If our goal is to accelerate learning for those most impacted by the pandemic, we must make the most of the time that we have. We’ve known since TNTP’s The Opportunity Myth study that, all too often, only a quarter of students’ time in their classes is spent on activities that are moving them sufficiently toward college and career readiness. Simply doing more of what we did before the pandemic will not get us where we need to be as we seek to recover from it.
[pullquote position="right"]We actually know a lot about how to make the most of learning time[/pullquote]:
Ultimately, making the most of students’ time is the responsibility of school and district leaders. From their positions, they can set the expectations, create the systems, provide the resources, and give the encouragement to enable teachers to do their best work. A recent major review of research commissioned by the Wallace Foundation confirms it: What school leaders do has a major impact on educational outcomes.
[pullquote]We know what such leadership looks like because we’ve seen leaders who, despite all the challenges of the past year, put in place systems and marshaled their people and resources to make sure all students engaged in rigorous instruction on a daily basis.[/pullquote] Some of these leaders, like Kimberly Grayson, principal of Dr. MLK Junior Early College in Colorado or Ashley Johnson, principal of Henderson Collegiate in North Carolina are featured in our Follow the Leaders project, which Relay Graduate School of Education launched to share how leaders with previous track records of improving student learning were leading for equity during the pandemic. We will continue to do as leaders work through the recovery in the coming year.
These individuals—including school and network leaders in both district and charter schools—each approached the task somewhat differently, in ways appropriate for their context. But they all committed to the following actionable strategies to make the most of people’s time in a very challenging year:
Principal Brandi Chin, School Director at Noel Campus, Denver School of Science and Technology told us recently she’s looking at planning for next school year like planning to open an entirely new school.
That’s how all school, district, and network leaders should be thinking right now.
As we reimagine what needs to be done to give all students the learning experiences they deserve, we must think first and foremost about how to make the most of their time.
Dr. Ben Klompus currently serves school and system leaders as the Dean of Principal Supervisor Programs at Relay Graduate School of Education. A former leader and classroom teacher who has led multiple school systems to achieve nationally recognized gains in student outcomes, Ben has worked extensively at the nexus of data-driven network improvement, instructional leadership development and design thinking. Serving system and school-level leaders from more than 100 school districts and charter management organizations across 25 states and internationally, he has helped lead Relay’s efforts to hone a clear theory of action, align key measurement tools, and engage in regular data-driven improvement cycles in order to improve program impact. Dr. Klompus holds his Ed.L.D. and Ed.M. from Harvard Graduate School of Education, and a B.S. in Philosophy from The Colorado College.
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