoot as high as they dare.