1. Launching District Transformation to
Ensure EVERY Child Achieves
In Franklin-McKinley School District
Dr. Stella M. Kemp
Assistant Superintendent of Education Services, FMSD
Jaime Kidd
Director of Program Development & Support, Partners
2.
3. 85% Free or Reduced Lunch
58% Latino
33% Asian
45% English Learner
10% Special Education
4. 38 percentage point gap between achievement of
Asian and Hispanic/Latino students
100%
% Proficient/Advanced in Language Arts
90%
80%
76%
70%
CST 06-07
58%
60%
50%
50%
40%
CST 07-08
47%
CST 08-09
38%
34%
28%
30%
24%
20%
CST 09-10
CST 10-11
CST 11-12
10%
0%
English Only
English Learner
Asian
Hispanic/Latino
15. Lessons Learned
• In Common Core transition, needed accurate
and real-time data on student learning across
the district
• Listened to what was “bubbling up” at the
school sites
• Staff needed multiple opportunities to
collaborate– at school and district levels
• Communication is key
16. Implications for this Year
• Developed a Progress Monitoring system
across the District for targeted grade levels
• Seek out input and feedback for small shifts
and big ideas before “run”
• Developed an Instructional Framework to
anchor our Teaching & Learning
• Developing opportunities for teachers and
leaders to collaborate and learn together –
through CCSS training, PLCs, etc.
17. How can you focus and align the
transformation efforts in your school or
district?
19. Self-Assessment
1. Read the Core Instructional Program sections of
the rubric
1. Reflect: What stands out as some areas of strength
or areas for growth in your school or district?
2. Share
1. How might you use this to help refine the areas of focus
in your school or district?
2. What challenges do you anticipate?
20. Self-Assessment
1. Read either the Leadership or Professional
Learning sections of the rubric
2. Reflect: What stands out as some areas of strength
or areas for growth in your school or district?
3. Share
1. How might you use this to help refine the areas of focus
in your school or district?
2. What challenges do you anticipate?
21.
Know where you are starting
(Transformation Rubric)
Set goals and develop a clear
plan (Theory of Action)
Reflect and adjust constantly
(ROCI)
24. Contact Us
Dr. Stella Kemp
stella.kemp@fmsd.org
Twitter: @stellakemp
Jaime Kidd
jkidd@partnersinschools.org
Twitter: @partnerssi
Notas del editor
Introduction of presenters: Dr. Stella Kemp, the Asst. Supt of Education Services from Franklin-McKinley School District in San JoseJaime Kidd, Director of Program Development & Support from Partners in School Innovation, a non-profit based in San Francisco and nationally whose mission it is to Go around the room - What is your role and why did you choose this session?
Stella:CardsWarm-up Activity: Fine a partner. Share what connection you made to your card/quote.
Stella: Who we are as Franklin-McKinley District Context – number of schools, configurations, etc.
Stella: Review current data andShareSan Jose 20/20 Initiative
Stella: How we started the work? DAIT was looking for compliance – but we still didn’t have coherence. We knew that there were misalignments in the systems – our student achievement data was telling us that AND indicators from the field and our accountability/compliance observations noted that we were seeing disconnects in what we were hoping for along with what we envisioned seeing in practice throughout our district. Found a strategic partnership that could support us not only by accelerating student achievement, but also ensure that the achievement was sustainable throughout our district.
Stella:Our ultimate goal is to ensure that EVERY child succeeds in our SYSTEM. Therefore, we needed to take both a school AND disrtict approach to student achievement. The work centers are 4 key Practices: 1). Focus: on things that matter – for us that was Instruction and Collaboration2). Alignment – Ensure that everything in the system is lining up with the area(s) of FOCUS. What this also means is that we need to make sure that the focus is clear and transparent. 3). Equity - We really have to know our diverse students and better adapt to meet their needs. Without knowing our students and understanding that Equity is an issue in our system, we won’t be able to achieve our goal. We have focused in on our Latino students as well as our ELLs and Special Education students. We have had to make sure that our resources aligned to these focus areas of Equity. 4). Continuous Improvement: Lastly, we ROCI (use the Results-Oriented Cycle of Inquiry) to get better at what we say we want to do – get better at our FOCUS
Stella: We view this as a multi-year transformation. While we really started the deep transformational work at the school level in year 1, we also had to begin some key structural shifts at the district level.
Stella: Why we partnered with Partners in School Innovation – what they bring to our work in transforming our district to a 21st century district for all learners.Jaime: We workhand-in-hand with teachers and leaders to strengthen teaching, learning and achievement in under-performing public schools and districts.
Jaime:What is ROCI? I’ll introduce. Have Stella give an example – what are you ROCIing around for Thanksgiving?Pair-share: have folks share a personal exampleJaime: bring it back to the importance of having a common focus and ROCIing in teams.
Jaime: Introduce the frameworks.Stella: Partners School and District Transformation Frameworks have helped us develop common understanding of the best practices we want to implement. A conceptual map is critical for your transformation efforts. It helps you identify what is needed to move forward – without a framework other things coming might only derail your focus and alignment.
Stella: In the school and even District system, there are typically lots of different and at times competing things going on – they may or may not be aligned… but all are intended to help students.
Stella: One of the things we are learning is that we need to work hard at both the school and district level to align the systems of support.
Jaime:One of the tools we use to help schools and districts ensure that they are all working in sync with one another is the Theory of Action. We start by identifying student needs, set specific goals for improving achievement. Agree on priority instructional practices that will support student needs and then look at ways to ensure that both our school and district systems align to support those needs. Pair share: what are some of the areas of focus in your district? How well are your systems aligned to those areas of focus?
Stella: Hand out the copies. Talk through the FM theory of action. Talk a little about how its been a part of the work.
Stella:Communication – we needed more transparency around how we were gathering input and using that to guide our decision-making
Stella:We continue to (ROCI) for this year at both school and district level – not dramatic, not throwing baby out with bath water – it’s systematic, simple, reflection and adjustment.
Jaime: We now want to share some tools with you that we use to figure out where to start.
Jaime: Background on school and district transformation rubrics
Jaime: Not about scoring each line item – can you use this tool to get clear and focused at your school, in your district
Stella:You’ve heard about FMSD and you’ve been introduced to tools, what are your next steps? How can you use this story/these tools in your own context?Think-Write-Pair-Share – find a partner to share what you’ve writtenWhat did this mean for you? Based on what you’ve heard today and your own self-assessment, what would you do next?