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Developing Administrative Goals or….the last thing on your To Do list! http:// goo.gl/fcZn1e

Developing Administrative Goals

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Developing Administrative Goals. or….the last thing on your To Do list!. http://goo.gl/fcZn1e. Introductions. Linda Eno , Ed.D: MCVSD Principal, Biotechnology HS Who are You? Name, District, Title. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Developing  Administrative  Goals

Developing Administrative Goals

or….the last thing on your To Do list!

http://goo.gl/fcZn1e

Page 2: Developing  Administrative  Goals

IntroductionsLinda Eno, Ed.D:

MCVSD Principal, Biotechnology HS

Who are You?Name, District, Title

deck developed with support from Marie Phillips, Willa Spicer, and publically available DOE documents

Page 3: Developing  Administrative  Goals

Objectives: today we will..1. re-establish the context for

administrative goals2. explore a process for building

administrative goals3. collectively consider best practices for

developing goals4. apply the learning to choosing, writing,

or improving your administrative goals

Page 4: Developing  Administrative  Goals

Reestablishing the Context

….of administrative goals

Page 5: Developing  Administrative  Goals

Moving From Pilot to Regulation: The Essential Question

What are the behaviors that we want to induce from school leaders?

Guided by the ISLLC standards:

◦ Committing to student achievement. School leaders need to be vested in the SGPs, SGO’s coming from their buildings.

◦ Prioritizing the conditions that allow teachers to do their best work. Things like school climate, and organizational planning.

◦ Strengthening the ability and attitude that get the best people to work in our classrooms and getting the people that work in our classrooms to be the best they can be: the evaluation leadership.

Page 6: Developing  Administrative  Goals

Why……….A summary statement from the research:

o “Although the direct effects of school leadership leading to

increased student achievement are weak, school leaders indeed

play an important role in indirectly impacting student achievement

by forming and facilitating an educational culture that breeds

student success through collaboration and team oriented models.

(Chrispeels, Burke, Johnson & Daly, 2008; Leithwood & Mascall,

2008; Robinson, Lloyd & Rowe, 2008) Kruger, Witziers and Sleegers

(2007) postulated that “leadership is no longer proposed as having a

direct influence on learning outcomes, but as having an indirect

influence through the way it has an impact on instructional

organization and culture” (p. 3)”. EFFECTS OF LEADERSHIP STYLES AND STUDENT ACADEMIC ACHIEVEMENT

by James D. Rautiola

Page 7: Developing  Administrative  Goals

How…..Where Administrative Goals Fit

into Your Evaluation

Page 8: Developing  Administrative  Goals

Evaluation Leadership (the rubric)… the link between your practice and Achieve NJ

http://www.mindtheproduct.com/2011/06/leadership-and-product-management/

YOU!

Page 9: Developing  Administrative  Goals

So…Administrative Goals Weigh Differently for Different PrincipalsGoals valued at 10%-40% of summative based on

type of schoola) Multi-Grade SGP = 10%b) Single Grade SGP = 20%c) Non-SGP School = 40%

How many goals will you set?

Page 10: Developing  Administrative  Goals

From Context to Process: Outstanding Decisions for

Districts1.How many goals will each

administrator set?

2.Who will select the area of

focus?3.How much alignment will be

required, vertically and horizontally?

Page 11: Developing  Administrative  Goals

GOAL SETTING PROCESS1. Examine the data ( & continue to re-examine it

throughout the process)

2. Identify an area of need (a focus)

3. Identify the target population for your goal

4. Establish your assessment instrument

5. State your goal in SMART format

6. Complete your districts’ form

7. Intervene, monitor, adjust

8. Analyze, summarize, and report out on end of cycle data

http://www.indyweek.com/triangleoffense/archives/2011/06/28/scrantonwilkes-barre-yankees-edge-durham-bulls-in-10-innings

Page 12: Developing  Administrative  Goals

POTENTIAL DATA SOURCES* ● Standardized Test Data

● Students’ Classroom Performance in Specific Content Areas

● Discipline Statistics

● Attendance Rates and Patterns

● Graduation/Promotion Percentages

● I&RS statistics

● Survey results

*(using 3 years of longitudinal data for establishing a mean or a trend is considered best practice)

Page 13: Developing  Administrative  Goals

Best Practices for Goal SettingBefore

◦ Review District goals Building goals Multiple data sources

◦ Consider How you will influence

student achievement in the focal area you select

Can you collaborate on or around your goal other district principals in

similar programs) other building administrators Teachers

Can you leverage existing goals?

During◦ Communicate

goals/progress/challenges to stakeholders

◦ Implement strategies and adjust if

they are not working data collection as

neededAfter

◦ Reflect What went well What would you do

differently

Page 14: Developing  Administrative  Goals

Sample Goals:

Template and sample goals from the NJDOE

Page 17: Developing  Administrative  Goals

Your Goals:

Where are you? What are the challenges?

http://goo.gl/OAghOA

Page 18: Developing  Administrative  Goals

THANK YOU!

Please let me know if there is anything I can help you with

[email protected]