Total Quality Schools

Definition

Total Quality schools apply the principles and practices of Total Quality Management to their administrative and instructional functions.

Basic Elements

When introduced in schools, the Total Quality process usually involves a combination of the following elements:

Understanding Systems and Processes–Education administrators make efforts to understand their school as a system containing many subsystems and processes. To do so, they often will “map” their systems and “flowchart” their processes. Schools will then strive to improve by redesigning their systems.

Using Data for Decision-Making–Employees learn to use data in decision-making. This frequently involves employing statistical methods to understand why processes vary.

Using Problem-Solving Teams and Teamwork–Classroom teams use common problem-solving processes and tools to tackle challenges and improve procedures. Students are often taught to use both methods and tools to improve classroom operations.

Identifying and Understanding Customer Needs–Schools identify the constituencies they need to satisfy, and attempt to understand their expectations and needs. Schools will develop measurement systems that compare their performance to their constituents’ expectations.

Quality Planning–Some schools use quality planning processes as a supplement to their strategic planning processes for identifying and achieving organization-wide goals. This will often involve developing organization-wide quality indicators, or “scoreboards”.

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Charter Schools

Definition
In concept, a charter school is a self-governing, publicly funded school that the community holds accountable for the results it produces–such as student learning–rather than for its compliance with school board or government rules and regulations.

A charter school operates without the typical restraints of an ordinary public school, for example, collective-bargaining agreements. Its enrollment is made up of students who want to attend that specific school–in effect, a charter school is a school of choice. In addition to its unique legal and governance structure, a charter school takes on elements of site-based management: People at the school site have the power to make critical decisions about issues such as budget and personnel.

Basic Elements
By January 1994, eight states had passed laws permitting the creation of charter schools. However, there are significant differences among these laws:

Some states limit chartering to existing public schools that want to convert to charter status, while others allow the creation of new schools.

Some states give responsibility for negotiating and approving charters to local school boards, while others bypass the local boards and allow entities such as community colleges, universities, and the state board of education to authorize charter schools.

Some states cap the number of charter schools that can be created, and some do not. Plus, some states give charter schools blanket waivers from existing state rules and regulations, while other states require rule-by-rule negotiations.

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Accelerated Schools

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information Accelerated Schools Info  Accelerated Schools PR: n/a  Accelerated Schools I: 234  Accelerated Schools L: 0  Accelerated Schools LD: 16,984  Accelerated Schools I: 228 Rank: 198693  Accelerated Schools Age: December 21, 1996  Accelerated Schools I: 0  Accelerated Schools whois source Robo: yes Sitemap: yes  Accelerated Schools Rank: 49573  Accelerated Schools Price: 2810 density12 Accelerated Schools Density
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Definition
In 1986, Stanford University introduced the concept of accelerated schools, an approach designed to create success for all students by closing the achievement gap between at-risk and mainstream children. The idea is to radically change individual schools by redesigning and integrating curricular, instructional, and organizational practices so that they provide enrichment–not just remediation–for at-risk students.

The accelerated schools program assumes that at-risk students have “learning gaps” in areas valued by schools and mainstream economic and social institutions. The program also assumes that remedial approaches fail to close these gaps because they don’t build on the students’ strengths and they don’t tap into the resources of teachers, parents, and the community.

Basic Elements
When the accelerated schools program is introduced into a school, the process involves several guiding principles and values:

Unity of Purpose–Parents, teachers, students, and administrators must agree on a common set of goals for the school. These goals become the focal point of everyone’s efforts, serving as a framework for all curricular, instructional, and organizational initiatives.

Empowerment/Responsibility–Members of the school community can make important educational decisions, take responsibility for implementing them, and take responsibility for the outcomes. This breaks the stalemate among administrators, teachers, parents, and students: It stops them from blaming each other and factors beyond their control for the students’ poor educational outcomes.

Building on Strengths–This program identifies and uses all the available learning resources in the school community, instead of exaggerating weaknesses and ignoring strengths. For example, parents can positively influence their children’s education at home and help teachers understand their children better. School administrators could make a concerted effort to creatively work with parents, staff, and students, rather than merely complying with them. Plus, teachers bring valuable insights, intuition, teaching, and organizational skills to the table. Furthermore, the strengths of at-risk students differ from those associated with predominantly white, middle-class culture, and often are overlooked. And finally, communities are ripe with assets, including youth organizations, senior citizens, businesses, religious groups.

Getting Started as an Accelerated School

There are four initial steps for developing an accelerated school. They are:

  1. Take stock of where you are, and establish baseline data.
  2. Create a shared vision as a focus for change.
  3. Compare your vision to baseline information, then identify gaps and needed changes.
  4. Identify 3-4 initial priorities, and establish small groups to work on these.

Reading
Hopfenberg, Wendy S. and Levin, Henry M., Accelerated Schools. School of Education, Stanford University, Stanford, CA (1990).

Accelerated Schools, Newsletter of the Accelerated Schools Project. School of Education, Stanford University, Stanford, CA.

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Comer Schools

Definition

This is an approach to restructuring the governance and practices of individual schools, initiated by psychologist James Comer in the mid-1970s. This approach hinges on Comer’s theory of how children develop and learn, and the reasons that disadvantaged, minority children do not learn in schools.

Comer believes that children follow a developmental continuum. They are born, totally dependent, into a family that is part of a social network with beliefs, attitudes, activities, and lifestyles. Parents become mediators who tell children what is important. Children gradually learn to manage their feelings and impulses, in essence, to control themselves. Development occurs in speech and language, cognition, intellectual and academic understanding, and moral, psychological, and social dimensions. To learn, children must imitate and identify with authority figures, in other words, internalize attitudes and values by relating emotionally to others.

When children come to school prepared to learn in that school’s style, due to how they have fared in the developmental continuum, they are perceived as “good.” When they do not, they are often perceived as “bad.” For this reason, Corner attests individual schools must support further developmental growth.

Basic Elements

When the Comer process is introduced into a school, it usually involves the following elements:

  • Changed School Governance–Parents, community members, teachers, administrators, and school staff collaborate in making key educational decisions.
  • Creation of a Social Skills Curriculum–Schools need developmental programs for young children who do not learn certain types of skills at home. Typically, a social skills curriculum covers politics and government, business and economics, health and nutrition, and spiritual and leisure activities.
  • Adoption of a Developmental Perspective Toward Children and Their Learning–This perspective incorporates three beliefs:
    1. All children are capable of learning.
    2. Learning is best achieved through the collaborative participation of all involved adults.
    3. Students enter school at different points along a developmental continuum.

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