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    District Leadership That Works: Striking the Right Balance

    5.0 3

    by Robert J. Marzano, Timothy Waters


    Paperback

    $29.95
    $29.95

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    • ISBN-13: 9781935249191
    • Publisher: Solution Tree Press
    • Publication date: 04/28/2009
    • Pages: 168
    • Sales rank: 264,135
    • Product dimensions: 7.00(w) x 9.90(h) x 0.50(d)

    Table of Contents

    About the Authors ix

    1 Does District Leadership Matter? 1

    The Study 2

    The Relationship Between District Leadership and Student Achievement 4

    What Does a Correlation Tell You? 4

    Specific Leadership Behaviors 5

    Ensuring Collaborative Goal Setting 6

    Establishing Nonnegotiable Goals for Achievement and Instruction 6

    Creating Board Alignment With and Support of District Goals 7

    Monitoring Achievement and Instruction Goals 7

    Allocating Resources to Support the Goals for Instruction and Achievement 8

    A Surprising and Perplexing Finding: Defined Autonomy 8

    The "Bonus" Finding 9

    The District, Schools, and Teachers Working Together 9

    Summary 12

    2 Putting Our Findings in Perspective 13

    Districts and Schools as Loosely Coupled Systems 13

    Issues With Site-Based Management 15

    The Call for Tight Coupling Regarding Achievement and Instruction 18

    The Evidence From High-Reliability Organizations 19

    The Evidence From Worldwide Study of Effective Schools 20

    A New View of District Leadership 21

    Summary 22

    3 Setting and Monitoring Nonnegotiable Goals for Achievement 23

    The Context for Setting and Monitoring Nonnegotiable Goals for Achievement 24

    The Need for a Formatively Based, Value-Added System 27

    Characteristics of a Formatively Based, Value-Added System 29

    Phase 1 Reconstitute State Standards as Measurement Topics or Reporting Topics 30

    Monitoring Phase 1 36

    Phase 2 Track Student Progress on Measurement Topics Using Teacher-Designed and District-Designed Formative Assessment 39

    Monitoring Phase 2 42

    Phase 3 Provide Support for Individual Students 43

    Monitoring Phase 3 47

    Phase 4 Redesign Report Card 48

    Monitoring Phase 4 52

    Summary52

    4 Setting and Monitoring Nonnegotiable Goals for Instruction 53

    Characteristics of High-Quality Teachers 54

    A Focus on Pedagogy 56

    Phase 1 Systematically Explore and Examine Instructional Strategies 57

    Monitoring Phase 1 59

    Phase 2 Design a Model or Language of Instruction 60

    Monitoring Phase 2 61

    Phase 3 Have Teachers Systematically Interact About the Model or Language of Instruction 62

    Monitoring Phase 3 63

    Phase 4 Have Teachers Observe Master Teachers (and Each Other) Using the Model of Instruction 63

    Monitoring Phase 4 65

    Phase 5 Monitor the Effectiveness of Individual Teaching Styles 65

    Monitoring Phase 5 69

    Summary 70

    5 Collaborative Goal Setting, Board Alignment, and Allocation of Resources 71

    Collaborative Goal Setting 71

    Board Alignment and Support 75

    Allocation of Resources 77

    The United States Versus Other Countries 79

    Summary 85

    6 Defined Autonomy in a High-Reliability District 87

    The Common Work of Schools Within a District 89

    School Leadership for Defined Autonomy 90

    District Initiative: Ensure Collaborative Goal Setting 94

    District Initiative: Establish Nonnegotiable Goals for Achievement and Instruction 96

    District Initiative: Create Board Alignment and Support 97

    District Initiative: Monitor Nonnegotiable Goals 98

    District Initiative: Allocate Resources 99

    Summary and Conclusions 103

    7 The Perils and Promises of Second-Order Change 105

    Living Through the Tough Times 107

    Some Advice for District Leaders 109

    Recommendation #1 Know the Implications of Your Initiatives 109

    Recommendation #2 Maintain a Unified Front 109

    Recommendation #3 Keep the Big Ideas in the Forefront 110

    Recommendation #4 Use What Is Know About Acceptance of New Ideas 110

    Recommendation #5 Communicate With "Sticky Messages" 111

    Recommendation #6 Manage Personal Transitions 112

    Revisiting the Bonus Finding 113

    Epilogue 115

    Technical Notes 117

    Technical Note 1.1 Interpretation of Correlation Between Principal Leadership and Student Achievement 117

    Technical Note 1.2 General Methodology Used in This Study 118

    Technical Note 1.3 Binomial Effect Size Display Interpretation of Correlations 126

    Technical Note 1.4 Correlation for Five District Responsibilities or Initiatives 129

    Technical Note 1.5 Correlation for Defined Autonomy 131

    Technical Note 1.6 Tenure 132

    Technical Note 1.7 District, School, and Teacher Effects 132

    Technical Note 3.1 Standardized Mean Difference Effect Size (ESd) 138

    Technical Note 3.2 Interpretation of Durlak and Weissberg (2007) Findings 139

    Appendix 141

    Reports Used in Meta-Analysis 141

    References 143

    Index 155

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    Bridge the great divide between distanced administrative duties and daily classroom impact. This book introduces a top-down power mechanism called defined autonomy, a concept that focuses on district-defined, nonnegotiable, common goals and a system of accountability supported by assessment tools. Defined autonomy creates an effective balance of centralized direction and individualized empowerment that allows building-level staff the stylistic freedom to respond quickly and effectively to student failure.

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