New Leaders for troubled schools: Jacquelyn Davis works with D.C.'s education bureaucracy.In recent years Frank W. Ballou Senior High School in Washington, D.C., has suffered some well-publicized traumas, including the on-campus murder of a 17-year-old and a deliberate mercury contamination by students that forced the school to close for a month. Meanwhile, barely 3 percent of students scored "proficient" in reading, and just under 10 percent did so in math. In comparison, the firing of Ballou's principal in the summer of 2005--the second sacking sack·ing n. A coarse, stout woven cloth, such as burlap or gunny, used for making sacks; sackcloth. sacking Noun coarse cloth woven from flax, hemp, or jute, and used to make sacks Noun in as many years--seemed like a mercifully mer·ci·ful adj. Full of mercy; compassionate: sought merciful treatment for the captives. See Synonyms at humane. mer dull event. For Jacquelyn Davis, any mention of Ballou brings back sharp memories. "Ballou is where I had my awakening," says Davis. In 1999, as a second-year law student at Georgetown University Georgetown University, in the Georgetown section of Washington, D.C.; Jesuit; coeducational; founded 1789 by John Carroll, chartered 1815, inc. 1844. Its law and medical schools are noteworthy, and its archives are especially rich in letters and manuscripts by and , she taught a legal course at the high school. "My students at Ballou were incredibly smart but their skills were on such a low level," she says. "Some of them were close to being illiterate." She realized that the school was broken but felt powerless to fix it. "It was painful to witness," she says. Today Davis, 35, wields considerable influence over Ballou and, in fact, almost every public school in Washington, D.C. As the executive director of the Washington office of New Leaders for New Schools (NLNS NLNS New Leaders for New Schools (Denver, Colorado) NLNS Nonleafy Normal Stature (botany) ), Davis is overseeing a rapidly expanding crop of new principals who are promising to revitalize a long-ailing system. The nonprofit NLNS has agreements to train principals in five other U.S. cities--Chicago, New York New York, state, United States New York, Middle Atlantic state of the United States. It is bordered by Vermont, Massachusetts, Connecticut, and the Atlantic Ocean (E), New Jersey and Pennsylvania (S), Lakes Erie and Ontario and the Canadian province of , Baltimore, Memphis, and the Oakland Bay Oakland Bay is a body of water near the town of Shelton, Washington. It is connected to the larger Puget Sound via Hammersley Inlet.
Someone Who Can Do It All Davis grew up in Port Arthur, Texas Port Arthur is a city in Jefferson County within the Beaumont-Port Arthur metropolitan area and is situated in southeast Texas. As of the 2000 U.S. Census, the city had a total population of 57,755. , where her father served as a school board member during the massive effort to desegregate de·seg·re·gate v. de·seg·re·gat·ed, de·seg·re·gat·ing, de·seg·re·gates v.tr. 1. To abolish or eliminate segregation in. 2. that city's schools, and she was among the first white students to attend a formerly segregated elementary school elementary school: see school. . "In some ways I've always been thinking about these issues of race and class and education," she says. As an undergraduate at Brown University, she studied school reform with Ted Sizer Theodore R. Sizer (born June 23, 1932 in New Haven, CT) is a leader of educational reform in the United States. Since the late 1970s, he has worked with hundreds of high schools, studying the development and design of the American educational system. , and not long after moving to Washington in 1993 to work for a congressman, she co-founded Hands on DC, a nonprofit that uses volunteers to make repairs in the city's notoriously dilapidated school buildings and provide college scholarships to low-income students. None of this, she says, prepared her for the dysfunction she discovered while teaching at Ballou, which was jarring enough to sideline her career as a lawyer. Instead, she headed for public education. She and some Georgetown classmates Classmates can refer to either:
Thurgood Marshall (July 2, 1908 – January 24, 1993) was an American jurist and the first African American to serve on the Supreme Court of the United States. Academy, a law-related high school just blocks away from Ballou and one of the city's first charter high schools. Davis became an administrator at Thurgood Marshall. She recruited the school's first principal and learned firsthand first·hand adj. Received from the original source: firsthand information. first what it takes to lead an effective school. That work led to an insight that would reverberate re·ver·ber·ate v. re·ver·ber·at·ed, re·ver·ber·at·ing, re·ver·ber·ates v.intr. 1. To resound in a succession of echoes; reecho. 2. . "You can have amazing a·maze v. a·mazed, a·maz·ing, a·maz·es v.tr. 1. To affect with great wonder; astonish. See Synonyms at surprise. 2. Obsolete To bewilder; perplex. v.intr. teachers," Davis says. "But if you don't have a principal holding it all together ... the school's not going to work." The principal she helped hire was highly qualified, she recalls. "But even he wasn't perfect." She saw close-up the staggering array of skills requisite in a successful principal, from managing a multimillion-dollar budget, to being an instructional leader, to working with parents and community members. "How do you find someone who can wear all these hats?" Davis asks. Great Schools Have Great Principals In 2002 Davis met up with an old friend, Jonathan Schnur. They'd first met while working on Bill Clinton's 1992 presidential campaign. Both passionate about education as a fundamental right for every child, their shared interests had kept them in contact. "For years the two of us had been having discussions about education and about how to make schools work for all kids," says Davis. "We were always both focused on the students who were too often left behind in urban schools--low-income kids, kids of color not of the white race; - commonly meaning, esp. in the United States, of negro blood, pure or mixed. See also: Color ." Schnur, as a Clinton administration Noun 1. Clinton administration - the executive under President Clinton executive - persons who administer the law education-policy adviser, had spent lots of time visiting schools across the country. "And one pretty simple but powerful insight became clear," he says. "Great schools have great principals." He used the premise to write a two-page concept paper describing a program for recruiting, training, and supporting new urban-school principals. He says he was eager to launch the program right away. "You've got no program, no funding, no team," Schnur recalls one friend cautioning him. "You've never been a principal. You need to develop this more before you launch." So Schnur took his idea and enrolled in the Harvard Graduate School of Education The Harvard Graduate School of Education (HGSE) is a graduate school at Harvard University, and is one of the top schools of education in the United States. It offers six doctoral concentrations and thirteen masters programs. in 1999 where he joined forces with some students from the Harvard Business School Harvard Business School, officially named the Harvard Business School: George F. Baker Foundation, and also known as HBS, is one of the graduate schools of Harvard University. . Together they refined Schnur's concept and entered it in Harvard's annual business-plan contest. New Leaders for New Schools, as Schnur dubbed dub 1 tr.v. dubbed, dub·bing, dubs 1. To tap lightly on the shoulder by way of conferring knighthood. 2. To honor with a new title or description. 3. the program, was the first nonprofit to be named a semifinalist in the competition. This helped secure start-up funding, including $1.15 million in grants from the NewSchools Venture Fund The NewSchools Venture Fund is a non-profit venture philanthopy fund that invests in educational entrepeneurship projects at the K-12 levels in United States public schools. , a California-based venture philanthropy Venture philanthropy takes concepts and techniques from Venture Capital finance and high technology business management and applies them to achieving philanthropic goals. Venture philanthropy is characterized by:
By late 2002, NLNS was up and running in New York, Chicago, and the Oakland Bay area, with three cities The Three Cities is a collective description of the three fortified cities of Cospicua, Vittoriosa, and Senglea on the Island of Malta, which are enclosed by the massive line of fortification created by the Knights of St John, the Cottonera Lines. submitting bids to be the next expansion site. Schnur, now CEO (1) (Chief Executive Officer) The highest individual in command of an organization. Typically the president of the company, the CEO reports to the Chairman of the Board. of the nonprofit, selected Washington and asked Davis to launch the new program office. The hiring of principals, says Schnur, is entwined with community politics. Davis, just over 30, was already intimate with the politics and players of the D.C. education landscape. Schnur states her qualifications more bluntly: "We needed someone who could bring people together and get things done." [ILLUSTRATION OMITTED] Finding the Best Woman (or Man) for the Job Jacquelyn Davis's desk is awash Awash (ä`wäsh), river, E Ethiopia, rising near Addis Ababa and flowing c.500 mi (800 km) to a swampy lake near the Djibouti border. The Awash Valley is important agriculturally and has hydroelectric plants. in papers. It's an early December morning, 2005, and applications for next year's "cohort" of New Leaders are rolling in. Last year, 260 people applied to the program, and 18 were accepted. Selection involves several rounds of written responses, interviews, case studies, and problem-solving exercises, where applicants are judged on 10 criteria, from "belief in the potential of all children to excel academically" to "project management" to "self-awareness." "I personally interviewed around 150 people last year," says Davis. "At an hour and a half per interview, that's where I spend a lot of my time." The final round involves an eight-hour simulation of a day in the life of a principal. Irate parents? Teacher observations? A ruptured boiler? NLNS didn't want to reveal specifically what problems are thrown at applicants during the simulation, except to say that anything a principal might encounter is fair game. NLNS recruits all have teaching expertise, but are drawn from a range of sectors--private industry, education, nonprofits, law, the military--and are put through a yearlong boot camp Software from Apple that enables an Intel x86-based Macintosh to host the Windows XP operating system. Boot Camp is used to divide the hard disk into Windows and Mac partitions, to install the necessary drivers and to create a dual boot environment. , which includes weekly classes and a hands-on, medical residency-style apprenticeship with a mentor principal. The training is followed by two years of on-the-job support. New Leaders in D.C., Davis says, have on average six years in the classroom and adult leadership experience. Average age is 35. Two-thirds of the New Leaders are women (see Figure 2). NLNS doesn't push a particular curricular model or reform package. Rather, says Schnur, the yearlong training program emphasizes three core principles: All children can excel academically and behaviorally; principals are instructional leaders; classroom decisions should be driven by data. "We think that these principles are incredibly important," says Schnur. "Research shows that these are the kinds of things that happen in highly effective schools, and if you don't do them you're not likely to have an effective school." Central Office Shuffle Last December Davis was facing another urgent task: hammering out a formal agreement with the D.C. Public Schools (DCPS DCPS District of Columbia Public Schools DCPS Duval County Public Schools DCPS Defense Civilian Pay System (US DoD) DCPS Digital Copy Protection System DCPS Defense Civilian Payroll System DCPS Data-Centric Publish-Subscribe ). For the previous several years, NLNS had been operating essentially with no contract from D.C. Public Schools. The only written commitment she had from the school system was a four-line letter from then new superintendent, Clifford B. Janey, dated March 2005, saying that D.C. Public Schools will "cover the Residency year salaries ... for up to 20 New Leaders who will train in DCPS during the 2005-2006 school year." Contrast that with the 22-page Memorandum of Understanding A Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) is a legal document describing a bilateral or multilateral agreement between parties. It expresses a convergence of will between the parties, indicating an intended common line of action and may not imply a legal commitment. (MOU (Minutes Of Usage) A metric used to compute billing and/or statistics for telephone calls or other network use. ) that then D.C. superintendent Paul Vance inked with NLNS in 2003. This document defined the nitty-gritty, who-does-what of the partnership. NLNS pledged, for example, "to identify classroom spaces for the courses" that the New Leaders would take during their yearlong training, while the school system promised to "identify outstanding practitioners from the D.C. Public Schools who could serve as faculty or guest lecturers in these courses." [ILLUSTRATION OMITTED] Vance and his chief of staff, Steven Seleznow, were among the driving forces in bringing NLNS to Washington. "It was pretty clear that we needed them," says Seleznow. "One of the levers of change is to have really strong leaders in the schools, and we didn't have the in-house capacity to recruit and train the best principals. With New Leaders we saw an opportunity to build an almost immediate capacity." He acknowledges that there was concern that graduates of the program, with relatively little experience, would not be up to the task of running schools. "But we did our due diligence Research; analysis; your homework. This term has caught on in all industries, because it sounds so "wired." Who would want to do analysis or research when they can do due diligence. See wired. , and given the quality of the training, the quality of the people New Leaders had been able to recruit in other cities, the mentors they would have, we felt we were minimizing the risk" of their inexperience. Besides, says Seleznow, a former principal in Montgomery County, Maryland Montgomery County of the U.S. state of Maryland is situated just north of Washington, D.C. and Southwest of Baltimore. It is one of the most affluent counties in the nation[1], and has the highest percentage (29. , "There's no experience that can totally prepare you for your first principalship." For the most part, the 2003 Memorandum of Understanding mirrored agreements that NLNS had with other school systems. At the core lay a financial arrangement, with D.C. Public Schools paying the New Leaders' salaries during training and NLNS covering the program costs, leaving Davis to raise a $1.5 million annual operating budget Noun 1. operating budget - a budget for current expenses as distinct from financial transactions or permanent improvements budget items, operating cost, operating expense, overhead - the expense of maintaining property (e.g. . But in at least one regard the D.C. agreement broke new ground. Superintendent Vance agreed to grant NLNS graduates who excelled during their residency year--and were subsequently hired as principals--increased decision-making authority and autonomy. The New Leaders were promised greater control over budgets, staffing, curriculum, and professional development. "New Leaders felt strongly that their principals had to have autonomy," says Seleznow. "They wanted to immunize im·mu·nize v. 1. To render immune. 2. To produce immunity in, as by inoculation. im their principals from a lot of the problems that came along with being a captive to the bureaucracy." He says there were plans eventually to offer the autonomy to all qualifying principals because their union worried about the New Leaders becoming a "favored group of principals with tools that other principals did not have." At the time, it appeared that NLNS, having just arrived in Washington, was destined des·tine tr.v. des·tined, des·tin·ing, des·tines 1. To determine beforehand; preordain: a foolish scheme destined to fail; a film destined to become a classic. 2. to be a lot more than a supplier of principals. It was helping to shape policy, placing principalship at the center of the reform agenda. "I tell you all of this for naught," says Davis, after describing the autonomies in the 2003 MOU. Seleznow retired a few weeks after helping to work out the agreement. And soon Vance did, too. "To be very candid with you, I just don't want to be bothered with it all," Vance told reporters, describing his frustrations with running D.C. Public Schools. With the loss of these key partners, says Davis, NLNS had to gain new champions in the central office, and the program had to find new supporters. The promises in the MOU quickly fell into limbo, and it was clear that the autonomies for NLNS principals would not take root. "We had a 'gentlemen's agreement' about how these autonomies would be worked out, but the specifics were not in writing. I didn't anticipate such a quick transition in the top-level leadership," Davis recalls. "People who remain constant in the system are often not the most senior staff people, and it's through relationships with those people that we get a lot done. They are the foundation of the system." Despite the setback, Davis did not veer from the plan to recruit and train a cohort of would-be principals. She became a constant presence in the central office building, reminding workers there who she was and what NLNS was trying to do. "I know everyone's secretary really well," Davis says. "And that matters because every single assistant superintendent Assistant Superintendent, or Assistant Superintendent of Police (ASP), was a rank used by police forces in the British Empire. It was usually the lowest rank that could be held by a European officer, most of whom joined the police at this rank. position has turned over at least once, and some of them have turned over three times since I've been here. And the secretaries have remained. So when I call and say to the secretary, 'I'm calling from New Leaders,' the secretary says 'Of course. How are you?' and my call gets returned" by the assistant superintendent. Breaking Through Getting a phone call returned is one thing. Getting a New Leader hired is another. D.C. Public Schools was never obligated ob·li·gate tr.v. ob·li·gat·ed, ob·li·gat·ing, ob·li·gates 1. To bind, compel, or constrain by a social, legal, or moral tie. See Synonyms at force. 2. To cause to be grateful or indebted; oblige. to hire any of the New Leaders. "Our people have to compete in the hiring process just like other candidates," says Davis. In other cities, early graduates of the program had difficulty being hired as principals and were often brought on as assistant principals or other administrators. (See "The Waiting Game," features, Summer 2004). Many of the New Leaders were perceived as outsiders. Yet Bernard Lucas, president of the Council of School Officers, the union representing D.C. principals and assistant principals, worries that New Leaders are leapfrogging Leapfrogging is a theory of development in which developing countries skip inferior, less efficient, more expensive or more polluting technologies and industries and move directly to more advanced ones. over other job applicants. "The concern is that people who have worked very diligently, who have had excellent evaluations over the years, who have the skills, that they are being pushed to the side and overlooked when positions become available," says Lucas. He adds that he supports the NLNS concept. "If the people who come out of the New Leaders program go through the selection and interview process on top, then so be it. But just because these other individuals did not go through the program does not mean they don't have the vision or are incapable of leading the schools." Davis says that in some ways being an NLNS graduate can be an obstacle, for the simple fact that New Leaders don't look like other D.C. principals. "If they have it in their minds that the principal should be a man who's sixty ... this is a very different thing than selecting an instructional leader who's 35, who's female, who might have dreadlocks dread·locks pl.n. 1. A natural hairstyle in which the hair is twisted into long matted or ropelike locks. 2. A similar hairstyle consisting of long thin braids radiating from the scalp. . Changing what a community thinks a principal is and what a principal should do has been a lot of work." For Davis, breaking through has meant leading workshops for job-seeking New Leaders. "We tell them, know the school that you're going to interview for. Know the data, know the community, know the players. We had one New Leader who went out and walked the neighborhood before her interview. And then in the interview she talked about the people she'd met in the neighborhood. That was a kind of liftoff moment for her." So far the strategy has worked. Of the 47 New Leaders Davis has shepherded through the hiring gauntlet gauntlet /gaunt·let/ (gawnt´let) a bandage covering the hand and fingers like a glove. , only one, Melissa Kim, was not immediately hired by a D.C. public school. She spent a year as an assistant principal in nearby Arlington County. "I think part of it is that she seemed young," says Davis about Kim, who was 28 years old when she graduated from NLNS. In the summer of 2005 Kim was hired to run Deal Junior High School in D.C. [ILLUSTRATION OMITTED] Back to Ballou It's too early to say whether or not the New Leaders are making a significant impact on student achievement, although RAND has been enlisted to study the program. Schnur says the results are due in 2008. One milestone brings Davis particular delight. In July 2005, D.C. Superintendent Clifford B. Janey appointed Karen Smith Karen Smith (born January 30, 1979 in Toowoomba, Queensland) is a former field hockey midfield player from Australia, who earned a total number of 257 international caps for the Women's National Team, in which she scored 45 goals. , a recent NLNS graduate, to be the new principal of Ballou. Smith brought in two NLNS graduates to serve as assistant principals--creating a team of like-minded educators working together to turn the school around. Last year, even before the firing at Ballou, Davis says that she began discussions with the school system about which New Leaders "could take on challenging high schools." In particular, she touted Smith, then a 33-year-old former high-school English teacher and program director for Teach For America Teach For America (TFA) is a non-profit organization whose mission is to close the academic achievement gap between children from different socio-economic backgrounds. . Smith had spent her training year as an assistant principal at McKinley Technology High School McKinley Technology High School [1] is a public city-wide 9-12th grade high school in the District of Columbia Public Schools in Washington, D.C.. The school was originally an off shoot of Central High School (now Cardozo Senior High School), was called McKinley Technical in Washington, where she helped craft the budget, manage the facility, and deal with parents. When the Ballou job opened up, Davis encouraged Smith to consider it. "I didn't know if I was ready for that," says Smith. "But I felt up for the challenge." Superintendent Janey evidently agreed. He directly appointed Smith to the Ballou principalship, skirting the normal process involving community panels. "I was ecstatic," recalls Davis, who says that Ballou, under Smith's direction, is on the path to reform. "I was told by a lot of people that I needed to be a man. I was told that Ballou's principal needed to be a man," Smith says. She recalls her response to the critics: "I can't deny that I'm younger than most principals. I can't deny that I don't have as much experience, but here's what I'm going to do." In September 2006, on the first day of school at Frank W. Ballou Senior High School, Davis returned to the school that had so profoundly affected her years earlier. In the year since Smith assumed the principalship, reading scores had improved. The halls were calm; students were in their classrooms. One student told her, "Ms. Smith does not play, but she loves us and we know it." "The building is already significantly different than the one I knew," says Davis. "There's more structure, more order. The culture has shifted enough now for Smith to focus on instruction and student learning--the stuff that matters most." She couldn't help but feel a sense of satisfaction: "On a personal level I've had my eye on that school for a long time." Tyler Currie Tyler Currie (born in Calgary, Alberta, Canada) ran for a Provincial parliament seat during the 2007 Ontario election in the downtown Toronto riding of Trinity-Spadina for the Progressive Conservative Party of Ontario. is a contributing writer for the Washington Post Magazine.
Career Boost (Figure 1)
Nearly 90 percent of all graduates and 95 percent of Washington, D.C.
graduates of the New Leaders for New Schools program have been promptly
hired for leadership positions (principals and assistant principals).
Placement of NLNS Graduates, 2001-2006
Percentage Overall Washington, D.C.
Principal 69 74
Assistant Principal 20 21
SOURCE: New Leaders for New Schools
Note: Table made from bar graph.
A Different Mold (Figure 2)
With high participation rates from the ranks of the young, females, and
minorities, New Leaders do not look like the typical public school
principal.
Characteristics of New Leaders and U.S. Public School Principals
Percentage
New Leaders U.S. Principals
Female 67 44
Black 50 11
White 32 82
Hispanic 8 5
Under Age 40 82 12
Note: For percentage under age 40, New Leaders in the year they begin
the program are compared to new public school principals in 1999-2000.
SOURCES: New Leaders for New Schools; National Center for Education
Statistics, "Digest of Education Statistics 2005"; Susan M. Gates et al,
"Who is Leading our Schools?" (RAND Corporation, 2003)
Note: Table made from bar graph.
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