School Development in Culturally Diverse U.S. Schools: Balancing Evidence-Based Policies and Education Values
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Review of the Literature
2.1. Recent US Policy Shifts toward Evidence-Based Innovations and Values
2.2. Traditional Humanistic Values of Democracy and Education
2.3. Culturally Responsive Leadership
3. Description of the Intervention
3.1. Content
3.2. Delivery System
4. Methodology
- How do formal and informal school leaders work in teams to mediate between evidence-based policy requirements at federal, state, and district levels and the needs of culturally diverse students?
- What leadership team practices contribute to school development as measured by improved student outcomes in school letter grades?
- What values from evidence-based policies and democratic education are evident in effective school development?
4.1. Sampling
4.2. Data Collection and Data Analysis
5. Results
5.1. Quantitative Results
Improved School Letter Grades
5.2. Qualitative Interview Results
You know, I really don’t think we have a real, definite vision. I think right now we were a C-minus school… So I know that is definitely one of his visions, is to get us to improve our C-minus standing. But other than that, I don’t think we all know, okay, definitely what is the vision for the school as a unit, other than moving forward from a C-minus; and that is a big goal.
I know he meets with department chairs, I think it’s once a month, and they meet I think for about an hour. And then their department chairs go back to their department and pass on information that they have gathered from that. So there is—he’s trying to get that communication down. But from there there’s not an avenue, really, to put input back up, so it comes down. And I know I’ve given suggestions to my chair, but I don’t know if it has gotten back up. So there’s no real follow-through on when you have ideas.
Since we started, I have seen changes in the school vision and mission, the directions that we are going in the capacity-building groups that we have, our curriculum action team, as well as the revamped and rejuvenated leadership council with better direction…We have better communication across the board and better professional development for our staff focused on student learning.
[The School Improvement Project] has provided the research, the systems, the applications to start small, look at the low-hanging fruit, start to build momentum, have clarity in purpose and direction, and get the buy-in to start moving forward…it’s showing the principal how to build teams to have, for example, to help with issues on curriculum and culture. It is no longer just the principal trying to lead the way. It’s all encompassing of staff trying to get on board.
I’m still sitting here with my team going, “Okay, we need to do this next year, dah dah dah,” and I have no idea if it’s going to happen or not…I know they’ll carry forward, or hopefully whoever takes over will be open to where we’ve been, and where we were thinking we would be going, and I’m sure they’ll add their own expertise. We want it to be better, and it will be...
We have increased accountability at [our school]…This means we have made our goals and outcomes clearer. We have also further defined individual roles and what they look like so that people can truly be more included and feel their own importance to our shared goals. The further we move along with every individual having clearly defined roles/value/and importance to our team, the more people embrace that and make us more effective as a whole school.
It’s kind of like we’re progressing hand in hand, or what I see this training has enabled us to do is become a team. Before we were every two weeks for 30 min before school. Where we weren’t given time to gel, to use your word, to become a unit. Then what we do, then we take it back to our teams…We went back and we have our thing ready to go.
6. Discussion
7. Limitations
8. Future Directions
9. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Phase 1 | Phase 2 | Phase 3 | ||
---|---|---|---|---|
# Schools Served | 45 | 7 | 19 | |
# Participants | 80 | 35 | 101 | |
% School-Rural | 56% | 14% | 53% | |
% Schools-Urban | 25% | 72% | 37% | |
% Schools-Suburban | 19% | 14% | 5% | |
% Community College | - | - | 5% | |
Ethnicity—Latino/a/Hispanic | Principals | 27% | 58% | 57% |
Staff | 14% | 32% | 61% | |
Ethnicity—White | Principals | 60% | 33% | 43% |
Staff | 60% | 68% | 38% | |
Ethnicity—Native American | Principals | 11% | 8% | - |
Staff | 3% | - | 1% | |
Ethnicity—Other | Principals | 2% | - | - |
Staff | 23% | - | - | |
Gender—Female | Principals | 62% | 25% | 75% |
Staff | 74% | 58% | 88% | |
Gender—Male | Principals | 38% | 75% | 25% |
Staff | 26% | 42% | 12% | |
Principal Tenure— <3 years | 88% | 17% | 29% |
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Ylimaki, R.; Brunderman, L. School Development in Culturally Diverse U.S. Schools: Balancing Evidence-Based Policies and Education Values. Educ. Sci. 2019, 9, 84. https://doi.org/10.3390/educsci9020084
Ylimaki R, Brunderman L. School Development in Culturally Diverse U.S. Schools: Balancing Evidence-Based Policies and Education Values. Education Sciences. 2019; 9(2):84. https://doi.org/10.3390/educsci9020084
Chicago/Turabian StyleYlimaki, Rose, and Lynnette Brunderman. 2019. "School Development in Culturally Diverse U.S. Schools: Balancing Evidence-Based Policies and Education Values" Education Sciences 9, no. 2: 84. https://doi.org/10.3390/educsci9020084
APA StyleYlimaki, R., & Brunderman, L. (2019). School Development in Culturally Diverse U.S. Schools: Balancing Evidence-Based Policies and Education Values. Education Sciences, 9(2), 84. https://doi.org/10.3390/educsci9020084