Las Vegas Review-Journal

If we want good schools, we need good leaders

- David Brooks

The solutions to the nation’s problems already exist somewhere out in the country; we just do a terrible job of circulatin­g them. For example, if you want to learn how to improve city schools, look how Washington, New Orleans and Chicago are already doing it. Since 2011, the graduation rate at Chicago public schools has increased at nearly four times the national average, to 77.5 percent from 56.9 percent. The percentage of Chicago students going to two- or four-year colleges directly after graduation increased to 63 percent in 2015 from 50 percent in 2006.

Sean Reardon of Stanford compared changes in national test scores between third and eighth grade. He found that Chicago students were improving faster than students in any other major school district in the country. Chicago schools are cramming six years’ worth of education into five years of actual schooling.

These improvemen­ts are proof that demography is not destiny, that bad things happening in a neighborho­od do not have to determine student outcomes.

How is Chicago doing it? Well, its test scores have been rising since 2003. Chicago has a rich civic culture, research support from places like the University of Chicago and a tradition of excellent leadership from school heads, from Arne Duncan to Janice Jackson, and the obsessive, energetic drive of Mayor Rahm Emanuel.

Chicago has expanded early childhood education and imposed universal full-day kindergart­en. After a contentiou­s strike in 2012, Emanuel managed to extend the school day. But he and the other people who led this effort put special emphasis on principals.

We’ve spent a lot of time over the past few decades debating how to restructur­e schools. We’ve spent a lot of time trying to help teachers. But structural change and increasing teacher quality don’t get you very far without a strong principal.

Researcher­s from the University of Minnesota and the University of Toronto studied 180 schools across nine states and concluded, “We have not found a single case of a school improving its student achievemen­t record in the absence of talented leadership.”

What do principals do? They build a culture. Researcher­s from Mckinsey studied test scores from half a million students in 72 countries. They found that students’ mindsets were twice as powerful in predicting scores as home environmen­t and demographi­cs were. How do students feel about their schooling? How do they understand motivation? Do they have a growth mindset to understand their own developmen­t?

These attitudes are powerfully and subtly influenced by school culture, by the liturgies of practice that govern the school day: the rituals for welcoming members into the community; the way you decorate walls to display school values; the distributi­on of power across the community; the celebratio­ns of accomplish­ment and the quality of trusting relationsh­ips.

Principals set the culture by their very behavior — the message is the person.

Research suggests that it takes five to seven years for a principal to have full impact on a school, but most principals burn out and leave in four years or less. Chicago has one of the highest principal retention rates of any large urban system, 85 percent. Principals are given support, training and independen­ce. If you manage your school well for a couple of years in a row, you are freed from daily oversight from the central office.

But the big thing is transformi­ng the role. Principals used to be administra­tors and middle managers, overseeing budgets, discipline, schedules. The goal was to be strong and decisive.

Today’s successful principals are greeting parents and students outside the front door in the morning. That Minnesota-toronto study found successful principals made 20 to 60 spontaneou­s classroom visits and observatio­ns per week.

In other words, they are high-energy types constantly circulatin­g through the building, offering feedback, setting standards, applying social glue. In some schools, teachers see themselves as martyrs in a hopeless cause. Principals raise expectatio­ns and alter norms. At Independen­ce Middle School in Cleveland, principal Kevin Jakub pushes a stand-up desk on wheels around the school all day.

Research also suggests a collaborat­ive power structure is the key. A lot of teachers want to be left alone and a lot of principals don’t want to give away power, but successful schools are truly collaborat­ive.

The Wallace Foundation website recently described the exemplary activism of former Kentucky principal Dewey Hensley. In his first week, he drew a picture of a school on a poster board and asked the faculty members to annotate it together. “Let’s create a vision of a school that’s perfect. When we get there, then we’ll rest,” he told them. School governance was led by a simple structure of three committees, populated and headed by teachers. Hensley also visited the homes of the 25 most disruptive students.

When you learn about successful principals, you keep coming back to the character traits they embody and spread: energy, trustworth­iness, honesty, optimism, determinat­ion. We went through a period when we believed you could change institutio­ns without first changing the character of the people in them. But we were wrong. Social transforma­tion follows personal transforma­tion.

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