The document discusses the concept of a self-improving school system (SISS) where responsibility for school improvement shifts from central and local governments to the schools themselves. A key aspect of a SISS is the establishment of school clusters, referred to as "family clusters," consisting of 3-12 schools that work collaboratively on improvement. Family clusters can realize benefits like improved student outcomes, leadership development, and innovation through resource sharing. Moving towards a fully self-improving system would require strengthening existing cluster arrangements and fostering competition between clusters to drive improvement across the entire system in a coherent way.
Collaborative school reform hotseat june 2012tzoubir
This research examines Networked Learning Communities (NLCs) introduced by a London Local Authority to encourage collaboration among schools. The research aims to identify features of this collaboration, understand how NLCs operate, and analyze gaps between intentions and outcomes. Key findings include that NLCs did not maintain a pupil performance focus or build staff capacity as intended. Collaboration was viewed as a tool for control rather than improvement. Headteachers prioritized expediency over collaboration due to accountability pressures, focusing on short-term success rather than capacity building. The research concludes that incentivized networks fail to achieve deep collaboration and that headteacher identity and expediency hinder the development of collaborative systems.
The document discusses teacher leadership, which focuses on improving teaching and learning through collaborative professional development rather than formal roles. It argues that teacher leadership is important for sustaining school improvement over time by building internal capacity. Research shows teacher leadership enhances teacher self-efficacy and morale, and that collaboration between teachers improves teaching quality. For teacher leadership to thrive, schools must empower teachers and provide time and training for leadership work. Teacher leadership benefits both schools and teachers by raising standards and engaging teachers in meaningful professional learning.
Strategies for scaling a blended learning pilotcschneider36
This white paper—commissioned by the Cities for Education Entrepreneurship Trust (CEE-Trust)—examines
potential responses to the challenges of growth by examining four approaches to scaling a successful blended learning
initiative. Any of these approaches might be used alone or in combination with others, but the most promising efforts
will be those that combine elements from all four approaches into a coherent, overall strategy.
This document provides an agenda and background information for a summit on sustaining school turnaround efforts at scale. The summit goals are to explore challenges of implementing turnaround strategies district-wide and identify ways to work together to increase success rates. It includes a list of participating districts and partners, as well as the agenda which focuses on building principal and teacher capacity, using data, extending time, and strengthening community ties. Breakout sessions will generate lessons to share, with the goal of communicating strategies to continue improvement once initial funding ends.
Innovation at St. Mary’s Catholic Primary School, North Sydneystmns
The document discusses innovation in schools and education. It outlines that innovation and change are central to the role of school leaders according to professional standards. Reasons for building innovation capacity include improving learning outcomes, enhancing equity and equality, and keeping education relevant. One approach to measuring innovation looks at changes in practice reported in international studies. Countries with greater innovation see increases in student achievement and outcomes. The document advocates for collaboration as key to encouraging innovation and discusses applying principles of redesigning education at St. Mary's with a focus on measuring the impact of flexible, innovative practices on student learning.
The document introduces the updated 2008 Educational Leadership Policy Standards (ISLLC 2008). It summarizes the process that the National Policy Board for Educational Administration (NPBEA) took over two years to revise the 1996 Interstate School Leaders Licensure Consortium (ISLLC) Standards. The new standards incorporate research on educational leadership from the past decade and address changing policy contexts. They are intended to guide state policymakers in improving leadership preparation, licensure, evaluation, and professional development. The standards provide a foundation for a continuum of policies and activities to support education leaders throughout their careers.
Rolffs, Deanna & Murphy, Mary Kay. Concrete Steps to Transform Teacher Collaboration for Increased Student Learning. Presented at the AdvanceED Conference of the Michigan Department of Education in April 2014.
The document discusses the New Zealand Aspiring Principals Programme (NAPP), which aims to develop innovative school leaders. The NAPP is a year-long blended learning program funded by the Ministry of Education. It emphasizes developing leaders who embrace innovation, cultural competence, and change management to accelerate student achievement. The program teaches participants to be self-aware, lead learning and change, focus on the future of schooling, and understand the principal role. It also encourages collaboration and risk-taking to improve student outcomes in New Zealand's education system.
Collaborative school reform hotseat june 2012tzoubir
This research examines Networked Learning Communities (NLCs) introduced by a London Local Authority to encourage collaboration among schools. The research aims to identify features of this collaboration, understand how NLCs operate, and analyze gaps between intentions and outcomes. Key findings include that NLCs did not maintain a pupil performance focus or build staff capacity as intended. Collaboration was viewed as a tool for control rather than improvement. Headteachers prioritized expediency over collaboration due to accountability pressures, focusing on short-term success rather than capacity building. The research concludes that incentivized networks fail to achieve deep collaboration and that headteacher identity and expediency hinder the development of collaborative systems.
The document discusses teacher leadership, which focuses on improving teaching and learning through collaborative professional development rather than formal roles. It argues that teacher leadership is important for sustaining school improvement over time by building internal capacity. Research shows teacher leadership enhances teacher self-efficacy and morale, and that collaboration between teachers improves teaching quality. For teacher leadership to thrive, schools must empower teachers and provide time and training for leadership work. Teacher leadership benefits both schools and teachers by raising standards and engaging teachers in meaningful professional learning.
Strategies for scaling a blended learning pilotcschneider36
This white paper—commissioned by the Cities for Education Entrepreneurship Trust (CEE-Trust)—examines
potential responses to the challenges of growth by examining four approaches to scaling a successful blended learning
initiative. Any of these approaches might be used alone or in combination with others, but the most promising efforts
will be those that combine elements from all four approaches into a coherent, overall strategy.
This document provides an agenda and background information for a summit on sustaining school turnaround efforts at scale. The summit goals are to explore challenges of implementing turnaround strategies district-wide and identify ways to work together to increase success rates. It includes a list of participating districts and partners, as well as the agenda which focuses on building principal and teacher capacity, using data, extending time, and strengthening community ties. Breakout sessions will generate lessons to share, with the goal of communicating strategies to continue improvement once initial funding ends.
Innovation at St. Mary’s Catholic Primary School, North Sydneystmns
The document discusses innovation in schools and education. It outlines that innovation and change are central to the role of school leaders according to professional standards. Reasons for building innovation capacity include improving learning outcomes, enhancing equity and equality, and keeping education relevant. One approach to measuring innovation looks at changes in practice reported in international studies. Countries with greater innovation see increases in student achievement and outcomes. The document advocates for collaboration as key to encouraging innovation and discusses applying principles of redesigning education at St. Mary's with a focus on measuring the impact of flexible, innovative practices on student learning.
The document introduces the updated 2008 Educational Leadership Policy Standards (ISLLC 2008). It summarizes the process that the National Policy Board for Educational Administration (NPBEA) took over two years to revise the 1996 Interstate School Leaders Licensure Consortium (ISLLC) Standards. The new standards incorporate research on educational leadership from the past decade and address changing policy contexts. They are intended to guide state policymakers in improving leadership preparation, licensure, evaluation, and professional development. The standards provide a foundation for a continuum of policies and activities to support education leaders throughout their careers.
Rolffs, Deanna & Murphy, Mary Kay. Concrete Steps to Transform Teacher Collaboration for Increased Student Learning. Presented at the AdvanceED Conference of the Michigan Department of Education in April 2014.
The document discusses the New Zealand Aspiring Principals Programme (NAPP), which aims to develop innovative school leaders. The NAPP is a year-long blended learning program funded by the Ministry of Education. It emphasizes developing leaders who embrace innovation, cultural competence, and change management to accelerate student achievement. The program teaches participants to be self-aware, lead learning and change, focus on the future of schooling, and understand the principal role. It also encourages collaboration and risk-taking to improve student outcomes in New Zealand's education system.
This document discusses learning communities and professional learning communities (PLCs) in educational settings. It provides definitions and explanations of learning communities as groups that share interests and goals of learning. PLCs are described as groups of educators united in their commitment to student learning, who collaborate and make decisions together. Steps for schools to become effective PLCs include determining readiness, using external facilitators, identifying barriers and boosters, and starting with a focus on learning. The role of the school librarian in supporting PLCs includes developing relationships with teachers, communicating expectations, and empowering collaboration.
The document discusses leadership challenges for the future and strategies to address them. It outlines global, national, local, and school-level challenges facing leaders. It advocates for strategic, sustainable leadership that looks beyond daily operations to the future. Alternative leadership models are emerging, including co-headships and leaders of school partnerships. The key is mobilizing resources to improve student outcomes, including engaging parents, teaching and learning, and addressing barriers.
Status of School-Based Management Practices of Schools In Secondary Schools i...Jandel Gimeno
This document is an abstract for a master's thesis that examines the status of school-based management practices of school heads in secondary schools in Trece Martires City, Cavite, Philippines. The study aims to determine the current status of practices related to vision/goals, school programs, staff development, resource management, community involvement, donations/grants, school environment, and curriculum implementation. It will identify factors that influence implementation of school-based management and achievement of school heads' goals. The results could inform better standard operating procedures. The conceptual framework indicates that administrative duties and instructional leadership roles influence efficient school-based management and faculty performance.
The author argues that while the term "transformation" is used frequently in discussions of Building Schools for the Future (BSF), there is little clarity around what exactly it means and how it can be achieved. Current education standards and metrics may restrict truly transformative changes. To truly transform education, learners must be actively involved in co-designing new schools and learning experiences through BSF, rather than having changes imposed on them from above. Embedding learner voice through meaningful participation could help design learning spaces that support innovative theories of learning and prepare students for the 21st century.
Dalton, margaret developing a specialist degree for teacher leaders nfeasj[1]William Kritsonis
Dr. William Allan Kritsonis, PhD - Editor-in-Chief, NATIONAL FORUM JOURNALS (Established 1982). Dr. Kritsonis earned his PhD from The University of Iowa, Iowa City, Iowa; M.Ed., Seattle Pacific University; Seattle, Washington; BA Central Washington University, Ellensburg, Washington. He was also named as the Distinguished Alumnus for the College of Education and Professional Studies at Central Washington University.
Brennan, Niamh M. [2011] “Applying Principles of Good Governance in a School ...Prof Niamh M. Brennan
This chapter provides insights into the governance of schools. Roles and responsibilities of school boards and school board members are considered, as is the composition of school boards. The elements contributing to effective boards are discussed, in particular the key roles of chairman and school principal which in turn influence board dynamics. Some practical suggestions follow on how to improve school board processes, including agendas, minutes of meetings, board papers, information flows and school board committees. The chapter concludes by referencing the value of school boards evaluating their own effectiveness.
Tb.session3.assessing progress and achievementAHDScotland
This document provides an overview of the Professional Learning Resource developed by Education Scotland to support assessing progress and achievement within the broad general education. It outlines the suite of resources which includes overarching papers, curriculum area papers, progression frameworks, and annotated exemplars. The resources are intended to support teachers in planning for assessment, understanding significant aspects of learning, monitoring progress, and making holistic judgements about achieving curriculum levels. The focus is on evidence-based, manageable approaches to assessment within the Curriculum for Excellence.
Innovations in curriculum to make it globaldrvijayamravi
1. The document discusses the need for innovation in school curriculum to equip students for the modern world and global competition. It argues traditional teaching methods are inefficient and curriculum must be comprehensive, inclusive, and address a global, multicultural perspective.
2. Four aspects of curriculum innovation are identified: approach, design, procedure, and evaluation. Schools should ask why they are innovating and how benefits and challenges will be addressed. An innovative leader is key to managing curriculum changes.
3. Suggestions include establishing an advisory committee to regularly evaluate fields and update the curriculum. The focus should be on competency-based instructional objectives and concept evaluation rather than content. Schools must support research, technology use, and independent curriculum
Digital Professional Learning Communitiesspaul6414
This document discusses digital professional learning communities and how various online tools can be used to facilitate collaboration. It describes social networking platforms like wikis, blogs, Twitter and LinkedIn that allow educators to connect, share resources and ideas. It encourages administrators to develop their own online professional learning communities to extend learning beyond their local schools.
Professional Learning Communities Made Easyguestcc6b38
This Powerpoint presentation by Faye L. Lewis, an assistant principal in Essex County New Jersey, will make Professional Learning Community implementation easy for those venturing into the worls of PLCs.
Keynote presentation for the National Colloquium on Professional Learning Communities organized by the Department of Basic Education (DBE) - South Africa
This report describes a case study of two schools in the Netherlands that were identified as having highly developed professional learning communities and distributed leadership. The study aimed to understand what conditions support these, including the role of school leaders.
At the selected primary school, Willibrordus, and secondary school, Vathorst College, the daily work and educational practices are organized to enable and encourage teacher collaboration on school improvement. This lays the foundation for distributed leadership and professional learning. Additionally, teachers and leaders demonstrate professional communication through constructive feedback and open discussion.
The schools foster a culture of teacher autonomy, creativity, and cooperation. They also emphasize formal and informal professional development to help teachers gain new ideas and expertise. School leaders and
School based management-a_structural_reform_interventionEdelyn Gempisao
School-based management (SBM) is a structural reform that decentralizes decision-making authority to individual schools. It has been adopted by many countries to address issues like high dropout rates and improve educational quality. In the Philippines, SBM was implemented nationwide after being piloted through projects like TEEP. SBM aims to empower local school leaders and communities by transferring resources and responsibilities to the school level. While results have been mixed, SBM has potential to positively impact student outcomes when combined with capacity building, accountability, and access to innovations at the school level. The biggest challenge for the Department of Education is full implementation of SBM across all public schools.
The document discusses school leadership in Mauritius and focuses on leading for learning. It provides details about education reform that began in 2006 in Mauritius. It discusses the roles and responsibilities of the Rector in leading the school and ensuring inclusive education. It emphasizes that students should be at the center of the school's mission and their participation in decision making is important. The document also outlines an organizational chart and discusses the leadership for learning model in the Mauritian context.
Objective
To equip participants with an insight of School-Based Management (SBM) to support schools in their journey to improve School Performance and Student Achievement.
Methodology
explore 21st Century era Learning and to improve and align school resources to provide for it.
Methodology
to explore 21st Century era Learning and to improve and align school resources to provide for it.
to model School-Based Management(SBM) strategies to improve School Performance and,
to apply SBM techniques to improve Student Achievements
School Based Management Contents
Overview of Resource Management-School Based (SBM)
21st Century Teaching & Learning
SBM Assessment Instrument-Six Dimension of SBM
Strategies to improve School Performance & Student Achievement
Workshop Activity
Afternoon session, Skills for Work - Edinburgh, 25.11.15AHDScotland
This document provides information about career education and its importance. It discusses how career education helps students develop career management skills, learn about the world of work, and make informed choices. The document outlines a career education standard and journey from ages 3 to 18. It discusses benefits like improved student outcomes, motivation, and social mobility. Research evidence demonstrates benefits such as higher academic achievement, graduation rates, and economic returns. The document advocates starting career education early and emphasizing partnerships between schools, Skills Development Scotland, parents, employers, and others. It provides an example of career education activities at Preston Street Primary School involving visits, conferences, CV writing, and more.
AHDS Annual Conference 2016 - Mark PriestleyAHDScotland
This document summarizes a presentation by Professor Mark Priestley on school-based curriculum development. It discusses different approaches to curriculum development, including content-led, outcomes-based, and process-based curricula. It notes tensions that can arise between policy intentions and school implementation. Barriers to change are addressed, including physical, structural, attitudinal and cultural barriers. The importance of clarity of purpose, knowledge selection, and appropriate pedagogical methods are emphasized. Overall it promotes an approach where curriculum development starts from broad educational goals and purposes, then determines appropriate knowledge and teaching strategies to achieve those goals.
Latest Global Educational Management TrendsTimothy Wooi
Introduction
Global Trends and Changes shaping the future of K-12 Education with online learning as mainstream, blended learning and education systems Shift.
Latest Global Educational Management Trends
New Definitions of Success
1.Rethinking Measurements
2. Student-Centered Environments
3. Personalized Professional Development
4. Managing Change
5. Data Informed Decisions + World-Class Standards
6. Balanced Approaches: Asking To What End
7. Programming, Robotics and the Maker Movement
8. Neuroscience, Youth Development Research and how Kids Learn Best
9. Mobile Learning
10. Cloud Computing
Recent Trends in K-12 Education
1.The Use of the Internet and Social Media as a Teaching Tool
2.Students Teaching Teachers
3.Paying Close Attention to Each Students' Needs
4. Better Assessment Methods
5. Personalized Learning Experiences
6. Flipped Learning
7. Cloud Technologies
8. Gamification
Goal / Purpose
To equip teachers to digitally empower diverse learners to connect, communicate and collaborate by creating a rich environment indulging technology in the classroom to help them evolve.
To facilitate learning in a more impactful manner by integrating technology to help make the world a smaller place with interaction beyond the classroom and classmate to virtual trips and multi-region and multi-nation interactivity to commence projects and work.
Methodology
Bridging the range of project-based learning opportunities within “phenomenon-based” curriculum redesign, relevant and meaningful to students and their communities by:-
- giving flexibility to redesign student centered learning in a more flexible K-12 education and aligning to the system to set high expectations and close achievement gaps.
- rethinking accountability for new learning models to
modernize educators and leadership development to
implement personalized learning and invest in research
on the digital equity gap.
The document discusses transforming lives through learning and focuses on the curriculum, tracking and monitoring, pedagogy, and literacy. It notes that schools will be expected to have clear strategies to reduce achievement gaps across the curriculum. Examples of curriculum rationale, assessment information, and questions to consider about shared understanding of curriculum goals and tracking/monitoring processes are provided. The presentation aims to share ideas and examples of transforming learning through a literacy-rich curriculum.
System Leadership Workshop March 07 125920kapil1312
This document discusses system leadership and school improvement. It begins by outlining key components of school improvement such as developing a narrative for sustained change, organizing improvement activities, and putting professional learning at the heart of the process. It then discusses themes from turnaround schools, including developing system leadership capabilities. The rest of the document covers a vision for educational purpose, the nature of system leadership roles, and how personalizing learning, professional teaching, intelligent accountability, and networking can drive achievement and system reform.
Successful leadership: a review of the international literature examines research on effective school leadership. It finds that while instructional/pedagogical leadership has been shown to improve student outcomes, transformational leadership and a combination of the two approaches may be most effective. Successful school leaders set direction, create positive school culture, and support staff motivation and commitment to foster improvement. International research emphasizes the importance of leadership in supporting school improvement.
This document discusses learning communities and professional learning communities (PLCs) in educational settings. It provides definitions and explanations of learning communities as groups that share interests and goals of learning. PLCs are described as groups of educators united in their commitment to student learning, who collaborate and make decisions together. Steps for schools to become effective PLCs include determining readiness, using external facilitators, identifying barriers and boosters, and starting with a focus on learning. The role of the school librarian in supporting PLCs includes developing relationships with teachers, communicating expectations, and empowering collaboration.
The document discusses leadership challenges for the future and strategies to address them. It outlines global, national, local, and school-level challenges facing leaders. It advocates for strategic, sustainable leadership that looks beyond daily operations to the future. Alternative leadership models are emerging, including co-headships and leaders of school partnerships. The key is mobilizing resources to improve student outcomes, including engaging parents, teaching and learning, and addressing barriers.
Status of School-Based Management Practices of Schools In Secondary Schools i...Jandel Gimeno
This document is an abstract for a master's thesis that examines the status of school-based management practices of school heads in secondary schools in Trece Martires City, Cavite, Philippines. The study aims to determine the current status of practices related to vision/goals, school programs, staff development, resource management, community involvement, donations/grants, school environment, and curriculum implementation. It will identify factors that influence implementation of school-based management and achievement of school heads' goals. The results could inform better standard operating procedures. The conceptual framework indicates that administrative duties and instructional leadership roles influence efficient school-based management and faculty performance.
The author argues that while the term "transformation" is used frequently in discussions of Building Schools for the Future (BSF), there is little clarity around what exactly it means and how it can be achieved. Current education standards and metrics may restrict truly transformative changes. To truly transform education, learners must be actively involved in co-designing new schools and learning experiences through BSF, rather than having changes imposed on them from above. Embedding learner voice through meaningful participation could help design learning spaces that support innovative theories of learning and prepare students for the 21st century.
Dalton, margaret developing a specialist degree for teacher leaders nfeasj[1]William Kritsonis
Dr. William Allan Kritsonis, PhD - Editor-in-Chief, NATIONAL FORUM JOURNALS (Established 1982). Dr. Kritsonis earned his PhD from The University of Iowa, Iowa City, Iowa; M.Ed., Seattle Pacific University; Seattle, Washington; BA Central Washington University, Ellensburg, Washington. He was also named as the Distinguished Alumnus for the College of Education and Professional Studies at Central Washington University.
Brennan, Niamh M. [2011] “Applying Principles of Good Governance in a School ...Prof Niamh M. Brennan
This chapter provides insights into the governance of schools. Roles and responsibilities of school boards and school board members are considered, as is the composition of school boards. The elements contributing to effective boards are discussed, in particular the key roles of chairman and school principal which in turn influence board dynamics. Some practical suggestions follow on how to improve school board processes, including agendas, minutes of meetings, board papers, information flows and school board committees. The chapter concludes by referencing the value of school boards evaluating their own effectiveness.
Tb.session3.assessing progress and achievementAHDScotland
This document provides an overview of the Professional Learning Resource developed by Education Scotland to support assessing progress and achievement within the broad general education. It outlines the suite of resources which includes overarching papers, curriculum area papers, progression frameworks, and annotated exemplars. The resources are intended to support teachers in planning for assessment, understanding significant aspects of learning, monitoring progress, and making holistic judgements about achieving curriculum levels. The focus is on evidence-based, manageable approaches to assessment within the Curriculum for Excellence.
Innovations in curriculum to make it globaldrvijayamravi
1. The document discusses the need for innovation in school curriculum to equip students for the modern world and global competition. It argues traditional teaching methods are inefficient and curriculum must be comprehensive, inclusive, and address a global, multicultural perspective.
2. Four aspects of curriculum innovation are identified: approach, design, procedure, and evaluation. Schools should ask why they are innovating and how benefits and challenges will be addressed. An innovative leader is key to managing curriculum changes.
3. Suggestions include establishing an advisory committee to regularly evaluate fields and update the curriculum. The focus should be on competency-based instructional objectives and concept evaluation rather than content. Schools must support research, technology use, and independent curriculum
Digital Professional Learning Communitiesspaul6414
This document discusses digital professional learning communities and how various online tools can be used to facilitate collaboration. It describes social networking platforms like wikis, blogs, Twitter and LinkedIn that allow educators to connect, share resources and ideas. It encourages administrators to develop their own online professional learning communities to extend learning beyond their local schools.
Professional Learning Communities Made Easyguestcc6b38
This Powerpoint presentation by Faye L. Lewis, an assistant principal in Essex County New Jersey, will make Professional Learning Community implementation easy for those venturing into the worls of PLCs.
Keynote presentation for the National Colloquium on Professional Learning Communities organized by the Department of Basic Education (DBE) - South Africa
This report describes a case study of two schools in the Netherlands that were identified as having highly developed professional learning communities and distributed leadership. The study aimed to understand what conditions support these, including the role of school leaders.
At the selected primary school, Willibrordus, and secondary school, Vathorst College, the daily work and educational practices are organized to enable and encourage teacher collaboration on school improvement. This lays the foundation for distributed leadership and professional learning. Additionally, teachers and leaders demonstrate professional communication through constructive feedback and open discussion.
The schools foster a culture of teacher autonomy, creativity, and cooperation. They also emphasize formal and informal professional development to help teachers gain new ideas and expertise. School leaders and
School based management-a_structural_reform_interventionEdelyn Gempisao
School-based management (SBM) is a structural reform that decentralizes decision-making authority to individual schools. It has been adopted by many countries to address issues like high dropout rates and improve educational quality. In the Philippines, SBM was implemented nationwide after being piloted through projects like TEEP. SBM aims to empower local school leaders and communities by transferring resources and responsibilities to the school level. While results have been mixed, SBM has potential to positively impact student outcomes when combined with capacity building, accountability, and access to innovations at the school level. The biggest challenge for the Department of Education is full implementation of SBM across all public schools.
The document discusses school leadership in Mauritius and focuses on leading for learning. It provides details about education reform that began in 2006 in Mauritius. It discusses the roles and responsibilities of the Rector in leading the school and ensuring inclusive education. It emphasizes that students should be at the center of the school's mission and their participation in decision making is important. The document also outlines an organizational chart and discusses the leadership for learning model in the Mauritian context.
Objective
To equip participants with an insight of School-Based Management (SBM) to support schools in their journey to improve School Performance and Student Achievement.
Methodology
explore 21st Century era Learning and to improve and align school resources to provide for it.
Methodology
to explore 21st Century era Learning and to improve and align school resources to provide for it.
to model School-Based Management(SBM) strategies to improve School Performance and,
to apply SBM techniques to improve Student Achievements
School Based Management Contents
Overview of Resource Management-School Based (SBM)
21st Century Teaching & Learning
SBM Assessment Instrument-Six Dimension of SBM
Strategies to improve School Performance & Student Achievement
Workshop Activity
Afternoon session, Skills for Work - Edinburgh, 25.11.15AHDScotland
This document provides information about career education and its importance. It discusses how career education helps students develop career management skills, learn about the world of work, and make informed choices. The document outlines a career education standard and journey from ages 3 to 18. It discusses benefits like improved student outcomes, motivation, and social mobility. Research evidence demonstrates benefits such as higher academic achievement, graduation rates, and economic returns. The document advocates starting career education early and emphasizing partnerships between schools, Skills Development Scotland, parents, employers, and others. It provides an example of career education activities at Preston Street Primary School involving visits, conferences, CV writing, and more.
AHDS Annual Conference 2016 - Mark PriestleyAHDScotland
This document summarizes a presentation by Professor Mark Priestley on school-based curriculum development. It discusses different approaches to curriculum development, including content-led, outcomes-based, and process-based curricula. It notes tensions that can arise between policy intentions and school implementation. Barriers to change are addressed, including physical, structural, attitudinal and cultural barriers. The importance of clarity of purpose, knowledge selection, and appropriate pedagogical methods are emphasized. Overall it promotes an approach where curriculum development starts from broad educational goals and purposes, then determines appropriate knowledge and teaching strategies to achieve those goals.
Latest Global Educational Management TrendsTimothy Wooi
Introduction
Global Trends and Changes shaping the future of K-12 Education with online learning as mainstream, blended learning and education systems Shift.
Latest Global Educational Management Trends
New Definitions of Success
1.Rethinking Measurements
2. Student-Centered Environments
3. Personalized Professional Development
4. Managing Change
5. Data Informed Decisions + World-Class Standards
6. Balanced Approaches: Asking To What End
7. Programming, Robotics and the Maker Movement
8. Neuroscience, Youth Development Research and how Kids Learn Best
9. Mobile Learning
10. Cloud Computing
Recent Trends in K-12 Education
1.The Use of the Internet and Social Media as a Teaching Tool
2.Students Teaching Teachers
3.Paying Close Attention to Each Students' Needs
4. Better Assessment Methods
5. Personalized Learning Experiences
6. Flipped Learning
7. Cloud Technologies
8. Gamification
Goal / Purpose
To equip teachers to digitally empower diverse learners to connect, communicate and collaborate by creating a rich environment indulging technology in the classroom to help them evolve.
To facilitate learning in a more impactful manner by integrating technology to help make the world a smaller place with interaction beyond the classroom and classmate to virtual trips and multi-region and multi-nation interactivity to commence projects and work.
Methodology
Bridging the range of project-based learning opportunities within “phenomenon-based” curriculum redesign, relevant and meaningful to students and their communities by:-
- giving flexibility to redesign student centered learning in a more flexible K-12 education and aligning to the system to set high expectations and close achievement gaps.
- rethinking accountability for new learning models to
modernize educators and leadership development to
implement personalized learning and invest in research
on the digital equity gap.
The document discusses transforming lives through learning and focuses on the curriculum, tracking and monitoring, pedagogy, and literacy. It notes that schools will be expected to have clear strategies to reduce achievement gaps across the curriculum. Examples of curriculum rationale, assessment information, and questions to consider about shared understanding of curriculum goals and tracking/monitoring processes are provided. The presentation aims to share ideas and examples of transforming learning through a literacy-rich curriculum.
System Leadership Workshop March 07 125920kapil1312
This document discusses system leadership and school improvement. It begins by outlining key components of school improvement such as developing a narrative for sustained change, organizing improvement activities, and putting professional learning at the heart of the process. It then discusses themes from turnaround schools, including developing system leadership capabilities. The rest of the document covers a vision for educational purpose, the nature of system leadership roles, and how personalizing learning, professional teaching, intelligent accountability, and networking can drive achievement and system reform.
Successful leadership: a review of the international literature examines research on effective school leadership. It finds that while instructional/pedagogical leadership has been shown to improve student outcomes, transformational leadership and a combination of the two approaches may be most effective. Successful school leaders set direction, create positive school culture, and support staff motivation and commitment to foster improvement. International research emphasizes the importance of leadership in supporting school improvement.
School Based Management A 21st Century Approach to School Developmentijtsrd
Public school education across the world has undergone trends where the school management shifts from centralization and decentralization. This research has focused on a variety of the best strategies and practices of school based management in a global approach. The findings of this study showed that there are different indicators emerged as significant in relation to School based management. These include the effective school leadership, management strategies, faculty development, and stakeholders' participation were identified that have huge influence in attaining the overall objectives and aims of school based management. Based on the data gathered, there were no single formula in achieving the overall goal of our school based management, however, there are number of practices that leads to positive and quality educational system these includes effective leadership, management strategies, faculty development and stakeholders participation. Therefore, with these practices, there is a huge probability that a school will likely achieve its goal. Caterina D. Villo | Brenda T. Tabiosa | Ma. Cecilia L. Caballero | Lynne Christine E | Solar, Marilyn M. Miranda | Dr. Luzviminda A. Bonghanoy ""School Based Management: A 21st Century Approach to School Development"" Published in International Journal of Trend in Scientific Research and Development (ijtsrd), ISSN: 2456-6470, Volume-4 | Issue-2 , February 2020, URL: https://www.ijtsrd.com/papers/ijtsrd29995.pdf
Paper Url : https://www.ijtsrd.com/other-scientific-research-area/other/29995/school-based-management-a-21st-century-approach-to-school-development/caterina-d-villo
Networking between schools is an important strategy to help schools improve performance as autonomy increases. Research shows some benefits of networking, such as improved student performance when schools collaborate on staffing and hiring. Effective networks share knowledge, resources, and address common problems. They involve partnerships across education and other sectors. Further research is still needed to better understand how networking contributes to school improvement.
Decagonal approach, a vehicle for school improvementMuhammad Yusuf
The decagonal approach is a school improvement model used in Pakistan that takes a whole school approach rather than just focusing on teachers. It involves 10 components: capacity building of teachers, leadership and management, community participation, children's participation, developing the physical environment, curriculum enrichment, research and documentation, school governance, school-based interventions, and local resource generation. The approach was implemented in 30 schools over 2 years. Key lessons learned include that school improvement is a process, not an event, it requires team effort and changing individual attitudes, and creating a conducive learning environment contributes to student learning.
The document discusses the National Centre for School Leadership's school leadership development program, which aims to build leadership capacities to transform schools. It does this through several key areas: developing an understanding of self and vision, transforming the teaching-learning environment to be more child-centered, building effective teams, promoting a culture of innovation, developing partnerships, and effective administrative management. The goal is to equip school leaders with the skills needed to address challenges like resource shortages, poor teaching quality, and low student achievement in order to improve school performance.
The Systems Centre: Learning and Leadership in the Graduate School of Education and the Faculty of Engineering, brings together educational, corporate and community leaders with researchers, to engage in inter-disciplinary research and development, drawing on systems thinking and complexity theory as tools for understanding and re-designing learning systems and the leadership they need.
The Systems Centre: Learning and Leadership is hosting a series of expert-led open seminars on these themes. The seminars will also provide a foretaste of our new MSc programme in Systems Learning and Leadership, which opens in October 2011 (http://www.bristol.ac.uk/education/students/masters/sll )
We are delighted that Howard Green, Director of Research and Development at Oasis Academies, formerly Special Adviser on Leadership at the Department of Education, and Visiting Fellow at the Graduate School of Education, will lead our first session entitled:
‘Rethinking Educational Leadership’
“Has the current paradigm for school leadership, with its focus on professional standards and competencies, taken us as far as it can with our efforts to transform schools? How can systems thinking and processes help us to find answers to some of the complex problems that remain unresolved and often block further progress in schools? The seminar will stimulate thinking and discussion about these questions and propose a refocusing of our approaches to school leadership development.”
The seminar took place at 5.00pm on Thursday 5th May at the Graduate School of Education.
This document discusses rethinking school leadership and transformation. It provides:
1) Evidence that current school improvement strategies are reaching limits and not addressing complex issues blocking further progress.
2) A call for a new paradigm of school leadership focused on transformation rather than just incremental improvement. This would develop five minds - disciplined, synthesizing, creating, respectful and ethical/spiritual - and address complex problems through systems thinking.
3) Examples of systemic leadership approaches using communities and networks to holistically drive change through developing leadership in others over the long term.
In 3 sentences or less, it argues that a new paradigm is needed to transform schools for the 21st century by developing leaders' abilities to
This document reviews research on improving schools facing challenging circumstances. It discusses three phases of school improvement research: an initial focus on organizational change; a second phase integrating effectiveness research; and a current "third age" focusing on pupil outcomes, teacher instruction, building capacity, and cultural change. The findings section analyzes studies of improving, effective, and less successful schools. Key features of effective improvement programs include a shared vision, monitoring progress, strategic planning, and performance indicators to track changes over time. The document aims to identify universal principles of improvement while acknowledging the need to tailor approaches to specific school contexts.
This document summarizes research on school leadership and what enables some schools to be more effective than others in improving student outcomes. It finds that effective school leadership is important for school improvement but not sufficient on its own. School leaders can indirectly influence student performance through their positive impacts on school culture, organization, and teaching quality. The research highlights three key models of leadership: transformational, instructional, and distributed. Successful school leadership requires setting a clear vision, improving teaching conditions, enhancing teacher quality, and building relationships both within and outside the school community. School leaders face challenges like ensuring high-quality teaching and learning, managing student behavior and attendance, and developing the school as a professional learning community.
Dynamics of Educational Decentralisation on Effective Management of Primary S...ijtsrd
The purpose of this indicative comparative analysis is an initial identification of key issues for the education sector that arise from its implementation of government decentralization policies. The system of education management is being gradually decentralised and de concentrated on the basis of the subsidiarity principle, as decentralisation is seen as one of the key strategies for reforming and reshaping educational institutions. The present paper tackles the questions about how the interaction of education decentralisation, what changes occur in the process of school management with the increase of school autonomy and what are the conditions for the process of effective school autonomisation. Despite decentralization of education functions through delegation and deconcentration of functions, there are still concerns of ineffectiveness in service delivery especially at the local level. The importance and the impact of raising education quality gives added weight to the question, "Can education decentralization raise quality " Education decentralization policies are prevalent around the world. The objectives of such policies especially those increasing school autonomy and local governance may include improving service delivery, but more commonly involve shifting political power or funding responsibilities. Whatever motivation for education decentralization, such policies may lead to improvements in the quality of education. This paper examines the potential of education decentralization to improve management and performance, as reflected in educational outcomes and changes in the determinants of those outcomes in three parts The conceptual arguments for such a relationship "¢ The empirical evidence of the impacts of education decentralization, Better design and implementation of decentralization policy to leverage its impact on quality management. Massa Ernest Massa "Dynamics of Educational Decentralisation on Effective Management of Primary Schools: Lessons for Cameroon" Published in International Journal of Trend in Scientific Research and Development (ijtsrd), ISSN: 2456-6470, Volume-4 | Issue-4 , June 2020, URL: https://www.ijtsrd.com/papers/ijtsrd31194.pdf Paper Url :https://www.ijtsrd.com/engineering/other/31194/dynamics-of-educational-decentralisation-on-effective-management-of-primary-schools-lessons-for-cameroon/massa-ernest-massa
Accountability regulation and leadership in our school system - exploring a t...Browne Jacobson LLP
The document summarizes a roundtable discussion on accountability, regulation and leadership in the UK school system, where key figures explored visions and challenges. Participants agreed schools need autonomy but also robust local oversight held accountable by Ofsted. A coordinated inspection regime is needed for school groups to ensure effective governance, value for money, and educational outcomes regardless of school type or size.
The document discusses school improvement and the role of leadership in the school improvement process. It defines school improvement as systematic efforts to change learning conditions and goals. Research shows teacher development, leadership, and school culture are key to successful improvement. Effective leaders for improvement create a shared vision, develop staff potential, make the school a learning organization, and work with others. They build capacity for continuous improvement through collaborative leadership.
This document discusses professional learning communities (PLCs) and their potential to foster collaborative success in schools. It provides historical context for educational reform efforts beginning with A Nation at Risk in 1983 and the No Child Left Behind Act in 2001. The document defines PLCs as groups of educators working collaboratively to improve student outcomes. It reviews research showing that effective PLCs develop high levels of trust among stakeholders and incorporate teacher collaboration, data-driven instruction, administrative support, and community involvement. The document argues that PLCs that demonstrate these characteristics are more likely to achieve measurable gains in student performance.
This document provides an executive summary of a report about education reform and improving school systems. It discusses how despite increases in education spending, the performance of many school systems has barely improved. However, some school systems consistently perform better than others. The report studied 25 school systems, including 10 top performers, to understand what factors contribute to their success. The key findings are that the three most important factors are: 1) ensuring good quality teachers, 2) developing teachers' skills, and 3) delivering the best instruction to every child. Top performing systems demonstrate that focusing on these areas can lead to substantial improvements in outcomes, regardless of culture.
This document discusses how despite massive increases in education spending and reform efforts over decades, performance in many school systems has barely improved. International assessments show wide variations in quality between systems. The US is used as an example - despite large spending increases, smaller class sizes, and tens of thousands of reform initiatives, student outcomes remained almost the same. The experiences of top-performing systems were studied to understand why some consistently perform better and improve faster than others.
This document provides an executive summary of a report about education reform and improving school systems. It discusses how despite increases in education spending, the performance of many school systems has barely improved. However, some school systems consistently perform better than others. The report studied 25 school systems, including 10 top performers, to understand what factors contribute to their success. The key findings are that the three most important factors are: 1) ensuring good quality teachers, 2) developing teachers' skills, and 3) delivering the best instruction to every child. Top performing systems demonstrate that focusing on these areas can lead to substantial improvements in student outcomes, regardless of culture or context.
The document discusses the importance of professional learning communities (PLCs) in transforming the Welsh education system to improve student outcomes. It argues that PLCs, when implemented well within and across schools, can build teacher capacity to improve instruction and drive system-wide change. The key aims of Wales' School Effectiveness Framework include reducing achievement gaps and ensuring success for all students through strategies like PLCs, distributed leadership, and increasing collective efficacy.
Where next for the self improving school system may 2018Leora Cruddas
This document discusses the development of the self-improving school system in England and considers where it may go next. It provides an overview of how the system has changed significantly since 2010, with more schools becoming academies and teaching school alliances being established. It argues that while standards have risen in many areas, some areas are still being left behind. The document proposes a framework for conceptualizing good system governance, with inspection, intervention, and improvement each playing distinct but aligned roles to drive improvement across the entire system so that every child has access to a great school.
Multi age learning community in action final project by Bidita RahmanBidita Rahman
This is a must-read for anyone who is looking to effectuate real change in any K-12 school system. Through Dr. Cozza's deep understanding of the research and value of a MAC (Multi-age Learning Community), the reader walks away with practical knowledge and guidance to finally transform learning in the schoolhouse so all children can reach their real potential. (Michael J. Hynes Ed.D, superintendent of Patchogue-Medford Schools, Patchogue, NY)
Cozza makes the case that multi-age classrooms are an efficient and cost-effective way to increase personalization for students and further the cause of school reform at scale. Essential reading for students, teachers, parents, and school leaders. (Todd Sumner, principal, Francis W. Parker Charter Essential School and Theodore R. Sizer Teachers Center, Devens, MA)
The Multiage Learning Community in Action is a clear and concise framework for embarking on the journey of multi-age learning in our schools. It blends collaborative cultures, instructional practices, and backward design in curriculum planning to reach the developmentally appropriate needs of all students. (Jeannie Ray-Timoney Ed.D, associate superintendent, Department of Catholic Schools, Portland, OR)
Dr. Barbara Cozza provides a functional framework that takes educators on a transformative journey. A must read for all educators, policymakers, and parents. (Crystal Lindsay, director of school/district improvement initiatives, New York City Department of Education, New York, NY)
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Starcross school trip to Morpha Bay 2013David Carr
This document appears to be notes from a trip to Morfa Bay in 2013 that included various outdoor activities such as mountain biking, archery, beach walks, climbing, hiking, an assault course, orienteering, abseiling, caving, a zipwire, high ropes, and sea activities. The notes end with reflections on the last night of the trip which included a disco and the journey home.
ISS Education has achieved the Bronze Food for Life Catering Mark for its school menus in Devon, guaranteeing that the food meets certain standards such as using free-range eggs, farm-assured meat, organic yogurts, and sustainable fish. The recognition shows that fresh, healthy food you can trust is being served. Pupils will be able to learn more about where their food comes from through an upcoming "Green Fingers" competition and visits from a Blue Peter gardener to see vegetables growing on site.
The document provides information about the spring 2013 season. It is a one sentence document simply stating "Spring 2013", indicating it is referring to that specific season and year without providing any additional context or details.
The document outlines the aims and content of a workshop for school governors on supporting school improvement. It discusses governors' accountability for school improvement and effectiveness, understanding data to evaluate performance, and levers that can drive improvement such as focusing on teaching and learning. It provides examples of effective governance practices like using data to identify priorities and holding leaders accountable. The key takeaways are that governors should understand data, set strategic plans and priorities, and challenge school leaders to improve outcomes for students.
The document discusses memories from the town of Dawlish. In a few brief sentences, it conveys nostalgia for the past and recollections from times spent in the small coastal community. While short, the writing evokes feelings of nostalgia and recollection of personal experiences from the author's time in Dawlish long ago.
The Milky Way galaxy contains billions of galaxies and our solar system is located within it. Our solar system contains a star called the Sun at its center, along with eight planets that orbit the Sun - Mercury, Venus, Earth, Mars, Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, and Neptune. Pluto is now considered a dwarf planet. The four inner planets are rocky and the four outer planets are gas giants. Each planet has unique characteristics and conditions.
This document contains information about the planets and other objects in our solar system. It includes 3 sentences describing Mercury, Venus, Earth, Mars, Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, Neptune and Pluto as well as the Sun. The document was created by Olga Diavastis and contains images of each planetary body.
Devon ISS Information Leaflet Autumn 2013David Carr
This document provides information about school lunches including the food options available, special diets, free school meals, nutrition standards, and the Food for Life catering mark. It also introduces Graham Brunt, a local farmer who supplies vegetables to Devon schools from his 550 acre farm. Theme days and promotions are discussed to educate students about food origins.
This document provides a sample 3-week menu for an autumn/winter term for Devon 3 Choice. Each week includes 5 days of meal options with a meat/fish dish, vegetarian option, jacket potato bar, vegetables, and dessert of the day. A variety of dishes are offered such as pork sausages, beef burgers, shepherd's pie, fish fingers, chicken korma, and more. Side dishes and extras available daily include a salad bar, bread, fruit, yogurts, cheese and crackers, and drinks. All ingredients meet various assurance standards.
Review and forward planning workshop 2012David Carr
This document summarizes a workshop reviewing the Dawlish Learning Partnership's (DLP) achievements in 2011-2012 and plans for 2012-2013. Key points discussed include procurement savings in school meals and cleaning, establishing the DLP and school websites to communicate their work, obtaining external funding, and the achievements of DLP action groups in areas like music, sports, gifted education, and more. The workshop involved presentations from action group chairs and developing a new partnership action plan for the upcoming school year.
School Menue Dawlish Learning Partnership parent packDavid Carr
This document outlines the weekly menus for 3 weeks. Each week includes options for a meat/fish dish, vegetarian dish, jacket potato/pasta, vegetables, and dessert for each day of the week. A variety of dishes are listed, including sausages, lasagna, chicken curry, and fish fingers. Accompaniments include mashed potatoes, rice, salad, chips and other typical side dishes.
Fairtrade Foundation Action guide for schoolsDavid Carr
The document provides a step-by-step guide for schools to promote and support Fairtrade in 2012. It outlines various actions schools can take during Fairtrade Fortnight in February and March, including holding events to raise awareness about Fairtrade and the challenges faced by farmers in developing countries. It also suggests steps for World Fair Trade Day in May, the summer term like organizing an "Unfair Olympics," and the autumn term such as promoting Fairtrade cotton uniforms. The overall goal is for schools, students, teachers, and local communities to work together to support Fairtrade farmers through small, everyday actions.
This document provides an overview of Key Stage 4 for parents, which covers years 10 and 11 of secondary school. It outlines the different qualifications students can study, including GCSEs, BTECs and OCR Nationals. GCSEs are assessed through exams, coursework and controlled assessments. Support is available for students, including tutoring programs, revision classes and liaising with parents. The document aims to help parents understand the assessment system and how they can support their child during these important years.
DLP Gifted and Talented Development Plan 2011 -12David Carr
This document provides a gifted and talented action plan for schools in the DLP collaborative. It outlines three main objectives:
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This document outlines a sports development plan for a collaborative of schools (DLP). It includes 4 steps: 1) Considering feedback on shared development priorities from an area review. 2) Identifying other useful student performance data. 3) Preparing an action plan with objectives and success criteria to improve access to sports and engagement in sports. 4) Preparing and managing a budget for the action plan. The action plan includes initiatives like inter-school sports competitions and improving sports teaching through professional development.
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This presentation includes basic of PCOS their pathology and treatment and also Ayurveda correlation of PCOS and Ayurvedic line of treatment mentioned in classics.
This presentation was provided by Steph Pollock of The American Psychological Association’s Journals Program, and Damita Snow, of The American Society of Civil Engineers (ASCE), for the initial session of NISO's 2024 Training Series "DEIA in the Scholarly Landscape." Session One: 'Setting Expectations: a DEIA Primer,' was held June 6, 2024.
Exploiting Artificial Intelligence for Empowering Researchers and Faculty, In...Dr. Vinod Kumar Kanvaria
Exploiting Artificial Intelligence for Empowering Researchers and Faculty,
International FDP on Fundamentals of Research in Social Sciences
at Integral University, Lucknow, 06.06.2024
By Dr. Vinod Kumar Kanvaria
বাংলাদেশের অর্থনৈতিক সমীক্ষা ২০২৪ [Bangladesh Economic Review 2024 Bangla.pdf] কম্পিউটার , ট্যাব ও স্মার্ট ফোন ভার্সন সহ সম্পূর্ণ বাংলা ই-বুক বা pdf বই " সুচিপত্র ...বুকমার্ক মেনু 🔖 ও হাইপার লিংক মেনু 📝👆 যুক্ত ..
আমাদের সবার জন্য খুব খুব গুরুত্বপূর্ণ একটি বই ..বিসিএস, ব্যাংক, ইউনিভার্সিটি ভর্তি ও যে কোন প্রতিযোগিতা মূলক পরীক্ষার জন্য এর খুব ইম্পরট্যান্ট একটি বিষয় ...তাছাড়া বাংলাদেশের সাম্প্রতিক যে কোন ডাটা বা তথ্য এই বইতে পাবেন ...
তাই একজন নাগরিক হিসাবে এই তথ্য গুলো আপনার জানা প্রয়োজন ...।
বিসিএস ও ব্যাংক এর লিখিত পরীক্ষা ...+এছাড়া মাধ্যমিক ও উচ্চমাধ্যমিকের স্টুডেন্টদের জন্য অনেক কাজে আসবে ...
This slide is special for master students (MIBS & MIFB) in UUM. Also useful for readers who are interested in the topic of contemporary Islamic banking.
Chapter wise All Notes of First year Basic Civil Engineering.pptxDenish Jangid
Chapter wise All Notes of First year Basic Civil Engineering
Syllabus
Chapter-1
Introduction to objective, scope and outcome the subject
Chapter 2
Introduction: Scope and Specialization of Civil Engineering, Role of civil Engineer in Society, Impact of infrastructural development on economy of country.
Chapter 3
Surveying: Object Principles & Types of Surveying; Site Plans, Plans & Maps; Scales & Unit of different Measurements.
Linear Measurements: Instruments used. Linear Measurement by Tape, Ranging out Survey Lines and overcoming Obstructions; Measurements on sloping ground; Tape corrections, conventional symbols. Angular Measurements: Instruments used; Introduction to Compass Surveying, Bearings and Longitude & Latitude of a Line, Introduction to total station.
Levelling: Instrument used Object of levelling, Methods of levelling in brief, and Contour maps.
Chapter 4
Buildings: Selection of site for Buildings, Layout of Building Plan, Types of buildings, Plinth area, carpet area, floor space index, Introduction to building byelaws, concept of sun light & ventilation. Components of Buildings & their functions, Basic concept of R.C.C., Introduction to types of foundation
Chapter 5
Transportation: Introduction to Transportation Engineering; Traffic and Road Safety: Types and Characteristics of Various Modes of Transportation; Various Road Traffic Signs, Causes of Accidents and Road Safety Measures.
Chapter 6
Environmental Engineering: Environmental Pollution, Environmental Acts and Regulations, Functional Concepts of Ecology, Basics of Species, Biodiversity, Ecosystem, Hydrological Cycle; Chemical Cycles: Carbon, Nitrogen & Phosphorus; Energy Flow in Ecosystems.
Water Pollution: Water Quality standards, Introduction to Treatment & Disposal of Waste Water. Reuse and Saving of Water, Rain Water Harvesting. Solid Waste Management: Classification of Solid Waste, Collection, Transportation and Disposal of Solid. Recycling of Solid Waste: Energy Recovery, Sanitary Landfill, On-Site Sanitation. Air & Noise Pollution: Primary and Secondary air pollutants, Harmful effects of Air Pollution, Control of Air Pollution. . Noise Pollution Harmful Effects of noise pollution, control of noise pollution, Global warming & Climate Change, Ozone depletion, Greenhouse effect
Text Books:
1. Palancharmy, Basic Civil Engineering, McGraw Hill publishers.
2. Satheesh Gopi, Basic Civil Engineering, Pearson Publishers.
3. Ketki Rangwala Dalal, Essentials of Civil Engineering, Charotar Publishing House.
4. BCP, Surveying volume 1
Strategies for Effective Upskilling is a presentation by Chinwendu Peace in a Your Skill Boost Masterclass organisation by the Excellence Foundation for South Sudan on 08th and 09th June 2024 from 1 PM to 3 PM on each day.
Main Java[All of the Base Concepts}.docxadhitya5119
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There are 4 phases of wound healing: hemostasis, inflammation, proliferation, and remodeling. This document also describes the mechanism of wound healing. Factors that affect healing include infection, uncontrolled diabetes, poor nutrition, age, anemia, the presence of foreign bodies, etc.
Complications of wound healing like infection, hyperpigmentation of scar, contractures, and keloid formation.
1. Inspiring leaders to
improve children’s lives
Schools and academies
Creating a self-improving school system
David H Hargreaves, July 2010
Resource
“The crisis of the world is, above all, an institutional crisis demanding
institutional innovation” (Peter Drucker)
“The future is already here: it is just not distributed very well”
(William Gibson)
2. Contents
Executive summary 3
Introduction 4
Family virtues 6
The local solutions approach 9
Co-construction in family clusters 10
Expanding system leadership 11
Beyond the self-managing school 12
Conditions of a sustainable self-improving system 13
Towards a mature self-improving system 20
Conclusion 23
Acknowledgements 24
References 25
3. Executive summary
In an era of diminishing centralisation,
accelerating the rate and depth of school
improvement and reducing the number of
underperforming schools requires a new vision.
Since the birth of school improvement in the
1980s, the quality of school leadership has
increased sharply and most schools have gained
experience of working in partnerships and
networks of many kinds. Increased
decentralisation offers an opportunity for the
school system to build on these and become self-
improving.
There are four building blocks of a self-improving
system: clusters of schools (the structure); the
local solutions approach and co-construction (the
two cultural elements); and system leaders (the
key people). These are already partially in place
but need to be strengthened so that schools
collaborate in more effective forms of professional
development and school improvement.
This thinkpiece explores the conditions necessary
to achieve a sustainable, self-improving school
system, with a particular focus on the
development of school clusters and the associated
provision of cluster leaders. A sketch of how such
a system might evolve over the next five years is
offered.
3
4. Introduction
On 18 October 1976, the UK’s Labour prime Should we persist with these same strategies for
minister James Callaghan gave a speech in Ruskin school improvement or is it time for a new vision?
College, Oxford that started what became known Two important changes have occurred that
as the Great Education Debate. At this time it was suggest the need for a new direction. First, the
very unusual for a prime minister to discuss calibre of school leadership has improved, in
education policy in public. In his near-apologetic many places to a dramatic degree, reflecting the
approach to the subject, Callaghan argued that National College’s central task of ensuring the
education was now too important to be left provision of leaders with relevant capabilities.
almost entirely to the teaching profession and Schools are more accustomed to managing their
that many voices, including that of a prime own financial affairs and many have developed
minister, needed to be heard on the purposes of sophisticated continuing professional development
schooling and educational standards. More was (CPD) for their staff. Second, virtually every
being demanded from schools, and core issues, school has experience of partnership with other
such as the desirability of a national curriculum schools, and the education service is now more
and a stronger inspectorate, should be addressed. networked. School leaders are more aware of
schools as a system, and the coalition
Up to this point, England had a highly government’s plans are evidently intended to
decentralised education system. The Ruskin change the shape of this system. A new balance
speech marked the beginning of a new phase, is being struck between centralisation and
which eventually led, under the Conservatives, to decentralisation, with a clear reduction in
the 1988 Education Reform Act that introduced a centralised action, at both national and local
national curriculum and a new assessment levels, and a matching increase in the powers and
system. This was an unprecedented degree of responsibilities of schools.
centralisation but it was matched by a degree of
decentralisation that delegated new financial In this thinkpiece, I argue that increased
powers to schools, and to their headteachers, the decentralisation provides an opportunity for a new
spirit of which was neatly captured in Caldwell vision of school improvement that capitalises on
and Spinks’s The self-managing school, also the gains made in school leadership and in
published in 1988. partnerships between schools. It would usher in a
new era in which the school system becomes the
Significantly, this second half of the 1980s gave major agent of its own improvement and does so
birth to the school improvement movement, at a rate and to a depth that has hitherto been no
which was driven both centrally by a more hands- more than an aspiration. It is essential that such a
on education department and some local change would enhance parental confidence in the
education authorities as well as by more quality of schools and the effectiveness of
enterprising headteachers. Successive teachers, on both of which better educational
governments, both Conservative and Labour, outcomes depend. This short thinkpiece suggests
have for over 20 years pursued this combination – what could be done to realise such a vision. It is
uneasy to some – of centralisation in some not a detailed policy prescription, but a sketch of
respects and decentralisation in others. The the main lines of action that would need to be
constant challenge has been to minimise taken.
variation, not just within and between schools but
also between local authorities, which has led School improvement depends on improved
central government to take ever greater powers leadership, but the necessary scale, speed and
of intervention, backed by national field forces sustainability of leadership development cannot
and strategies. School improvement has thus be achieved by centralised action alone. In the
come to be defined in terms of the processes of College’s innovative local solutions approach to
intervention in schools that are deemed, by the shortage of headteachers, succession
whatever measure, to be underperforming. Much planning takes place across networks of schools
has been achieved, yet it has to be conceded that (in the local authority or the diocese) in ways that
not all schools have improved substantially or are responsive to local circumstances.
even sufficiently over this last quarter century.
4
5. A similar approach is being adopted elsewhere by 4. How might the system move from where
the College to increase the provision of middle it is now to becoming a self-improving
leaders through local clusters of schools as well as system? Do the College’s current
in City Challenge. In this sense, the College is achievements (including those noted
acknowledging changes in the system and then above) contribute to such a system? What
developing them further in the interests of better additional action might be needed?
leadership provision.
5. What would make a fully-fledged self-
Scaling up such local solutions necessarily entails improving system robust and self-
new ways of deploying the headteachers of sustaining?
successful schools, who accept responsibilities
beyond the boundaries of their own schools and The language around the concept of a self-
are prepared to help other schools. The College’s improving system of schools (henceforward a
action with such headteachers – in the form of SISS) is confusing. Associated terms, such as a
national leaders of education (NLEs) and local self-managing system or self-developing system,
leaders of education (LLEs) – runs parallel with are used interchangeably despite variable
the emergence of larger groups of schools in connotations of the terms. At its core, the notion
forms such as federations and chains (Hill, 2010), of a SISS assumes that much (not all) of the
in addition to clusters of schools serving a wide responsibility for school improvement is moved
variety of functions, all of which is altering the from both central and local government and their
shape of the school system. agencies to the schools. An obvious forerunner in
England is local management of schools (LMS),
The College’s work on the provision of school the delegation of financial responsibilities to
leaders has thus evolved from centralised schools in the 1980s, which is generally regarded
provision to the point where the goal is making as a world-leading success story. However, a SISS
leadership development a largely self-generating is not merely the sum total of self-improving
enterprise, grounded in networks of schools. So schools. The system element in a SISS consists of
can the changed strategy of leadership clusters of schools accepting responsibility for
development become the basis for a largely self- self-improvement for the cluster as a whole. A
improving system? Is it possible to move from a SISS embodies a collective responsibility in a way
centralised model of driving every individual that neither school improvement nor LMS has
school to improve itself to a process of systemic ever done. In effect this involves the creation of a
self-improvement that matches the new model of new intermediary body between the individual
leadership development? Indeed, do changes in school and the local authorities, which are usually
leadership development and school improvement seen as the middle tier between central
necessarily have to be aligned? government and the individual school.
In addressing these issues, this thinkpiece poses The architecture of a SISS rests on four main
five linked questions to frame the argument: building blocks:
1. What would a self-improving school capitalising on the benefits of clusters of
system look like and what would be its schools
defining features?
adopting a local solutions approach
2. In what ways would a self-improving
system be an advance on our current stimulating co-construction between
system? schools
3. What would be the system’s building expanding the concept of system
blocks and to what extent is that leadership
architecture already in place?
5
6. Family virtues
The idea of schools working collaboratively has a find it easier to meet the needs of
long history, but recently this has become more every student since the range of
commonplace as a result of government initiatives provision, including curricular and 14-19
(eg, leadership incentive grants), the needs of provision, is much greater than that of a
students (eg, post-16 provision, small A-level single school, and students can easily be
options), the attractions of formal association (eg, moved within the family
federations, trusts), the outcome of critical Ofsted
reports (eg, NLEs), as well as projects aimed deal more effectively with special
directly at fostering inter-school collaboration (eg, education needs, especially when a
the College’s networked learning communities special school is a family member and
(National College, 2006a), some of which professional expertise in particular
continue to this day). So few schools lack aspects of such needs is shared between
experience of partnership, though the character schools
and quality vary considerably, from a relatively
shallow, short-term relationship affecting limited find it easier to meet the needs of
functions and few people (a loose partnership) to every staff member since staff can
a deep, enduring relationship that affects most job-rotate or be offered fresh
functions and most people in the schools (a tight opportunities between schools without
partnership). Very few groups of schools are at changing jobs, and school-based
the tight extreme, with common governance and professional development, enriched by
a collective strategy. the resources of several schools, replaces
out-of-school courses
Various names are used for these partnerships:
support new leaders since the existing
the most common are cluster, network, chain and
headteachers and leaders in the family
family. Agreement on what might be a generic
cluster are at hand to support the
term is lacking, so for the purposes of this
newcomer
thinkpiece I shall use the term family cluster,
because of its organic associations and build leadership capacity and boost
implications. The name has been used within City succession planning since staff are
Challenge to identify schools with statistically interchangeable within the family of
similar intakes in terms of various contextual schools
variables, including prior attainment. Each school
can then examine how it compares with others in protect their members, for while even
the family – to a maximum family size of 22 the most successful schools are, like
schools – in relation to student attainment and businesses (Collins, 2009) vulnerable to
rate of progress. A member of staff from each crisis and failure, if this happens to a
school in the family joins a meeting once or twice school in a strong or tight family cluster,
a term with others to share ideas and materials as other members get an early warning –
well as encourage mutual visiting. The aim is to earlier than Ofsted – and intervene with
share good practice and in particular help low- immediate support without provoking
achieving schools to improve their performance. defensive resistance
In terms of the continuum mentioned above,
many of these partnerships are loose, though distribute innovation by sharing the
some are developing into tighter ones. costs, in time and resources, of new
developments, and by working with other
I use the term family cluster in a stronger sense partners, such as business and further
to indicate an organic and sustainable relationship education
of a relatively small number of schools, between 3
and 12 per cluster. Considerable benefits transfer professional knowledge
potentially accrue to family clusters, which: more readily through joint professional
development and the ease of mentoring
and coaching
6
7. aid the integration of children’s by which the process of mutual improvement
services because external agencies find occurs. Family members both challenge one
it more efficient to work with a family another and support one another, and then
cluster than with separate schools celebrate their individual and collective
achievements.
become more efficient in the use of
resources because schools share both There is a powerful next step: competition
material resources, (eg expensive between family clusters. This has yet to develop
technology or sports facilities) and in our education system, though the phenomenon
human resources (eg, business and is well-established in the business world, where
financial services), especially in primary such clusters would be called strategic alliances or
schools coalitions. Hamel and Prahalad (1994) highlight
one problem in the business world:
Many of the College’s NLEs and LLEs have
discovered these benefits, sometimes as an “Almost every large company has a
unexpected effect of emergency action, where a spaghetti bowl of alliances, but there is
family relationship originates in a crisis and an seldom an overall logic to the set of
NLE assumes a role of responsibility for a school partnerships in that there is no distinctive,
in difficulties. However, these are potential underlying point of view about industry
benefits. To my knowledge, no family cluster, future and no conscious attempt to
even a tight one such as a federation, has yet assemble the companies that have
reaped all these benefits in full. The best clusters complementary skills to turn that
have partially secured some of them, but full conception of the future into reality. Thus,
benefits await cluster maturity. although many companies have a wide
variety of partnerships, the individual
Several schemes 1 have demonstrated that pairing partnerships are often disconnected, each
a high-performing school with a weaker one acts serving an independent and unrelated
as a positive force for improvement. One purpose. By way of contrast, what we have
unanticipated consequence is that the high- in mind are multilateral partnerships that
performing school actively gains from the pairing. possess a clear ‘cumulative logic’.”
There is, of course, a cost involved, but this is
offset by the boost to morale and the professional Hamel & Prahalad, 1994
skills of the lead school’s staff that arise from the
help they offer to schools in difficulties. In the This is precisely the problem in many school
event, both schools improve. System-motivated partnerships too. Many loose clusters are simply
altruism pays rich dividends. too superficial to yield much in the way of family
benefits. Tighter clusters in a SISS ensure that
The more family-like the cluster arrangement, I the different strands of partnership explicitly
suggest, the greater the chance that more of the share a ‘cumulative logic’, the core purpose of
benefits will be realised and the more likely it is which is the joint improvement of teaching and
that all member schools will improve. Cluster learning.
arrangements do not preclude competition
between members, but combine it with co-
operation. This is often the case with business
firms: ‘Co-operation is ceasing to be the opposite
of competition and is becoming, instead, one of
its preferred instruments’ (Deering & Murphy,
2003). The consequential benefits are the means
1
Examples are City Challenge, Leading Edge, and the raising achievement transforming learning (RATL) programme of the Specialist
Schools and Academies Trust (SSAT).
7
8. Hamel and Prahalad also observe that: Clusters are a critical structural building block of a
SISS, but three others are also essential, the first
“Competition for the future often takes of which is breaking free from a dependency
place between coalitions as well as culture in which the solutions to school problems
between individual firms… Managing are thought to lie somewhere beyond the schools
coalitions thus often entails a careful themselves.
balancing of competitive and cooperative
agendas over time. Coalition members
must be careful to keep their competitive
instincts in check or run the risk of
undermining the partnership
prematurely.”
Hamel & Prahalad, 1994
Competition between school clusters similarly
drives the mutual improvement within and
between clusters to the next level, but it takes
skilful leadership to know when to build on
collaboration by the introduction of the friendly
competition that drives up standards in the
interests of collective achievement.
Schools do, of course, form clusters on a
voluntary or self-selected basis, without an
explicit aim of school improvement. The College’s
cluster-based middle leadership development
programme (MLDP) is a projected alternative to
the centralised provision of training for middle
leaders that simply cannot cope with the numbers
needed annually. In the new model, clusters of
schools work together, with trained facilitators, to
provide on-the-job professional development,
supported by College-provided materials. In
parallel, the Training and Development Agency for
Schools (TDA) has developed continuing
professional development (CPD) clusters, showing
how school-focused CPD can be locally provided
in families. All such schemes have a beneficial
impact beyond their stated goal: in particular,
they help to foster and embed a culture of
professional learning within and between schools,
an advance that is critical in moving from a self-
improving school to a self-improving system.
The challenge is whether clusters whose origins
lie in issues other than improvement can make
the transition to inter-school support where the
main rationale of partnership becomes the
cumulative logic of joint improvement.
8
9. The local solutions approach
The College realised that the impending crisis in government in generating system change by
the supply of headteachers could not be averted supporting local solutions in place of top-down
by means of a conventional, centralised model of prescription. As Bunt and Harris (2010) put it:
succession planning; and a solution was
hampered by the perception that headteacher “Government has traditionally found it
supply was the College’s responsibility and each difficult to support genuine local
school had to fend for itself in a competitive solutions while achieving national
market. In reality, the detailed nature of the impact and scale… Centrally driven
succession problem, the kinds of organisations initiatives have struggled to make an
necessarily involved, and the particular kinds of impact on many of the complex issues
action demanded, all varied from place to place. confronting us today…. [This] requires
So the College mapped the national landscape for not only action from government, but
succession planning, provided relevant data and engagement and local knowledge from
evidence, and set in place the overall strategy and citizens. But despite support from
support. The solution, however, was determined across the political spectrum, genuine
and driven locally, tailored to local circumstances localism is something governments find
and resources. This local solutions approach difficult to achieve. What makes ‘local
involves local self-evaluation, local objectives and solutions’ effective is their local
local action plans. It means that, with College specificity, and the ability of groups to
help, problems have to be diagnosed and owned tailor solutions to local contexts. Local
locally, and the commitment and creativity for groups are also best placed to
solutions also generated locally. encourage community engagement on
a social issue, through access to local
The local solutions approach builds the culture of networks and existing relationships.
a SISS, because it necessitates the acceptance by There is therefore an inherent tension
schools of three related ways of thinking about between the factors for successful
their condition and what to do about it. localism and the impulse to achieve
impact nationally… Policymakers need
Schools take ownership of problems and an alternative that combines local
reject the notion that the school itself can action and national scale – an effective
do little or nothing because it is approach to ‘mass localism’.
somebody else’s responsibility to provide
a solution. Mass localism depends on a different
kind of support from government and a
Solutions are seen to be available from different approach to scale. Instead of
within the school system, provided assuming that the best solutions need
schools work together to diagnose the to be determined, prescribed, driven or
problems and devise solutions in their ‘authorised’ from the centre,
mutual interests. policymakers should create more
opportunities for communities to
The school system is not simply an develop and deliver their own solutions
amalgam of isolated schools but a and to learn from each other. It is not
collection of groups of schools that enough to assume that scaling back
sometimes need to collaborate in order to government bureaucracy and control
get better. will allow local innovation to flourish.”
The local solutions approach also involves a Bunt & Harris, 2010
recognition by central government that the
centralised and clumsy one-size-fits-all approach The work of the College has demonstrated the
that ignores local contexts is becoming less and power of such ‘mass localism’ in education and
less appropriate as the local solutions approach is how it is an essential ingredient of a SISS.
embedded, and indeed impedes that process.
What the College has done is very much in line
with new approaches adopted by the new
9
10. Co-construction in family clusters
Families of schools working on local solutions,
whether it is middle leadership or succession
planning, share a common feature: their capacity
to stimulate co-construction among the
participants. The term co-construction has
recently come into widespread use to refer to the
way the partners agree on the nature of the task,
set priorities, co-design action plans, and then
treat their implementation as a co-production. In
some schools, co-construction is also well-
developed between students and teachers in the
co-design of aspects of learning and is associated
with the growth of mentoring and coaching
among students. Co-construction is the action
taken to ensure ‘what works’ in specific contexts
with particular people; it is about adapting and
adjusting the practices of teaching and learning to
secure the promised outcomes.
Co-construction does more than get results.
Through its processes, social capital (trust and
reciprocity) within and between schools is built up
and then fostered by the extent and depth of
mentoring and coaching that is easier to achieve
within a family of schools. The enriched social
capital generated by these organic relationships
enables the member schools’ intellectual capital
(knowledge and skill, core competences) to be
exploited more fully. Schools that offer deep
support to other schools, such as staff in national
support schools working with their NLE
headteacher, repeatedly insist that they too have
gained from the partnership. The activities of co-
construction lead to the co-evolution of the
schools as effective organisations.
Family clusters provide the basic units of a SISS;
the local solutions approach combined with co-
construction provides its collaborative culture. The
complexities of school systems mean that many of
the family benefits arising from schemes of school
improvement and professional development are
being secured as a by-product of action with a
more limited aim. It is opportune to consolidate
what began as separate developments in a way
that reaps the benefits of clusters. But for this to
amount to a SISS, its fourth building block is
critical.
10
11. Expanding system leadership
In education, the term system leader, originally All the projects linked to clusters entail forms of
introduced by Michael Fullan (2005) has now distributed leadership. Because professional work in
attracted various definitions. They have in common clusters necessitates a system view and the three
three core features, all of which reflect a deep moral core features of system leadership noted above, it
purpose: should be recognised as system leadership now
being distributed to all levels. Teachers are, from
a value: a conviction that leaders should early in their professional development, being
strive for the success of all schools and their progressively inducted into the knowledge and skills
students, not just their own that will be required of system leaders at the higher
levels. Individual professional development and
a disposition to action: a commitment to organisational development are becoming
work with other schools to help them to inextricably interwoven. Teaching and leading go
become successful hand in hand and acting on this helps to build
leadership capacity within and between schools in
a frame of reference: understanding one’s the family. Unless the ideas and implications for
role (as a person or institution) as a servant action of system leadership are widely diffused, the
leader for the greater benefit of the teaching profession and its leaders will not take
education service as a whole collective responsibility both for the success of all
schools in the system and for ensuring the
The term is already expanding, despite being so new development of system leaders.
and relatively little known or understood. Originally
the term was most often applied to headteachers In short, the College’s work on succession planning
ready to work with other schools in difficulties – thus and middle leaders has, along with parallel
NLEs and LLEs. It is now applied more generally to developments elsewhere in the education service,
heads working to support schools other than their created new structures and cultures that are leading
own and to school improvement partners (SIPs). many teachers, and especially senior school leaders,
The College’s role in the development and provision to adopt a systemic perspective on their work and a
of system leaders in England has been substantial commitment to system improvement. In the best
(National College, 2006b; Carter & Sharpe, 2006; current practice, students too are adopting a system
Coleman, 2008). view by offering support to students in schools other
than their own. The leadership building blocks for a
Recent and rapid changes in leadership SISS are already being put in place.
development, including the College’s projects on
succession planning and middle leadership, indicate
that the numbers of system leaders at headteacher
level need to be increased and an understanding of
system leadership needs to be extended to staff at
every level. We need also to go beyond the need for
some very good schools to intervene in failing
schools to a position where good schools can learn
with and from one another so that they become
great schools. Happily, the evidence is that many
headteachers are interested in some kind of system
leader role; most teachers on leadership courses
now want to take a big-picture or systemic view of
schooling, not merely a narrow preparation for a
particular role; and most do, or want to, spend time
in schools other than their own.
11
12. Beyond the self-managing school
For the last quarter of the 20th century, a major
task for school leaders in England was the
development of the self-managing school, and in
this England has led the way internationally. As
schools became more self-managing over some
two decades, they were enabled to become more
self-improving – when they were well led. Today’s
system leaders are a direct product of successful
leadership of self-managing schools. A major task
for school leaders in the first quarter of the 21st
century may be the development of the self-
managing school system. Achieving this status is
likely to be a precondition of becoming a self-
improving system.
Central to the success of such a mission would be
an increased capacity of schools to improve
themselves. For many years, the process of
school improvement was led, even determined, by
central and local government intervention,
because most schools had not reached the level
of self-management to be able to move to self-
improvement. Today’s outstanding school leaders,
who masterminded the powerful co-evolution of
self-management and self-improvement, have
often become NLEs or LLEs helping other schools
at the same time as becoming the entrepreneurial
leaders of established, longer-term family clusters
of schools, which is a new organisational form.
A SISS depends on the creation of family
clusters, but ones of the right kind will not
emerge unless they are led, initially at least, by
the headteachers of highly successful schools
willing to be system leaders. What more, then,
needs to be done, by the College and by other
agencies, to pave the way for a self-managing
and self-improving school system and to effect
the transition from where we are now to a robust
and sustainable SISS?
12
13. Conditions of a sustainable self-improving
system
To create a sustainable SISS, three key questions above, few schools will opt for either extreme
need to be answered. position – the near-permanent tie of federations
or trusts at the tight end and the shallow
What sorts of family clusters are commitments at the loose end – preferring the
needed in a SISS and what action is flexibility and moderate constraints of more
needed to create them to scale? central positions.
Many of the clusters in National College schemes Most clusters will be geographically local, since
are not newly formed, but based on existing two key features of close collaboration are ease of
clusters, such as SCITT and EBITT (school- face-to-face contact and mobility of staff and
centred and employment-based initial teacher students. Some existing clusters have members
training respectively) clusters, as well as some distance apart, even in different local
federations and trusts. Collaborative clusters have authorities, which have boundaries that are often
over the years taken many forms: some senior arbitrary. Distant family clusters might later
staff retain fond memories of TVEI collaboration dissolve, with each member starting a new local
in the 1980s. cluster. Whilst local clusters will probably become
the dominant type, some of which will span local
What types of family cluster are likely to populate authority boundaries, other types, for instance
a SISS? The most common, I suspect, will be a not-so-local clusters of faith schools, may thrive.
homogeneous family cluster, either from the same
phase (eg, a cluster of primary schools) or same Some headteachers, and even more governing
faith (eg, a group of Catholic schools). Most bodies, are wary or even sceptical about families
current ones are of this type. of schools. Indeed, some governors find it difficult
to think beyond the individual school that they
There are also heterogeneous family clusters, for may have loyally served over many years, and so
example comprising one secondary school with its are more resistant to new partnerships than their
feeder primaries, and perhaps a special school. own headteacher. Much the same may be said of
These are particularly suitable for rural areas, parents, only a small minority of whom have
where the single secondary school’s intake comes experience of a family cluster. But clusters cannot
mainly from local primary schools. be imposed on unwilling schools: that would
undermine a SISS. It would be essential to
Mixed family clusters are a third type, for instance harness the support of headteachers, governors
when a cluster of maintained sector schools and parents by making them more aware of the
includes just one faith school or an independent many benefits of family clusters. Some start-up
school, or when schools of different faiths, such additional funding might be a necessary incentive
as Christian, Jewish and Muslim schools, form a until the benefits, including cost-saving ones, are
mixed-faith family. recognised. Schools in mature family clusters
happily pay into the cluster as a recognised
Some existing federations, of either schools or investment (Hill, 2010).
academies, were formed with a business, charity
or academic sponsor. In the case of what are
popularly called hard federations, where the
governing bodies of more than one school
amalgamate, the ties could be difficult to dissolve.
Some family clusters created by NLEs started, as
it were, as an equivalent to a merger or
acquisition in the business world. I suspect that
most family clusters in a SISS will be brokered
and essentially voluntary relationships, with a
more flexible, less permanent tie than that of the
hard federation or trust. In terms of the loose–
tight continuum of partnership I proposed
13
14. Not all clusters would be newly formed: many with the College to broker clusters, then support
already exist under a variety of names reflecting and monitor their self-improvement, in place of
different purposes and origins, including some direct provision for school improvement.
recent ones, such as national challenge trust
schools and federations, and accredited school Will there be enough system leaders
groups or providers. New clusters may well arise to take to scale the number of clusters
from policies adopted by the new government. to make effective family clusters
Some outstanding primary schools will be sustainable?
reluctant to lose the support their local authority
offers by becoming a lone academy, but might NLEs, concludes a recent review (Hill & Matthews,
choose to become one within a self-managing 2010), are in the vanguard of transforming
family cluster with shared administrative support. England’s education system, and:
This would reduce back-office costs and minimise
the burden on individual headteachers. As they “the successful recruitment,
work with underachieving schools, a family of deployment and expansion of a cadre
academies would become self-improving. of schools capable of sharing their
excellence with other schools and,
Some rationalisation of clusters could forestall where necessary, taking over and
unnecessary overlap and undesirable rescuing failing institutions, introduces
bureaucracy. It is possible to start with small a powerful lever for change into the
clusters of three or four schools that could, with school system. By showing that they
experience, expand into larger families. can bring about change in the most
intractably underperforming or
For the system to become self-improving, it is not challenging schools, NLEs have
necessary for every school to join a cluster. demonstrated their capacity as agents
Freestanding schools can, as now, be self- of change. They and their schools relish
evaluating and self-improving units. Indeed, this such work; their governors are
is how many schools have achieved outstanding persuaded of the mutual benefits; and
status. There may be good reasons why a school tens of thousands of children and
should not join a cluster and could continue as at young people are getting a better deal
present either within a local authority or as an as a result.”
academy, free school or trust. A balance would
need to be struck between offering incentives to Hill & Matthews, 2010:116
schools to join clusters and acknowledging that
this would not always be the right way for some Capturing the knowledge and skills of these
schools. exceptional pioneers of system leadership and
transferring it to leaders who follow in the wake of
Were many, even most, schools to join family the trailblazers is now the task of the College.
clusters, this would herald changes for local
authorities and their relationships with schools. As The leaders of outstanding schools fall into two
schools became self-managing, they became less categories: those who want to be or have become
reliant on the local authority: the transition was system leaders working with other schools, and
not always easy. As schools become self- those with little interest in system leadership.
improving, the transition will again be one that Among the latter are those who have simply not
local authorities must decide to support or resist. been given or have not availed themselves of
Hitherto, the local authority has been the middle opportunities for system leadership and those
tier between central government and the who may fear that a close partnership with other
individual school, but clusters are now an schools will jeopardise their achievements and
emergent kind of middle tier. Some local reputation. The task is to persuade many of this
authorities have been active in the promotion of group to join the former group, as could happen
clusters: they are well-placed to phase out their in the new government’s policy that outstanding
own school improvement arm and transfer self- schools may become academies on the condition
improvement responsibility and activity to family that they work with at least one other school.
clusters. In a SISS, the local authority would work
14
15. The skills of leading a successful school and the In the business world some partnerships work
skills of helping another school to become equally and others fail, and it will be much the same with
successful are not, however, coterminous. This schools. Recent research suggests three core
was the mistake made with Beacon schools, features of inter-firm partnership competence:
introduced in 1998. Some schools knew how to
make effective partnerships with other schools, co-ordination: building consensus on
and improved their skills in so doing. But others partnership goals, ways of working, roles
did not. It takes talent to be a successful head, of and responsibilities
course, but that talent is not enough for the
highest forms of system leadership. (As some communication: being open and
headteachers in their second headship know to honest, sharing information fully and with
their cost, having run one school successfully accuracy and in a timely way
does not in itself guarantee one can replicate this
in a different school.) For a school to achieve an bonding: creating trust and ensuring
Ofsted grade of ‘good’ or ‘outstanding’, the that people get pleasure from working
headteacher must be expert at what in the together
business world would be called the core
competences 2 that underpin success. In The distinctive constituents of partnership
schooling, the most critical core competences are: competence in education are becoming clear.
Among them I would include:
the relentless focus on learning and
teaching, and the conviction that the best the conception of the school as a learning
teaching and learning yield high community, with the expansion of school-
examination and test results and rounded based CPD to embrace mentoring and
persons with the right qualities for a coaching, teachers’ observations of one
successful life in the 21st century another at work and the co-construction
of better professional practice
ensuring order, attendance and good
behaviour as a precondition of the investment in innovation in teaching
improvement in learning and teaching and learning (‘doing things differently in
order to do them better’), arising from
Knowing how to lead a high-performing school is CPD that is school-based and classroom-
a necessary but not always a sufficient condition focused, with ‘learning as the bridge
of knowing how to help another school to between working and innovating’ (Brown
succeed. NLEs and LLEs and similar cluster & Duguid, 1991) so that improvement
leaders are successful in what they do because becomes an inherent part of teacher
they possess some additional competences. In the professionalism
business world, the similar notion of alliance
capabilities and how to develop them has been distributed leadership, with an emphasis
well-researched 3, but its equivalent in the on preparing leaders at every level,
education field is at a much lower level. The including pupils, by identifying talent and
ability to forge partnerships with other schools is empowering the taking of responsibility
not yet one of the core competences of highly and initiative
successful schools. Creating a SISS entails
ensuring that what one might call partnership
competence becomes a core competence of all
headteachers.
2
Hamel & Prahalad (1994) define a core competence as ‘a bundle of skills and technologies that enables a company to provide a
particular benefit to customers.’
3
Robert Spekman & Lynn Isabella, 2000, Alliance Competence, John Wiley; James Austin, 2000, The Collaboration Challenge, Jossey-
Bass; Deering & Murphy, op.cit; Koen Heimericks, 2008, Developing Alliance Capabilities, Palgrave Macmillan, where alliance capability
is defined as an organisation’s ‘ability to capture, share, disseminate, internalise and apply alliance management know-how and
know-why.’
15
16. the recognition that working with another spending time understanding the culture
school is a reciprocal process, because and working methods of partners and
there is always something to be learned using differences as a spur to learning
both from and with others rather than conflict
local knowledge and the ability to adapt having open communication between
whatever arises, from necessity or partners, covering performance data and,
preference, to the immediate context, as they arise, differences and changing
with its distinctive history and culture circumstances
The first three are prerequisites for the whole developing strong links between
staff of the lead school, not just the headteacher, organisations at all levels so that
to engage professionally with the whole staff of a partnership is supported by a dense web
partner school; the fourth removes the suspicion of interpersonal connections
by staff in the partner school that they are being
treated as inferiors without any worthwhile spending as much time on building up
qualities and something is being done to them, commitment to collaborative activity
not with them; and the last is the sensitivity to within an organisation as on building
context, including the personalities and cultures in relationships with partners
partner schools, to support making the right
decisions in the right way at the right time. using interim or input measures to assess
a partnership’s early progress before the
System leaders build such competences into their full value of a partnership comes through
own school, so they are well-placed to transfer
them to a less successful one. It is never just a agreeing a clear status and remit and
matter of what the headteacher does. It is decision processes for the collaboration
because the rest of the staff, some of whom may
have more experience and insight than their It is system leaders with partnership competence
headteacher into the art of working laterally who should take the lead in family clusters.
rather than vertically, are also able to transfer Without them, teachers may busily share good
their values and ways of working – their shared practice, that is, talk about what they do, but
partnership competence – to another school in without any significant change in their practice. As
their cluster. A precondition of being able to Michael Huberman (1995) puts it, ‘There is a
transfer professional knowledge and skills into “discussion culture” among teachers…
another school is the honed experience of so interspersed with timid attempts at the level of
doing in one’s own school. This is precisely what actual implementation… To get from a peer
distributed system leadership means in practice. discussion to its enactment in one’s classroom is a
The exemplary school has to replicate its culture, phenomenal leap.’ What we are after is
not just some of its practices, in the less knowledge transfer, by which I mean that a
successful one if the relationship is to be teacher successfully puts into practice something
transformative on a sustainable basis. new that has been learned from another teacher.
Drawing on the business literature as well as
directly from school partnerships, Robert Hill
(2008; 2004) has provided a high-quality guide
for school leaders. Key lessons include:
ensuring that collaboration fits with the
objectives of all the partners so that
everyone involved wants to make the
partnership work
16
17. This is not a simple, straightforward business 4, Without nodal system leaders at its heart, there is
but conditions that facilitate it obtain in schools a serious risk that a cluster-based system would
that distribute system leadership and work in a merely recycle mediocrity and affirm
cluster. Huberman’s model for effective complacency, or would simply collapse because
knowledge transfer, which he calls the ‘open the headteachers lack partnership competence
collective cycle’, is based on two premises: the and/or there is too little pay-off from the
group of teachers shares the same subject or partnership. Embedding the ambition, drive and
discipline but its members come from different know-how for deep school improvement in
schools; the cycle of professional development is clusters is vital for a robust and sustainable SISS.
managed by this group, not a consultant. Family Many clusters contain good schools that have the
clusters are the ideal location for Huberman’s potential to be outstanding. The Good to Great
approach. (G2G) programme in London (Matthews &
McLaughlin, 2010) has demonstrated that with
It will take some time to generate a the right kind of inter-school support, based on
comprehensive, evidence-based understanding of mentoring and coaching, good schools can indeed
partnership competence within clusters of schools. be raised to the level of outstanding, and that
In the interim, school leaders can profit from must be one of the purposes of family clusters.
experience in the business sector 5, where there is
extensive advice on the selection of partners and Ideally for a SISS, then, there should be enough
making the partnership effective. One notion nodal system leaders to ensure one per cluster. At
education could usefully borrow from business this stage, of course, it is impossible to estimate
comes from Hamel and Prahalad (1994). In their how many clusters of what size might arise over
study of business coalitions, they talk about a what timescale 6. The College would need to
nodal company at the centre of the network or determine the knowledge, skills and experience
coalition with a large share of influence within it: appropriate for a nodal system leader and then
recruit and prepare them to the desired scale.
“Nodal firms must accept that all coalition This is an intellectual and practical challenge for
partners may not have the same level of the College, but one of its most urgent tasks. The
commitment to the concept. Partners College should use its current experience of
exhibit a wide variety of interests and brokering and supporting clusters, including its
varying levels of commitment… Nodal firms new approaches to succession planning and
need to have this perspective and middle leadership development as well as the
understanding in order to manage each experience gained from City Challenge, to provide
partner appropriately… Influence within the written guidance and training on best practice for
coalition comes from an ability to recognize self-improving clusters.
and then exploit, or redirect and frustrate,
the differing agendas and concepts of self-
interest possessed by the various
partners… Any one company’s capacity to
motivate, direct and manage the coalition
derives not from legal control and unilateral
dependency, but from political skills,
possession of critical competences, a clearly
articulated and inspiring point of view
about the future, and a track record of
honouring commitments to partners.”
Hamel & Prahalad, 1994
4
Mark Ackerman, Volmar Pipek & Volker Wulf, 2003, Sharing Expertise, MIT Press; Gabriel Szulanski, 2003, Sticky Knowledge, Sage; Paul
Hildreth & Chris Kimble, 2004, Knowledge Networks, Idea Group Publishing.
5
See footnote 3 above.
6
By May 2010 the College had recruited, designated and deployed 431 NLEs and 825 LLEs. At the same time there are 5,000 accredited
SIPs and 600 professional partners (experienced headteachers who provide structured mentoring and support to newly appointed
heads). 17
18. Is this task easier than it was with the first system demonstrating leading-edge pedagogy
leaders? Richard Elmore (2008) argues that once
teachers adopt a system perspective, they treat exemplifying high-quality assessment for
their knowledge and skills not as professional learning
private property, but as a collective good that
should be shared with colleagues. He also providing teams of experts (eg, advanced
questions the common view of leaders as people skills teachers) and enquiry and research
with highly unusual personal attributes who are, teams
almost by definition, in a permanent minority. In
place of this ‘essentialist’ definition of leadership, The extensive professional development of middle
he argues that what outstanding leaders have is leaders and aspirant headteachers in recent
knowledge and skill of particular kinds. When years, as well as the College’s work on succession
such leaders first emerge, they are indeed planning, is producing a cohort of better
unusual, as was the case with NLEs. The prepared, system-orientated leaders at just below
imperative task is to separate what they do headteacher level, some of whom will be ready
(leadership) from who they are (leaders) so that for more active system leadership in the near
their practices can be captured, codified and future. As elements of system leadership become
taught to others, often through mentoring and an inherent part of the training of leaders at levels
coaching. The task, in other words, is to ensure other than headteacher – middle leaders who
the wider distribution of partnerships competence, have day-to-day responsibility for much inter-
of which we now have a better grasp, through an school mentoring and coaching, and the facilitator
expanded cohort of system leaders. The College roles in the middle leadership development
and its partners have to prepare system leaders programme – headteacher leaders of clusters
slightly ahead of the pace at which family clusters have a higher level of human capital on which to
of schools are formed so that every family can rely. Indeed, in best current practice leadership
initially be led by a prepared system leader. At the talent is being spotted and developed in initial
same time, many clusters do not contain teacher training and early years within the
members who are in, or close to, special profession. It is now possible for the most
measures, and so the high-level skills of NLEs and talented to become an assistant headteacher
LLEs would not always be so critical to self- within three years.
improving cluster success.
Hitherto much leadership development has been
The pool from which system leaders can be to increase the organisational capacity of
recruited and trained is itself being enlarged. New autonomous schools. All the above demonstrates
forms of school-based leadership development are how the College’s most recent focus on system
a rich breeding ground for future system leaders, leadership is geared to enhance the system
such as the facilitators in the College’s middle capacity on which a self-improving system
leadership development clusters and those in key critically depends. The way forward for the
roles in the national teaching schools, which have College has two obvious elements:
devised ways of:
scaling up the recruitment and training of
engaging in effective school-to-school system leaders
support at middle leadership level that
focuses on building sustainable bringing together into a more coherent
leadership capacity whole its wealth of experience of relevant
work at various levels of leadership other
developing expert practitioners able to than the headteacher, for here lies the
deliver high-quality coaching and essential complementary support that
teaching programmes would make self-improving clusters
effective
providing professional development in
leading teaching and learning
18
19. What inevitably began as separate strands of the
College’s work at different levels, often in
different locations, and led by different people,
should now be aggregated into a compelling
vision of a SISS, with a consolidation of recent
projects and a specification of the further work
needed to realise the vision.
How can the process of self-
improvement be assured?
Although both schools and the inspection system
have in recent times increased the importance of
school self-evaluation, guidance has mainly been
directed to the individual school rather than a
family of schools, with the exceptions of a
National College publication (NCSL, 2006c) and
the TDA’s development of a benchmarking tool for
effective practice in CPD clusters. At present,
many headteachers complain in vain that Ofsted
ignores cluster membership, even when it
evidently contributes to better teaching and
learning. Ofsted should formally assess the quality
not only of the individual school, but also of the
cluster of which it is a member, including the
extent to which the cluster realises the family
benefits noted above. Ideally, Ofsted would also
report on student performance and progress at
the cluster level as well as at individual school
level, which would show how family clusters raise
the achievement of all students. Clusters need to
be accountable for what they do and for their
added value.
The most detailed knowledge about what makes
an effective family cluster, including how well it
manages continuous self-improvement, is likely to
come from those who take the lead in brokering
and supporting such partnerships, namely the
College and the local authority. All three parties of
College, local authorities and Ofsted play a role in
identifying dysfunctional clusters (for some would
undoubtedly come to light) and in shaping
remedial action. As knowledge of what makes
effective nodal school leaders and self-improving
clusters sharpens, and it becomes easier to
identify them, there is considerable scope for
exemplary clusters to work laterally to support
newly-formed clusters and those in difficulties.
19
20. Towards a mature self-improving system
Originally the College’s task was to ensure the Over a five-year period, the College
continued supply of school leaders. As the recruited, prepared and designated
concept of school leaders has broadened and the sufficient system leaders for nodal
scale of provision has grown, the College’s focus schools and, with the local authorities,
has turned to problem prevention, creating sensitively brokered cluster
system-based means by which schools and local arrangements. Many schools now
authorities take ownership of leadership belong to two clusters:
development and devise sustainable ways of
identifying, preparing and supporting leaders at a homogeneous family of schools of
many different levels. Leadership development is the same phase/type (primary,
now conceptualised as a progressive trajectory secondary, special, faith etc) to
supported throughout a teaching career. As in ensure improvement of phase-
turn the teaching profession progressively specific matters
develops a more sophisticated conception of
leadership and its role in school improvement, the a heterogeneous family of mixed
building blocks of a self-improving system are put phases/types, the most common of
in place, ready for consolidation, expansion and which would be a geographically local
further development. mix of primary, secondary and
special schools, at the heart of which
An explicit intention to move to a SISS over the is a secondary school with its feeder
next five years would be an ambitious but primary schools
attainable goal, fully in line with Secretary of
State Michael Gove’s declaration at the College’s In both of each school’s clusters, the
national conference in June 2010 that ‘At the content and timing of professional
heart of this government’s vision for education is development are aligned across
a determination to give school leaders more member schools so that close
power and control; not just to drive improvement collaboration is common. Staff and
in their own schools, but to drive improvement students move between schools in
across our whole education system.’ accordance with needs and
opportunities. A few schools are in very
Key policy decisions to help progress towards a tight clusters in the form of federations
SISS would include: or chains, with an executive
headteacher. At the other extreme,
confirmation of the College’s direction of some schools have chosen not to
travel on leadership development, local belong to a cluster. Whilst they mainly
solutions and school-to-school support stand alone, they network with clusters
as the need or inclination arises. Most
a requirement that the College family clusters fall between these
strengthen the building blocks of a SISS, extremes. As headteachers change, so
especially the provision of system leaders do some cluster arrangements. It is the
and leaders of family clusters to greater voluntary membership and flexible ties
scale, as well as written guidance on best that make the family cluster so
practice for self-improving clusters attractive and effective.
the support for new roles and The NLEs, whose specialist skills of
responsibilities for the key agencies (the working with failing schools are not
College, TDA, local authorities and needed by most nodal school leaders,
Ofsted) continue their work. Where a failing
school has not been a member of a
What, then, would the landscape of a maturing cluster, joining one and developing
self-improving school system look like? A short partnership skills is part of the
speculation is in order: what could be achieved by remediation.
2015?
20
21. The emergent range of patterns is support, clusters either failed to
considerable and at first sight looks collaborate in sufficient depth or simply
chaotic when compared with the collapsed. In a few cases, the College
isolated schools of the old local had to de-designate a nodal school and
education authorities with their strict its leader.
boundaries. This is a natural and
inevitable consequence of local One example of the impact of the new
solutions: different kinds of cluster are arrangements on teaching and learning
appropriate to different areas, urban is the provision for middle leaders in
versus rural, and to local contexts and primary and secondary schools. Each
cultures. Moreover, some local cluster runs a middle leadership course
authorities responded positively to their on a regular basis: every middle leader
brokering role, but others did not, has, as an entitlement, access to such
especially where clusters straddled local a course, which builds on work under
authority boundaries, necessitating way in each cluster’s routine
intervention from the Department for professional development. As part of
Education. As in chaos and complexity the course, middle leaders engage in
theory, however, below the surface is a development tasks that contribute to
new kind of order in which schools the improvement plans of their own
working together in networks have school as well to those of the other
aligned their continuing professional schools in the cluster. The impact of
development and their leadership the course on teaching and learning is
development, and woven these into a key criterion of course effectiveness.
their school development and The strongest impact has been on
improvement plans, both for each secondary school subject departments
school and for other schools in the of just one or two teachers, where the
cluster. ability to work with their equivalents in
other schools has come as a boon.
It was quickly realised that the majority Middle leaders now grow fast in their
of school leaders lacked in-depth understanding of, and contribution to,
experience of working with other system leadership.
schools, and their partnership
competence was over-estimated: A second example is the revised
enthusiasm outpaced skill. Progress in implementation of assessment for
cluster formation and development was learning (AfL), an evidence-based
accelerated in two ways. First, as the approach to enhancing teacher action
College prepared more leaders of nodal in classrooms that raises test scores
schools, experienced clusters and their and students’ meta-cognitive skills. The
leaders at various levels worked conventional way to induct teachers
laterally with new clusters. Some into AfL was by teacher attendance at a
schools in well-established clusters left day’s course. Although teachers were
their cluster to start a new one. strongly attracted to the ideas, in
Second, local authorities provided practice they found them simply too
facilitators for cluster development or difficult to implement. Under the family
outsourced the task to those with the cluster system, one school took several
necessary expertise – the College’s role months to embed AfL through
being to quality assure and accredit sustained professional development,
training programmes. Mentoring and and then used its expertise to transfer
coaching has not been a normal part of the practice to other schools in the
teacher training, and only with help family through mentoring and
could many teachers develop the coaching. What was once a widespread
confidence and skills to ensure the failure has now become a successful
transfer of best practice between model of effective professional
schools. In the absence of such development.
21
22. At the leading edge of such
developments are clusters reaching a
high level of maturity: they are reaping
in full the benefits of family
arrangements. Criteria for cluster
effectiveness have been devised and
disseminated. More schools are
attracted to join clusters as the benefits
become better known.
The key metrics for the effectiveness of
cluster arrangements are the
proportions of schools in difficulties or
special measures and those rated
outstanding by Ofsted. Clusters have
demonstrated their power by the
preventative action that has reduced
the number falling into difficulties and,
where this has happened, by speeding
recovery. The number of schools rated
outstanding has risen. Most importantly
of all, student performance as
measured by examination and test
results is again rising steadily: the
plateau effect of the previous era of
school improvement has been
overcome in the new era of systemic
self-improvement.
22
23. Conclusion
It has long been known that the most powerful
influences on teachers are other teachers, but
policies have rarely built on the fact. The best way
of exploiting this phenomenon is through regular,
face-to-face encounters among professionals that
focus on the improvement of teaching and
learning. Under the direction of system leaders,
clusters of schools are the simplest way of
maximising inter-school professional development
as the main driver of a SISS. Once established, a
SISS potentially reduces the need for extensive
bureaucratic, top-down systems of monitoring to
check on school quality, the imposition of
improvement strategies that are relatively
insensitive to local context, with out-of-school in-
service courses not tailored to individual
professional needs, and external, last-ditch
interventions to remedy schools in difficulties, all
of which are very costly and often only partially
successful. In a self-improving school system,
more control and responsibility passes to the local
level in a spirit of mutual aid between school
leaders and their colleagues, who are morally
committed to imaginative and sustainable ways of
achieving more ambitious and better outcomes.
England is part way there. Will it now decide to
travel the rest of the journey?
23
24. Acknowledgements
I am most grateful to Toby Greany, Maggie Farrar
and Katy Emmerson, and many of their National
College colleagues, as well as to those who
attended invited seminars, for their constructive
comments and suggestions on earlier drafts of
this paper.
For further information about other research
available from the National College please visit
www.nationalcollege.org.uk/publications
24
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