The Hulley Centre
In my last blog I indicated that in November 2011 I signed a three year agreement with Solution Tree Canada to develop the Hulley Centre. The Centre has developed the Planning for School and Student Success Process. The PSSSP has developed a 6 day training program, organized into 3 modules offered over a 4 to 6 month period, for district and/or school based staff that return to their schools and lead the staff through the process which culminates in the development of a plan to improve. The process is based on sound research and practical experience in school districts across Canada. Over the next few weeks I would like to share the process and would welcome comments that could enhance the process. In today's blog I am sharing some of thinking behind the creation of the Hulley Centre.
“Planning for schools and students success
by involving the hearts, heads and hands of teachers.”
Every school is expected to plan.
However, research has shown that 70% percent of school improvement plans
makes little significant sustained differences in student learning. Wayne Hulley has spent the past 40 years
focused on the strategies and processes that have proven to have a positive
impact on student outcomes. He has
identified the 8 issues that have prevented most schools from a making the
gains they desire. His Planning for
School and Student Success Process (PSSSP) has been designed to confront the
issues. The process has a proven track
record having been used in schools across North America.
Recently he partnered with Solution Tree to develop the Hulley
Centre. The mission of the Centre is, “To
support student success, teacher satisfaction and community support for schools
through action based planning.”
Wayne Hulley’s experience has determined that many planning processes
focus on the head. Processes are
developed and schools are expected to use the process to create goals and plans
that are delivered to the central office to be monitored. This process can become a “head game” where
the staff simply fill in the blanks and develop little commitment to the
plan. They often return to the
classrooms and it is business as usual.
He refers to this as a “planning to plan approach,” based on compliance
but not commitment. School and student
improvement will never occur without the commitment of staff. School improvement is really about
instructional improvement and staff growth.
Commitment comes from the heart not the head. We capture staff hearts when we involve them
deeply in a process that allows them to take ownership. The Hulley Process keeps a focus on staff
since they are the ones that will have to implement the plan and make the
changes needed for success. Wayne refers
to this as “planning to improve.”
The “Planning for More Successful Schools Process” keeps a focus on
the teachers. The process is divided
into 3 aligned 2 day modules. The modules have been developed to counteract
the 8 issues, which have been identified by researchers, which lead to planning
that makes little or no difference and in the process frustrate staff and lower
morale making future attempts to improve difficult if not impossible.
The Eight Issues That
Prevent Many School Improvement Planning Processes Meeting With Significant
Sustained Success
1.
Lack of alignment and commitment of leadership at the provincial,
district and school level
2.
Low level of staff commitment and the failure to take
full account of the impact of change on those people who are most impacted by
it
3.
Failure to create a clear and compelling vision
4.
Ineffective use of data as the basis for planning
5.
Failure to
create and maintain a collaborative culture
6.
Creating goals that lack clarity to direct staff
planning, implementation and the monitoring of progress
7.
Implementing strategies that have little potential
to change outcomes
8.
Failure to celebrate successes and to monitor and
adjust the process based on ongoing formative assessment
The Hulley Centre’s, Planning for School and
Student Success Process, has been developed to confront the issues and as a
result has had a high level of success in schools across Canada.
Every schools and school district plans. The Hulley Centre, “Planning for More
Successful Schools Process,” does not take over the planning for a school or
district. It has the capacity to build
the priorities of the district or province into the process. The district owns the process and the Hulley
Centre through its network of associates facilitate, encourage and support the
effort.