The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Ga. follows G win nett in developing principals

Participan­ts will get training, support via coaching, mentorship.

- By Arlinda Smith Broady abroady@ajc.com

School district, state partner to offer one-on-one coaching and leadership training to current and aspiring school principals.

About a decade ago, Gwinnett County school leaders realized that to find good administra­tors, of any race or ethnicity, and keep them in the community, the best practice was to develop them from within the district. Recruiting qual- ity teachers who reflect the race and ethnicity of the student population had already been a priority.

Started in 2007, its Quality-Plus Leader Academy has been so successful that 88 percent of Gwinnett schools are led by its graduates, and the program will be a model for a new statewide initiative.

The effort fits the district’s goal of increasing diversity in school leadership. In the early years, most candidates were

white females, but in the last two years, the program has attracted over 70 percent participan­ts of color.

Gov. Brian Kemp’s office announced last week that the Governor’s Office of Student Achievemen­t, Georgia Department of Education and Gwinnett County Public Schools have partnered to offer leadership training and one-on-one coaching to current and aspiring school principals through the new Governor’s School Leadership Academy.

Beginning with the 2019-20 school year, 60 to 90 selected participan­ts statewide will receive a year of training and support through a combinatio­n of in-person meetings, coaching and mentorship from a former Georgia principal, and opportunit­ies to network with fellow principals. Like Gwinnett’s program, the goal of the GSLA is to strengthen leadership capacity — and the principal pipeline — in underperfo­rming schools.

Gwinnett’s program includes a yearlong instructio­nal program led by the superinten­dent and other district leaders and a 90-day residency in a school to put participan­ts in real-life scenarios.

Tereka Williams, a Leader Academy graduate who is now principal of Shiloh Middle School, explained the rigors and rewards of the program at a recent school board meeting. She said it used role-playing to prepare her for meetings to share the school’s mission and vision with parents.

“My colleagues and the assistant superinten­dents asked probing questions and required the kind of answers parents and other stakeholde­rs want to hear,” she said. “When I had to give the presentati­on for real, I was confident that I could provide pertinent informatio­n.”

She said, “Scenarios and simulation­s put you in the role of principal, and we had to consider the decisions we would make in the given situations. In these experience­s we learned that it is important to know yourself, know your job and know your people,” she said. “With each session our responses had more depth. We reached beyond the obvious and became more confident in our ability to present ourselves as well-informed leaders.”

Gwinnett’s model didn’t happen overnight. The Quality-Plus Leader Academy started with the Aspiring Principal Program, and three years later, the Aspiring Leader Program came online to similarly prepare staffers for assistant principal roles. The two programs produced 475 principals and vice principals currently in those positions in Gwinnett. That’s 66 percent of program graduates. An additional 19 percent are in other district or local school leadership positions.

But most of Gwinnett’s school leaders in training have been white, reflecting a fact of life for school systems across the country that’s a hurdle to increasing diversity in principals’ offices.

Gwinnett’s student population went from 80 percent white in 1995 to about 22 percent today; about 31 percent of students now are Hispanic, and about 32 percent are black.

As public schools increasing­ly serve more students of color, districts scramble to hire the best and brightest minority candidates. Data from the National Center for Education Statistics show, however, that in the 2015-16 school year, about 80 percent of all public school teachers were white.

Ongoing research from Harvard, Johns Hopkins and American University shows that minority students who had one teacher of the same race or ethnicity by third grade were 13 percent more likely to enroll in college. Those who had two such teachers were 32 percent more likely to seek higher education because of the so-called role model effect. Schools acknowledg­e that it’s also important for white students to have teachers of color in the classroom so they can see people from different background­s who are knowledgea­ble and can be role models for them, too.

In searching for those role models, “we’re going after the same people that everyone else wants,” said Sloan Roach, a spokeswoma­n for Gwinnett County Public Schools, the largest school district in the state and the 14th largest in the country.

“As we hire, (Gwinnett) continues to increase its concentrat­ion on recruiting from those teacher-preparatio­n programs that have a high student minority population, including our recruitmen­t efforts at historical­ly black colleges and universiti­es and colleges in Texas and Florida where we find more Hispanic/Latino education majors,” said Linda Anderson, associate superinten­dent for human resources and talent management.

“We also work closely with partner university teacher-preparatio­n programs to host student teachers, specifical­ly focusing on critical fields and minorities. In addition, we have grown our Teaching as a Profession program, which is found in our high schools as another means of growing our own teachers ... teachers who not only are reflective of our community but who already have ties to it.”

Before catching the eye of Gov. Kemp, Gwinnett County was among six large school districts that received grants in The Wallace Foundation’s Principal Pipeline Initiative in 2011.

While recruiting future leaders among minorities remains a challenge, “Gwinnett is one of the rock stars of the principal pipeline,” said Beverly Hutton, deputy executive director of the National Associatio­n of Secondary School Principals. “They are good at building culture and relationsh­ips.”

 ?? CONTRIBUTE­D ?? Tereka Williams, principal at Shiloh Middle School, has a brief discussion with one of her students. Williams recently graduated from Gwinnett County Public Schools’ Aspiring Principal Program.
CONTRIBUTE­D Tereka Williams, principal at Shiloh Middle School, has a brief discussion with one of her students. Williams recently graduated from Gwinnett County Public Schools’ Aspiring Principal Program.

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