One Unshakable Vision: World-Class Schools For Iowa
One Unshakable Vision: World-Class Schools For Iowa
One Unshakable Vision: World-Class Schools For Iowa
October 3, 2011 Dear Iowans, Whether our children succeed in a global economy depends on whether we create world-class schools. This blueprint is an urgent call to do just that. We must work together to transform schools so our youngsters are better prepared for a competitive international marketplace. Setting higher expectations for all students is essential so they are equipped to someday meet growing demands by employers. As many old jobs become obsolete, getting students ready for new jobs requires more than raising achievement in subjects like math and science. Students today also must learn how to quickly assimilate new knowledge, solve problems, and be innovative. Getting a great teacher in every classroom and a great principal in every building is the heart of the draft recommendations we are unveiling today. Nothing at school matters more than outstanding educators. At the same time, this is a comprehensive plan with many pieces that all fit together. We hope you will consider them as a package, and that you will support putting these changes in place. Iowans have a proud heritage of treasuring education, and we have many fine schools as a result. Now, its time to renew that commitment to serve Iowa students well into the 21st century. Between us we have eight young grandchildren, most living here in Iowa. We care deeply about giving Iowas young people the best possible education. Thank you for your support in the days ahead. Sincerely,
Writers: Jason E. Glass, Ed.D State Director of Education Linda Fandel Special Assistant for Education in the Office of the Governor Byron Darnall Special Assistant for Policy to Director Glass
This blueprint shows specific steps we can take to move our schools from good to great to excellent not with isolated approaches, but by having our whole system work better together and in symphony. This blueprint is not a list of options to be cherry-picked based on special interests, ideology, political affiliation, or whether one is within or outside of the education profession. It is a set of changes designed to work together to create an all-systemsgo approach. Lasting and meaningful change requires this sort of commitment and transformation. The whole system must change to improve. Our efforts must be focused and sustained. This blueprint details a comprehensive vision that can put Iowas schools on par with the top schools in the world.
Making sure every student has great teachers and great principals isnt any different. Clear, specific steps exist to make such improvements. These include:
Attracting and Supporting Talented Educators > Raise starting teacher pay to attract better candidates into education. > Create a statewide teacher scholarship program so more of the brightest students
choose education as a career in hard-to-staff areas, such as math and science.
> Raise the grade-point average to 3.0 for entry into teacher-preparation programs. > Raise the bar for teacher candidates on an initial screening assessment into teacherpreparation programs.
> Continue efforts currently under way to increase coursework in core content
(mathematics, science, English-language arts and social studies) for future elementary teachers, and increase hours in subject-specific coursework for secondary teachers.
> Improve clinical (field-based) experiences for new teachers through approaches such
as better student-teaching experiences, making sure teacher candidates have highquality mentors, more time for solo teaching, learning how to design dynamic and engaging lessons in the field, and greater supports for new teachers.
> Newly created teacher mentors in all schools will serve as adjunct college and
university faculty in supervising student-teaching, effectively opening studentteaching for any school in the state.
> Expand alternative pathways into teaching, the principalship, and the
superintendency, so more top talent can enter the field. Rigorously screen these new educators, provide mentoring supports, and require ongoing learning to help them be successful.
Improved Educator Recruiting and Hiring Practices > Develop a statewide one-stop educator recruiting
system for Iowa. This would include designing a new Teach Iowa website where all education jobs would be posted, a unified state application process and background screen, and links to facilitate the licensure process.
> Require a multi-step hiring process for teachers and principals involving
recommendations of current teachers and parents from each building. Based on the recommendations from these school-level hiring teams, school administrators and school boards make final choices.
Creating Educator Leadership Roles > Establish Mentor teachers in every building in the state to coach student-teachers,
new teachers, and veteran teachers toward improvement.
> Establish Master teachers in every building in the state to help in peer evaluation and
to serve as instructional leaders along with principals.
> Selection into Mentor and Master teacher roles occurs through a competitive
process, and the positions are at-will. Mentor and Master teachers removed from these leadership roles go back to being Career teachers.
> Require all teachers in Iowa to meet weekly in small groups to plan and collaborate
exclusively on teaching, student learning, and student results.
> Establish a teacher-led curriculum committee in each district to have teacher voices
included in curricular decisions.
> Create Apprentice principals who receive coaching and other training from more
experienced leaders from districts and Area Education Agencies.
> Create Career principals for school administrators who demonstrate strong
leadership and success in running buildings.
> Establish Mentor principals who would help coach Apprentice principals. A Meaningful and Peer-Based Evaluation System > Develop a new educator evaluation system that builds on the quality work Iowa
already has in place with current best practices around evaluation.
> Build research-based and reliable evaluation documents that recognize great
teachers and administrators.
> Develop a performance rubric for evaluation to show educators specifically where
they are and how they can improve.
> Include peer reviews in both teacher and administrator evaluations and require
annual and multiple evaluations of all educators.
> Create a coaching system that helps all educators improve based on evaluations. A Transformational Teacher Salary Structure > Implement a four-tier teacher compensation system with Apprentice, Career, Mentor
and Master levels.
> Increase beginning teacher pay significantly at the Apprentice level. Teachers with
less than five complete years of experience typically start at this level. Apprentice teachers work an additional five days for professional learning or instruction.
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> Teachers with between three and five complete years of experience, who demonstrate
effectiveness to their principal and a peer evaluator, and who are recommended by their principal, move to the Career teacher level. Career teachers teach 100 percent of the day. Moving to the Career teacher level comes with a substantial annual pay raise over the Apprentice teacher. Career teachers work an additional five days for professional learning or instruction.
> Approximately 15-20 percent of teachers would become Mentor teachers through a
competitive selection process. Mentors would teach 70-80 percent of the day and coach others 20-30 percent. These roles would come with a sizable annual pay raise, and they would work an extra 10 days in instructional or in planning/curriculum design roles.
Master Teacher
Selective Hiring 5% Workforce 50% Teaching 50% Coaching
Mentor Teacher
Selective Hiring 15% Workforce 75% Teaching 25% Mentoring
Career Teacher
Years 5+ 60% Workforce 100% Teaching
Apprentice
Years 1-5 20% Workforce 100% Teaching
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> Additional options for increasing pay would be available to all teachers who:
> Teach in critical shortage positions, such as mathematics, science and special
education. > Work in schools with high levels of poverty or special challenges. > Earn National Board for Professional Teaching Standards certification. > Earn Exceptional Teaching awards for demonstrating greatness in teaching through a rigorous selection process. > Earn an advanced degree or take coursework in the subject they teach. > Take on additional academic duties as determined by the local district. > Work in extended day or year programs to help students who need catching up. > Take on larger class sizes (if they demonstrate quality teaching). > Earn performance-based awards designed locally - for individuals, groups, teams, grades, buildings, or entire districts.
> Teachers currently working have the option of staying on the old step-and-lane
or lock-step salary system or coming across to the new system. The transition is a permanent change.
> Annual cost-of-living adjustments to the new system will be considered locally. Job Protections Based on Effectiveness > Using a collaborative approach, the state will establish a definition and observationbased measures of effective teaching.
> Teachers at the Apprentice level are at-will employees who have their contracts
renewed annually at the discretion of the local school board.
> Teachers above the Apprentice level who are evaluated as ineffective must be
provided an individualized improvement plan and supports to improve.
> Teachers above the Apprentice level have due process for dismissal. These teachers
may be recommended for dismissal after two consecutive years of ineffective performance as measured by supervisor and peer-based evaluations. They have the opportunity to make their case for continued employment to the school board.
> School boards have the final say in dismissals, and school board members must be
trained on the evaluation process and the definition of effective teaching.
> Teachers with the current standard state license (who stay on the step-and-lane
pay system) have the same system of supports, and face the same dismissal process, if they receive two consecutive years of ineffective evaluations.
> Layoffs are decided locally, but take individual performance, certifications, student
needs, and school needs into account first. Seniority will only be taken into account after these other factors are considered.
Free Principals to Lead > Expand the School Administration Manager (SAM) training program statewide.
SAMs take care of managerial tasks, such as budgeting, accounting and attendance to free up principals to get out into classrooms where they can lead and support great teaching.
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Improve and Expand the Iowa Core > Raise the bar for the Iowa Core to put Iowas standards on par with the highestperforming systems in the world.
> Use the Area Education Agencies as a unified, driving force behind implementing
high expectations. Schools must align curriculum to state academic standards, and AEAs must support this effort through quality professional-learning opportunities in a systemic way.
> Under the direction of educators from across Iowa, design a rigorous model
curriculum by July 2013 that can be used as a starting point for schools and teachers in strengthening their own core-subjects curriculum.
> Create high standards for critically important areas such as art, music and world
languages. These subjects help foster creativity and communication, among other key concepts so vital to our children in this 21st-century global economy.
A Next Generation Assessment Framework > Adopt a kindergarten assessment to measure whether children start kindergarten
ready to learn and leave kindergarten prepared for success in first grade. This assessment will help determine students strengths and weaknesses, and will adapt instruction accordingly.
> Develop new formative and summative assessments aligned with the Common
Core Standards for grades three through eight. These assessments will be computer adaptive to reduce testing time, provide instant results, and will be available for both classroom and end-of-year purposes. Iowa is part of the Smarter Balanced Assessment Consortium, which is working to design such assessments by 2014.
> A sampling of Iowa ninth-graders takes the Program for International Student
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Assessment (PISA) every three years. This measure provides an international checkin for Iowa students and gets at higher-order skills, such as problem solving.
> Put in place a suite of End-of-Course assessments for core subjects, such as English
(reading and writing), Algebra, Biology, and U.S. History or Government in high school. These measures would set clear expectations for high school courses and provide a statewide systems check for how students are doing in core subjects. A cut score for students to pass End-of-Course exams would reinforce clear expectations and would be required for graduation. Significant remedial help would be provided for students who fail, along with multiple opportunities to retake exams.
> Have all Iowa 11th-graders take a college entrance exam (such as ACT or SAT), with
the state covering the cost. This measure gives Iowa comparable data to a number of other states, gives us a screen to see if our students are ready for college or a career, and gives every Iowa teenager one of the keys needed for higher education. Being college and career-ready is critically important in a highly competitive global economy.
> Provide value-added measures for all districts, schools, grades, and educators.
It is important to take into account student background characteristics (poverty, disability, language ability) and consider student growth when evaluating test results. Value-added measures provide a more equitable, more realistic picture of how students, schools and educators are doing. Value-added measures give Iowa a powerful lens through which to look at student achievement data. Individual teacher results should be part of a personnel file and not subject to open-records requests. This data should be used for improvement, not blame and shame.
A New Accountability System > Seek a waiver from the rigid and unrealistic accountability system required under the
federal No Child Left Behind law, which unfairly punishes schools with high poverty rates.
> Work with key education groups and leaders from across the state to design a new
system that embraces accountability and puts student achievement at its center but also:
> Takes student growth or improvement (using value-added measures) heavily into
account in the calculations.
> Uses assessments that are better aligned with the Iowa Core and
Common Core.
> Takes into account that healthy and successful children are more than
just test scores. We can measure student hope, engagement and well-being and make that part of our system.
> Makes sure teachers and other educators have the supports they
need to succeed. Measures of staff working conditions and support should be part of our system.
> Measures parent satisfaction. > Makes sure districts are good stewards of taxpayer dollars.
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> Districts and schools that score high on this new system have earned autonomy,
where the state only visits them to congratulate them, or perhaps to ask how we can take their ideas to other schools.
> Districts and schools that consistently struggle are provided additional supports, but
also are subject to increasingly prescriptive direction from the state.
> Align the fractured systems of accreditation, compliance monitoring and school
improvement at the Department of Education to provide a system of unified supports and direction under the new system.
> Update the state data reporting system to provide the public with a dashboard of
all measures for each school and district in the state. Rate schools on a scale from Exceptional to Persistently Low-Achieving on this new accountability system.
Ensure Third-Grade Literacy > Require all districts to adopt a district-wide and research-based reading program
for early childhood learning and elementary grades, with the goal of making sure children learn basic literacy early on.
> Establish an Iowa Center for Literacy Education to act as a clearinghouse for
best practices and research-based information. The center will provide guidance on strategies, curriculum, lessons, and individual student approaches to improve reading. This would link directly with the states ongoing efforts around Response to Intervention, which asks schools to have research-based instruction for all students and then make intensive adjustments for children who arent learning from the general approach.
> Have all third-grade students taking the statewide reading assessment do so in
March. Results must be made available to schools no later than April. Students with good reason may take alternative district-selected assessments (including portfoliobased assessments) instead of the state assessment, so long as those are approved by the Iowa Center for Literacy Education.
> End social promotion for third-graders who read poorly, with numerous goodcause exemptions (disability, English Language Learning, for example) and multiple opportunities to pass. Being able to read after third grade is a critical juncture where children transition from learning to read to reading to learn. Moving children along who are not ready to do that puts them at a huge disadvantage for the rest of their lives.
Fueling Local Innovation > Establish an Innovation Acceleration Fund. Districts, schools, or cooperating
organizations (such as businesses, non-profits, or higher education) will identify local educational problems and find evidence-based and innovative solutions.
> Through a competitive process, the most transformative of these ideas gets funded
and, if the idea pays off, we can look at taking it to scale across the state.
Increasing School Innovation > Provide greater waiver authority to the Iowa Department of Education, so when local
school districts come up with a great idea for students that doesnt exactly fit into the current statutory configuration, we can provide flexibility to try new ideas. The State Board of Education would approve all such waivers, and the department would report to the Iowa Legislature annually on this flexibility.
> Expand the pathways to allow for innovative charter schools in Iowa: > Establish a transparent, multi-step process where the state approves charter
schools after a thorough feasibility study, including a plan that addresses student and community needs.
> Require all charter schools to accept all students for whom the placement is
appropriate, including those with disabilities and living in poverty.
> Fund charter schools on a level per-pupil playing field with other public schools. > Hold charter schools to the same high level of accountability via the states New
Accountability System.
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Online Learning Options > School districts can determine whether online options are appropriate for their
students and can choose to make these courses available.
> Create a state clearinghouse of high-quality online courses available to any student
in Iowa.
> Back the online courses with a licensed teacher and the best online learning
technology available.
Any Time, Anywhere Learning and Ending the Factory Education Model > Expand and grow the schools and districts using a competency-based education
system, where high school students who demonstrate they can master the content of a course dont have to earn credit through traditional seat-time.
> Expand high school student opportunities to learn through increased community
career/technical internships and more higher education options that connect students with their dreams as soon as they are ready.
A Statewide Parent and Community Engagement Network > Establish a statewide effort to increase parent and community engagement in every
school in Iowa.
> Create paid teacher leader roles in high-needs schools, where these parent liaisons
work to establish connections with families to get them more involved in their childs education.
Iowa Education Goals - Defining World-Class Student Outcomes > The top-performing state on national standardized assessments, such as the
National Assessment of Educational Progress (NAEP).
> All students reading by the end of third grade, or receiving intensive help. > All schools meeting or exceeding expected growth trajectories using value-added
measures.
> All students in safe learning environments, engaged in their own education, and
hopeful about their future.
> Ninety-five percent state high school graduation rate. > Ninety percent of high school students demonstrating success on end-of-course
exams.
> Ninety percent of students demonstrating college and career readiness on a collegeentrance exam.
Financial Considerations
Improvements of this magnitude require that we consider carefully the financial supports necessary to build world-class schools for Iowa. With that, we must begin by critically examining the funds we already put into education and ask if we can use these more strategically and efficiently. We should all ask: Are we using the resources we already have in the best possible ways? We have dramatically increased education spending in Iowa, and across this country, in recent decades. Yet our achievement results, by and large, remain flat. More money, by itself, does not seem to be a recipe for successful change. Dumping in more cash without meaningful changes just makes the same problems more expensive.
Board of Regents $522 9% All Other $972.7 16% K-12 Funding $2,642.1 44%
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While being more thoughtful and efficient with the money we have is important, worldclass schools do require adequate resources to be successful. This blueprint features several aspects that require additional funding if we are to really move toward being internationally competitive. It is our intention to add funds to education spending, and this funding must be sustainable over the long term. Estimates about costs are dependent on many variables and assumptions. While exact figures are still being tabulated for different models and scenarios, nothing in this report - including the costs to fully implement these strategies - should be considered outside the realm of possibility. This set of strategies is designed to be considered as a package. The final recommendations will include a detailed accounting of costs.
Timeline
Great Teachers and Leaders
2012 to 2022
Free Principals to Lead New Evaluation Systems Improve & Expand the Iowa Core A Next Generation Assessment Framework A New Accountability System Fueling Local Innovation Increasing School Innovation Parent & Community Engagement
Innovation
2013 to 2022
Attracting & Supporting Talented Educators Improving Recruiting & Hiring Practices Ensure Third-Grade Literacy Online Learning Options Competency-Based Learning
2014 to 2022
Create Teacher Leadership Roles Job Protections Based on Effectiveness Transformational Salary Structure
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Conclusion
This blueprint represents a comprehensive plan. It lays out coordinated steps Iowa should take to begin the work of creating worldclass schools. In the months ahead, the Governors Office and the Iowa Department of Education will seek feedback to improve these draft recommendations before presenting a sweeping education-reform proposal to the Iowa Legislature and the people of this great state. This blueprint builds on Iowas strong education foundation but takes the steps necessary to remodel our house for years to come. Our goal is lofty: Bring Iowas schools on par with the highest-performing education systems in the world. The plan of action is lofty as well - arguably unmatched in scope by anything else attempted in the United States. But we must remember that we do not start from scratch. We already have good schools put in place by generations of Iowans before us. Achieving the goal of creating world-class schools will not happen overnight. It will take a sustained effort that withstands the winds of political change. The journey should begin now with Iowans renewed commitment to giving our children the best possible education. That moment is upon us.
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Suggested Readings
Educator Effectiveness
Anderson, L. W., & Pellicer, L. O. (2001). Teacher Peer Assistance and Review: A Practical Guide for Teachers and Administrators. Thousand Oaks, CA: Corwin Press. Separation of Degrees: State-By-State Analysis of Teacher Compensation for Masters Degrees (2009). In www.americanprogress.org. Retrieved September 20, 2011, from http://www.americanprogress.org/issues/2009/07/separation_of_degrees.html The Widget Effect: Our National Failure to Acknowledge and Act on Differences in Teacher Effectiveness (2009). In www.widgeteffect.org. Retrieved September 20, 2011, from http://widgeteffect.org/downloads/TheWidgetEffect_execsummary.pdf
Innovations in Education
Innovations in Education: Successful Charter Schools (2004). In www2.ed.gov. Retrieved September 20, 2011, from http://www2.ed.gov/admins/comm/choice/ charter/index.html International Association for K-12 Online Learning (2011). In www.inocal.org. Retrieved September 20, 2011, from http://www.inacol.org/ Keeping Pace with K-12 Online Learning (N.D.). In kpk12.com. Retrieved September 20, 2011, from http://kpk12.com/
International Scope
How the Worlds Most Improved School Systems Keep Getting Better (2010). In http://ssomckinsey.darbyfilms.com/reports/schools/How-the-Worlds-MostImproved-School-Systems-Keep-Getting-Better_Download-version_Final.pdf. Retrieved September 20, 2011, from http://ssomckinsey.darbyfilms.com/reports/schools/Howthe-Worlds-Most-Improved-School-Systems-Keep-Getting-Better_Download-version_ Final.pdf International Summit Puts Best Reform Ideas on the Table (2011). In www.nea.org. Retrieved September 20, 2011, from http://neatoday.org/2011/03/15/global-summitputs-best-education-reform-ideas-on-the-table/ Tucker, M. S. (2011). Standing on the Shoulders of Giants: An American Agenda for Education Reform. In www.ncee.org. Retrieved August 20, 2011, from http://www.ncee. org/wp-content/uploads/2011/05/Standing-on-the-Shoulders-of-Giants-An-AmericanAgenda-for-Education-Reform.pdf
Leading Voices
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Berry, B. (2011). Teach 2030: What We Must Do for Our Students and Our Public Schools -- Now and in the Future. New York, NY: Columbia University.
Christensen, C. M. (2008). Disrupting Class: How Disruptive Innovation Will Change the Way the World Learns. New York, NY: McGraw-Hill. Fullan, M. (2010). All Systems Go: The Change Imperative for Whole System Reform. Ontario, Canada: Corwin Press. Fullan, Michael. (2011). Change Leader: Learning to Do What Matters Most. San Francisco: Jossey-Bass. Fullan, M. (2011). Choosing the Wrong Drivers for Whole System Reform. In www. michaelfullan.ca/home. Retrieved September 3, 2011, from http://www.michaelfullan. ca/home_articles/SeminarPaper204.pdf Hargreaves, A., & Shirley, D. (2009). The Fourth Way: The Inspiring Future for Educational Change. Thousand Oaks, CA: Corwin Press. Heath, C. & Heath, D. (2010). Switch: How to Change Things When Change is Hard. New York: Broadway Books. Hershberg, T., & Robertson-Kraft, C. (2009). The Grand Bargain. Boston, MA: Harvard Education Press. Reeves, D. (2010). Leading Change in Your School. Alexandria, VA: ASCD.
Parent Involvement
Iowas Statewide Parent Information Resource for Student Success (2011). In www. IowaParents.org. Retrieved September 20, 2011, from http://www.iowaparents.org/
Reading Initiative
Annie E. Casey Foundation. (2010). Early Warning! Why Reading by the End of Third Grade Matters. Baltimore, MD: Author. The Florida Center for Reading Research. http://www.fcrr.org/. N.P., N.D. Web. 20 Sept. 2011. http://www.fcrr.org/ Getting Ahead by Staying Behind: An Evaluation of Floridas Program to End Social Promotion. http://epsl.asu.edu/epru/ttdocuments/EPRU-0601-141-OWI.pdf. N.P., 2006. Web. 20 September 2011. http://epsl.asu.edu/epru/ttdocuments/EPRU-0601141-OWI.pdf Third Grade Retention Policy Leading Better Student Performance Statewide (2006, September). In www.oppaga.state.fl.us. Retrieved September 13, 2011, from http:// www.oppaga.state.fl.us/reports/pdf/0666rpt.pdf McCombs, J. S., Kirby, S. N., & Mariano, L. T. (Eds.). (2009). Ending Social Promotion Without Leaving Children Behind. Santa Monica, CA: Rand Corporation. States Target Early Years to Reach Third-Grade Reading Goals. (N.D.). In www. edweek.org. Retrieved September 20, 2011, from http://www.edweek.org/ew/ articles/2011/06/29/36literacy.h30.html
Secondary Assessment
Center on Education Policy. (2010). State High School Tests: Exit Exams and Other Assessments. Washington D.C., DC: Author. North Carolina End-of-Course Tests. http://www.dpi.state.nc.us/accountability/ testing/eoc/. N.P., 20 Sept. 2011. Web. 20 Sept. 2011. http://www.dpi.state.nc.us/ accountability/testing/eoc/ Virginia Standard of Learning. Virginia Department of Education, 2011. Web. 20 Sept. 2011. http://www.virginiasol.com/test_end_of_course.htm
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