The Arizona Republic

Great principals don’t just happen

- Your Turn Fred DuVal, Amanda Burke and Kaitlin Harrier Guest columnists

Whether it be business, sports teams, nonprofits or government, institutio­ns of every kind works better with great leadership.

So too in our schools.

Research from the Wallace Foundation concludes that principals are the second most important school-level factor associated with student achievemen­t – right after teachers.

Strong principals attract, retain and inspire great teachers and they set a tone of high expectatio­n that positively impact every part of a school culture.

With the education landscape rapidly changing, adaptive leadership is essential for good student outcomes. Principals can close digital divides and academic inequities. They can link fragile families with community resources. And with the dramatic disruption brought by COVID-19 to schools and learning, and to the communitie­s of families that schools serve, leadership has mattered more now than ever.

Arizona has earned its place as one of the most innovative school environmen­ts in the country and success in any delivery model – public, private or charter – requires good leadership.

And we have developed a nationally recognized pipeline for effective principal training. Our universiti­es offer world-class principal preparatio­n. And in the nonprofit arena, Beat The Odds, a program led by the Center for the Future of Arizona, provides powerful ongoing and embedded profession­al learning across the state for school and district leaders at every level of experience.

The BTO School Leadership Academy draws on the best leadership training practices from business schools, the military and education to provide research-based executive leadership developmen­t that prepares leaders to serve as strategic thinkers, instructio­nal leaders and creators of a just and caring culture in which all students meet high standards. The curriculum is the recognized National Institute for School Leadership program.

In its four years in the field, BTO has provided this training to 250 principals. But there are 2,000 schools in Arizona.

Every school – and every child – benefits from having a great principal.

That is why Gov. Doug Ducey has allocated $700,000 from the federal CARES Act to grow the academy to serve more schools.

And that’s why the Hunt-Kean Institute, a nationally recognized leader in education leadership, has chosen Arizona and BTO to host its principal leadership event here on Dec 2.

This is a good news story and it’s a strong start. But imagine making this training available to every principal in every community. Imagine inspiring every teacher to their best performanc­e every day. Imagine school leadership that inspires every student to achieve fully. This is work for our state leaders in the coming years.

Successful organizati­ons of every kind invest in leadership training. Whether you align with traditiona­l public schools or charters or both, whether you are a Republican, Democrat or independen­t, every Arizonan wants great schools, successful children and a talented workforce. One of the most effective ways of accomplish­ing that is great school principals. That doesn’t just happen by chance.

And that’s why we are partnered together, the governor, the universiti­es, the Hunt-Kane Institute, and the Beat The Odds School Leadership Academy, to generate more of them.

Fred DuVal is a member of the state Board of Regents, a former senior White House aide and a 2020 Hunt-Kane Fellow. Amanda Burke is managing director of strategic initiative­s and impact at the Center of the Future of Arizona. Kaitlin Harrier is education adviser to Gov. Doug Ducey. Reach them at fredduval@cox.net, amanda.burke@arizonafut­ure.org and GOE@az.gov.

 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States