Defining Greatness 25 Factors Great Schools Have in Common Patrick F. Bassett Bassett@HeadsUpEd.com Bassett’s 25 Indicators of Great Schools Great schools… 1. Create and perpetuate an intentional culture shaped by the adults, rooted in universal values of honesty and caring, and relentlessly oriented toward achievement. • • • “To inspire each girl to fulfill her promise and to better the world.” (“Purpose helps a girl to understand she is not the only star in the firmament, nor is she a tumbleweed being blown through life.”) Culture provides motivation, structure, and guidance. Motivators for adults vs. kids: Dan Pink’s “Drive” three motivators vs. Christensen & Horn’s research on drivers for adolescents Strategic & programmatic focus on character, “the hidden curriculum” revealed. Great schools… 2. Eclectically capitalize on the best ideas about what works in schools, those gleaned from the past as well as those deemed best for the future. Are you a 21st C. school “in the news” for innovation? Are you attuned to “disruptive innovations” – those that by definition increase access and decrease cost? 3. Manifest a coherent philosophy of learning for students, be it constructivist, Reggio Emilia, Waldorf, Montessori, strengthsbased, progressive, traditional, 1:1, IB, or whatever — so long as it remains open to ongoing discussion, assumption testing, and constant refinement. What’s your “differentiator”? Do faculty talk pedagogy? 4. Make a substantial commitment to professional development for faculty, expecting teachers to grow as learners themselves and to develop mastery in the art and science of teaching. Seriously invested in professional development? Need not be expensive: could be time. Too much freedom to choose? 5. Develop collegial means to professionalize the profession, such as rounds, lesson study, digital faculty portfolios, and the like, adopting professional development strategies that are prevalent in high-performing schools and countries around the world. Faculty portfolios of their flipped class videos & their students’ exhibitions 6. Adopt a big vision, one that continually refreshes itself in order to sustain the enterprise along the five most strategic continua: demographic, environmental, global, financial, and programmatic. What’s your vision statement? The “postcard of your destination?” 7. Define the school’s “playground” in expansive ways, beyond the school’s borders into the local community, the region, and the world. Your experiential-ed track? 8. Demonstrate the public purpose of private education locally, nationally, and globally through a variety of means, including modeling experimentation to improve schooling and partnering with the public sector at the school and university levels. Do you participate in Horizons/Prep for Prep programming? Joining the NNSP? 9. Embrace stewardship of the school and its resources, renewing and growing the school’s physical, financial, and human resources to achieve financial equilibrium. Does your physical, intellectual, social, & financial capital all grow every year? 10. Enable constituents to donate their time and treasure consistently by providing the metrics on school volunteerism, financing, and eleemosynary benchmarks, and by telling the school’s story in powerfully moving ways. Do you benchmark using NAIS StatsOnline “Markers of Success data? 11. Pay it forward by building endowment and thereby sustaining intergenerational equity so that the next generation of families will be at least as well served by this generation as the current generation of families has been by its predecessors. Adopt a “giving” financial discipline and culture? Allocate portion of all giving to endowment?) 12. Commit to diversity of all kinds and at all levels to create the conditions and school culture so that students learn how to appreciate & map differences, then navigate & ride the waves of change. Diverse teams at the faculty, management, and board levels: Scott Page’s Diversity & Complexity; Cosmopolitanism & Culture GPS; Research on value of introverts & neurotics on one’s team 13. Redefine the ideal classroom setting as one of intimate environment, not small classes, since the former can occur in schools or classes of any size and even online, and the latter can miss the point of intimacy. Does the students:staff ratio have room to grow?) 14. Create a financially sustainable future by means other than persistently large annual tuition increases, recognizing that being the best value, rather than the highest price in town, offers the strongest value proposition. Learn from the for-profits? Refine the value proposition of your school?) 15. Achieve extraordinary parent and alumni participation in annual giving, reflecting superb volunteer organization and execution and a grateful constituent base. Organize to seek 100% trustee & parent participation 16. Adopt and fund “3 Rs” talent strategies that position the school to recruit, retain, and reward the best and brightest teachers, school leaders, and board members. Seek Teach for America candidates? 17. Compensate staff members fairly and competitively related to performance and contributions to the well-being of the school and in acknowledgment of the staff’s tremendous responsibility for and impact on students. Reward attitude and performance? 18. Provide leadership paths for teachers wishing to stay in teaching, rather than jump to administration, by creating a host of academic and task- force leadership roles. Offer career & leadership track for teachers? 19. Track student outcomes over time, beyond the years in one’s own school, seeking data on how well the school prepared its students for the next legs of their life journeys — be it the next levels of education or life beyond. Employ the NAIS Young Alumni Survey? 20. Seek data to make data-rich (not opinion-rich) decisions, embracing former Education Secretary Margaret Spellings’s observation, “In God we trust; all others, bring data.” Employ the NAIS Trustee Dashboards? Survey constituents? 21. To avoid unnecessary distractions, educate the board and parents thoroughly about “how schools work,” and about what student and parent needs a school can and cannot meet. Parent and board education? Role Play Difficult conversations) 22. Market their schools with “sticky messages” that tell a compelling story. Know your market segmentation? Your school’s best stories? “Sticky messages+ that tell a story with data that backs it? Marketing features or outcomes? Reinforcing the value proposition with stories + data) 23. Know their priorities when making difficult decisions, ranking first “what’s best for the school,” then “what’s best for the student,” then “what’s best for all other interests.” Use the Institute for Global Ethics 4-way test: gut, legal, front page, role-model? Great Schools… 24. Know that mission-match with a prospective student (on the intake) and matriculating students (on the outtake) is the controlling factor in admissions and secondary school or college placement. Define the sweet spot of the ability range you serve? Create “schools with in a school” and “centers of excellence” to expand reach? Great Schools… 25. Find the right balance for the drivers of financial aid to achieve school goals of diversifying the school, managing enrollment, and attracting a talented class of students. Know your financial aid “Sophie’s Choice” profile? Great Schools… All schools have the capacity to become great schools. All they need is the focus and leadership to create the proper conditions for the board, school leadership team, staff, and constituents to do so. All they need is the focus and leadership to create the proper conditions for the board, school leadership team, staff, and constituents to do so. The End! Choose to be Great by Choice • Roald Amundsen vs. Robert Falcon Scott, in their efforts to lead their teams to be the first to the South Pole in October 1911 • Adopt the discipline of “the 20 – mile march” • Empirical creativity vs. intuition • First “shoot bullets, not missiles” Return 25 Factors Survey Return Factors Exercise – Great Schools Instructions: Pat Bassett's Independent School magazine column (Spring 2013) "25 Factors Great Schools Have in Common" identifies many attributes of exceptional schools. For the workshop breakout sessions he will conduct with our community, he has asked that participants read this article and then submit their top five to eight factors in each column: Top Factors that are Important and that our School Does Well 1. Top Factors that are Important and that our School Does Less Well 1. 2. 2. 3. 3. 4. 4. 5. 5. 6. 6. Creativity, Robotics, Teaming and STEM …and wearable, functional art Grant Wood’s Victorian Survival Smithsonian Podcast interpretation by Katy Waldman, Holton Arms School Demonstration of Learning Return Return Trend #5: Market Segmentation as the New Marketing Imperative Return Return Return Return Cf. Audubon Society; National Geographic; The Value Proposition Equation Perceived Outcomes = Value Perceived Price A six year old’s perspective? Compete on brand, price, or uniqueness Return 1. Difficult Conversations: How to Discuss What Matters Most by Douglas Stone, Bruce Patton, and Sheila Heen You’re holding me up. How’s the project coming? You’re a jerk. I hate you. Fine, thanks. Levels: Stated vs. Implied. Business at hand vs. Threats to my image. Difficult Conversations: How to Discuss What Matters Most by Douglas Stone, Bruce Patton, and Sheila Heen She doesn’t get what my work demands.. The Spouse/Partner Version . it wait? Can I’m busy You think you’re only busy one? You don’t love me. Fine. Irate Parent Version: Mishandled conversations create the very outcomes we dread. Expeditionary Learning Return NOLS-based Leadership Basics: Taking Care of… 1. Yourself… 2. Your Stuff… 3. Your Responsibilities to the Team In the context of real-world project-based learning and problem-solving Measured by Tech CWRA criticalThe Future of Teaching: Hybrid Learning, High + High Touch thinking assessment. See Christensen & Horn article on “hybrid disruptive innovation” The HONOR CODE Woodberry Forest School alums have highest alumni participation in the country - 64%. Higher than highest colleges. Charlotte Latin Honor Code testimonials from graduates: – “I see cheating at every turn in college – in the weight room, on the volleyball court, and in the classroom…. I want to thank you and the school for making being honest a habit for me.” -Aristotelian insight. – “Mr. Wall: I wrote my first English paper in college on my experience when I was caught cheating in 9th grade on a physics quiz and how helpful you were to me as a mentor from that point forward – and how that turned me into the young man I now am.” - Mark Twain on good judgment. – “Honor above All.” Return 3rd Marker of Success: Giving (Day) (1) Generous giving measures constituent loyalty (generosity as a proxy for high support and attributed effectiveness) Parent Avg Gift Trustee Average Gift Alumni % Parent % Trustee % Alumni Avg Gift Percentile(25) 4% 50% 95% $135 $577 $2,041 Percentile(50) 9% 66% 100% $250 $895 $3,699 Percentile(75) 16% 81% 100% $420 $1,462 $5,929 Percentile(90) 27% 93% 100% $639 $2,399 Parent Avg Gift $11,195 Trustee Average Gift 2010-11 Alumni % Parent % Trustee % Alumni Avg Gift Percentile(25) 4% 53% 96% $142 $575 $2,031 Percentile(50) 9% 69% 100% $264 $890 $3,922 Percentile(75) 16% 82% 100% $434 $1,494 $6,664 Percentile(90) 26% 95% 100% $668 $2,527 $12,111 2011-12 (Years mentioned are data collection years) 3rd Marker of Success: Giving (Day) (2) Generous giving measures constituent loyalty (generosity as a proxy for high support and attributed effectiveness) Parent Avg Gift Trustee Average Gift Alumni % Parent % Trustee % Alumni Avg Gift Percentile(25) 4% 53% 96% $142 $575 $2,031 Percentile(50) 9% 69% 100% $264 $890 $3,922 Percentile(75) 16% 82% 100% $434 $1,494 $6,664 Percentile(90) 26% 95% 100% Alumni % Parent % Trustee % $668 Alumni Avg Gift $2,527 Parent Avg Gift $12,111 Trustee Average Gift Percentile(25) 4% 45% 93% $136 $567 $2,002 Percentile(50) 8% 68% 100% $269 $901 $4,055 Percentile(75) 15% 84% 100% $438 $1,537 $6,779 Percentile(90) 28% 94% 100% $714 $2,635 $11,707 2011-12 2012-13 (Years mentioned are data collection years) Return Growing endowment: measures commitment to financial security (a proxy for inter-generational equity and long-term stability). 2010-11 Endowment Value Endowment per Student Value Percentile(25) $1,200,000 $3,267 Percentile(50) $4,347,851 $10,787 Percentile(75) $13,282,500 $22,929 Percentile(90) $30,167,411 $43,826 2011-12 Endowment Value Endowment per Student Value Percentile(25) $1,284,688 $3,559 Percentile(50) $4,984,805 $11,112 Percentile(75) $14,759,884 $25,630 Percentile(90) $33,645,414 $49,112 (Years mentioned are data collection years) th Marker of Success: Endowment- (Day) (2) 9Growing endowment: measures commitment to financial security (a proxy for inter2011-12 generational equity and long-term stability). Endowment Value Endowment per Student Value Percentile(25) $1,284,688 $3,559 Percentile(50) $4,984,805 $11,112 Percentile(75) $14,759,884 $25,630 Percentile(90) $33,645,414 $49,112 2012-13 Endowment Value Endowment per Student Value Percentile(25) $1,280,671 $3,747 Percentile(50) $5,360,647 $12,303 Percentile(75) $16,047,328 $28,010 Percentile(90) $33,813,080 $48,876 (Years mentioned are data collection years) Return Comparatively high student:faculty and student:total staff ratios (percentiles): measure high workload productivity (a proxy for institutional efficiency); low productivity/ratios (a proxy for competing on brand or program not price) Students : FTE Faculty Students : FTE ALL Staff Percentile(25) 7.8 4.6 Percentile(50) 9.0 5.2 Percentile(75) 10.4 6.1 Percentile(90) 12.1 Students : FTE Faculty 7.0 Students : FTE ALL Staff Percentile(25) 7.8 4.6 Percentile(50) 9.0 5.2 Percentile(75) 10.4 6.1 11.9 7.1 2010-11 2011-12 Percentile(90) (Years mentioned are data collection years) Comparatively high student:faculty and student:total staff ratios (percentiles): measure high workload productivity (a proxy for institutional efficiency); low productivity/ratios (a proxy for competing on brand or program not price) Students : FTE Faculty Students : FTE ALL Staff Percentile(25) 7.8 4.6 Percentile(50) 9.0 5.2 Percentile(75) 10.4 Percentile(90) 2012-13 Students11.9 : FTE Faculty 6.1 Students : FTE ALL 7.1 Staff Percentile(25) 7.7 4.5 Percentile(50) 9.0 5.1 Percentile(75) 10.6 6.0 12.2 7.1 2011-12 Percentile(90) (Years mentioned are data collection years) Comparatively high student:faculty and student:total staff ratios (percentiles): measure high workload productivity (a proxy for institutional efficiency); low productivity/ratios (a proxy for competing on brand or program not price) Students : FTE Students : FTE ALL 2010-11 Faculty Staff Percentile(25) 7.8 4.6 Percentile(50) 9.0 5.2 Percentile(75) 10.4 6.1 Percentile(90) 12.1 Students : FTE Faculty 7.0 Students : FTE ALL Staff Percentile(25) 7.8 4.6 Percentile(50) 9.0 5.2 Percentile(75) 10.4 6.1 Percentile(90) 11.9 7.1 2011-12 (Years mentioned are data collection years) Comparatively high student:faculty and student:total staff ratios (percentiles): measure high workload productivity (a proxy for institutional efficiency); low productivity/ratios (a proxy for competing on brand or program not price) Students : FTE Faculty Students : FTE ALL Staff Percentile(25) 7.8 4.6 Percentile(50) 9.0 5.2 Percentile(75) 10.4 6.1 Percentile(90) 11.9 Students : FTE Faculty 7.1 Students : FTE ALL Staff Percentile(25) 7.7 4.5 Percentile(50) 9.0 5.1 Percentile(75) 10.6 6.0 12.2 7.1 2011-12 2012-13 Percentile(90) (Years mentioned are data collection years) Return The Good News: Data To Use Diversity & Complexity - Scott Page • In any and all systems (nature, corporate, educational, disease), the more diverse the system, the stronger and more likely to persist and succeed. • Mathematically demonstrable: a formula to predict the higher likelihood of success of diverse systems • If you assemble the 100 “smartest” people you can find in one group and a random and diverse set of people in a second group, the second group outperforms in decision making every time. The Good News: Data To Use The Good News: Data To Use Culturally Competent Leaders Accepting of a lack of full closure, of ambiguity and ambivalence Recognizes there is much denial about diversity challenges Don’t Miss the Boat on – classroom experience richer; – the faculty Benefits problem-solving isof more innovative; – demographic imperative is addressed – Diversity! benefits all: in some ways benefits white students most (IHE) Articulates well why diversity is mission-critical: in terms of growth of critical thinking Return Problem Solving via Strategic Governance (cf. Dick Chait’s Governance as Leadership) Needed: Three Levels of Trusteeship Level One: Fiduciary (oversight and assessment of mission & finance) Level Two: Strategic (“less management/more governance” via scanning and planning) PFB’s Level3Three: visioning, R&D lenses:Generative oversight, (shared foresight, and insight orientation for imagining and experimenting). Use the power of setting the agenda to build a strong process Developing the Board & Admin Team (Board Member, May 2004, Chait et al.) The SAT Analogy: Our board is to our organization as is to . Three Levels of Board Governance Source: Bill Ryan, AISNE Governance Workshop, Oct 23. 2007 Analogies revealing some level of dysfunction: “Our board is to our organization as…” Loose steering wheel is to auto Fingernail is to blackboard Hamster is to wheel Board as Control Mechanism Three Levels of Board Governance (Adapted from Board Member, May 2004, Chait et al.) Board as Direction Board as Meaning Setter Maker Dam : River Compass : Navigation Inspiration : Poet Curbstone: Road Headlights : Auto Values : Choices Border Collie : Herd Guidance System : Satellite Designer : Work of Art Traffic Tower: Pilot Governor: Engine Landlord: Tenant Anchor: Ship Fiduciary Oversight: “Doing things right” Periscope : Submarine Spirit : Higher Purpose Lighthouse: Ship Flight Planner : Pilot Rudder : Ship Strategic Foresight: “Doing the right things” Generative, Visionary Insight: “Leave a legacy” Move from micromanagement to macroengagement. Employ the 3 lens rubric to problem-solving: Rising benefit costs? Adding Chinese or Hindi? Immersion? “Leaders are people who do the right thing; managers are people who do things right.” ~Warren G. Bennis Examples of a board doing “things right”? What Leaders Really Do ~ John Kotter Management: Leadership: Manages Complexity by… • Planning & Budgeting • Organizing & Staffing • Controlling & Problemsolving • Producing predictability, order, and consistency Leads Change by… • Setting a direction • Aligning people • Motivating and inspiring • Producing useful and dramatic change (i.e., “doing things right”) (i.e., “doing the right things”) Examples of a board doing “the right thing”? The Perfect Head of School (Walter Ebmyer, ISM, 1980) The Perfect Head of School always has the right thing to say…wears good clothes…buys good books…is 29 years old with 40 years of experience…smiles all the time…visits 15 classes per day and is always in the office to be available for instant parent conferences…etc. The Perfect Head of School is always in the next nearest school (not yours). If your head does not measure up… Send this notice to six other schools that are tired of their heads, too. Bundle up your head and send him or her to the school on the top of the list. In one week you will receive 1643 heads--and one will be perfect: Have faith in this letter. One country day school broke the chain and got its old head back in less than four months. Evaluating Leadership Evaluating Leadership Return SAT InfoGraphic Source: CAPE Outlook 10/13 PFB Note: 1550 of 2400 Benchmark Score for 3-part SAT (math, reading, writing) = floor where academic success in college is likely Return