About Us | Contact Us   

Fife Schools - A Standard Bearer Network Member

 

What is Standard Bearer?

In 1988, Dr. Phillip C. Schlechty launched the Center for Leadership in School Reform as a means to provide high-quality and responsive support to those who are leading school reform efforts across the nation. A private nonprofit corporation with headquarters in Louisville, Kentucky, the Schlechty Center, works with public school districts and their leaders to transform the existing system of rules, roles, and relationships that govern the way resources are used in schools to a system that is focused on the quality of work provided to students.

Over ten years ago, Dr. Schlechty and his staff developed a set of system standards which provide a framework for school districts to work on school reform and the work asked of students. The Standard Bearer Network consists of school districts who have committed to improvement through the use of these standards.

What Beliefs and Assumptions Underlie Standard-Bearer Work?

The Schlechty Center staff has formulated a set of premises about the core business of schools; the need for change in public schools; the primary customers of schools; the roles, rules, and relationships between and among those who work in school systems; the means for making results-based decisions; the need for leadership; and the relationship of capacity to performance. Districts that engage in Standard-Bearer work commit to these premises, as they provide both a discipline and a point of view for making changes and for building system capacity.

The following are the bedrock beliefs that unite the Network districts:

The Core Business of Schools is to ensure that every student, every day, is provided challenging, interesting, and satisfying work. Schlechty Center associates contend there is a direct linkage between the caliber of work students are provided and the willingness of students to engage in schoolwork. When students engage in and persist with their work, they are much more likely to learn that which schools, parents, and the community deem important. School systems must provide direction and support for the work of teachers with that which teachers can control - the work they design for students.

There Is a Need for Dramatic Improvement in the performance of public school students and public school systems. This is a belief that the Schlechty Center and Network districts share. It requires a change in what we believe and how we are structured. The System Standards provide a means for dealing with cultural as well as structural change. This work is not for the timid, or for those who like procedural change or change that only scratches the surface.

The Primary Customers of Schools are the students. Students are volunteers - in the sense that their willingness to give or withhold commitment conditions the extent to which they invest effort in schoolwork. While we can command student attendance, we must earn student commitment through the schoolwork we provide and the support we offer.

A Changed Core Business Requires Changed Roles involving everyone in the district. Teachers must be seen as designers of work and leaders of students - causing students to engage in and produce high-quality work. Principals must be seen as “leaders of leaders” who ensure that teachers have the resources, flexibility, and support required to design engaging work for students. Central office administrators must be seen as system capacity builders who focus their efforts on supporting the work at schoolhouses rather than on running programs. The superintendent must be seen as the chief educational leader in the community, one who ensures that the entire community comes to understand the emerging and changing needs of students and the kinds of support needed if students are to commit to and produce quality work. Members of the board of education must be seen as leaders who inform the community about the schools and who support those within the system to take actions to support students and their families so that students can succeed in their schoolwork. Support personnel - instructional aides, custodians, bus drivers, cafeteria workers - must all be seen in the context of ensuring support for teachers who design quality work and for students who engage in it. Everyone has a role; the roles interrelate throughout the district to create a system where everyone is focused on students and the work provided to students.

Beliefs, Vision, and Results Define the System, and in an effective system, compelling beliefs and vision give focus and direction, desired results are clear, and everyone knows that decisions are made in accord with the beliefs, vision, and results to be achieved. A district's beliefs, vision, and results provide the context both for the overall system to function effectively and for its schoolhouses to be responsive to the unique needs and interests of their students. Such a district becomes a school system - not merely a system of schools.

Leadership Is Everyone's Business, for school systems do not need just a few more strong leaders. They need more leadership at all levels in the system, and the development of leadership qualities and expectations should be a primary concern of system operations.

Capacity Building Is the Key and involves putting the values, structures, and resources in place to initiate and to sustain change over the long haul. All systems use performance benchmarks as important indicators of how the organization is doing, but the most effective systems use System Standards to focus everyone's attention on building the capacity for improvement of performance. Without capacity, significant improvement in performance is impossible.

Links

 

Schools | District | Resources | News & Events | Community | Contact Us | About Us
©2008 Fife Public Schools All Rights Reserved
Terms of Use | Webmaster