School administrators are responsible for evaluating the performances of various

 

School administrators are responsible for evaluating the performances of various employee groups. Being able to identify the strengths and weaknesses of employees and provide them with quality feedback is essential to the success of the entire school. As the school leader, you will need to  evaluate the instructional leadership capacity of your entire staff.

Read the following case studies and choose either the Elementary or Secondary to inform the assignment.

Elementary

You are a school principal in an elementary school. In preparation for meeting with your third grade team lead, Ms. Juarez, you have been analyzing the students’ reading performance data. You have identified that the students in four of the five teachers’ classes exhibit good to exceptional outcomes on their DIBELS benchmark data. Additionally, three of the teachers have historically yielded student scores with above average state standardized test results in comparison to schools in your district with similar demographics. In previous discussions with Ms. Juarez, she has cited the teachers’ efforts to plan together utilizing the pacing guide, core program, and assessment results as the primary reasons for their students’ positive outcomes.

One teacher, Ms. Monroe, has been identified as an outlier by the district’s assessment coordinator, relative to the results of her students, compared to the other four teachers. Additionally, you have observed evidence that suggests Ms. Monroe is behind on the pacing guide, compared to her colleagues. You also have received anecdotal information that she does not engage with her teammates during scheduled grade level meetings, which leads you to believe that she is not making an effort to plan with them outside the scheduled meetings.

Secondary

You are a school principal in a 9-12 grade high school. In preparation for a meeting with your ELA department chair, Mr. Wong, you have been analyzing the students’ ELA performance data. Including Mr. Wong, your school has eight ELA teachers. For seven of the ELA teachers, 70% or more of their students are demonstrating good to exceptional outcomes on their writing benchmark data. Four of the teachers have historically yielded student scores with above average state standardized test results in comparison to schools in your district with similar demographics. In previous discussions, Mr. Wong has cited the teachers’ efforts to plan together utilizing the pacing guide, core program, and assessment results as the primary reasons for their students’ positive outcomes.

One teacher, however, Mr. Blumenstock, has been identified as an outlier by the district’s assessment coordinator, relative to the results of his students, compared to the other two teachers. Additionally, you have observed evidence that suggests Mr. Blumenstock is behind on the pacing guide compared to his colleagues. You also have anecdotal information that he does not engage with his teammates during scheduled content team meetings, which leads you to believe that he is not making an effort to plan with them outside the scheduled meetings.

In 750-1,000 words, analyze your chosen case using the three-part guiding questions below.

Part 1: Analyze the Case

Consider the following questions to begin analyzing the situation:

  • What do you consider the responsibility of the team lead/department chair in assisting the outlier teacher?
  • What stakeholders should be included in the conversation relative to next steps? Are these individual conversations or a group discussion or both?
  • What questions should be considered when making a determination about next steps?

Part 2: Identify the Larger Issues

Consider the following questions to analyze the contextual issues present in the situation:

  • What school or district policies might affect your decisions?
  • What additional information do you need as part of your decision-making process?
  • What are the potentially positive and negative outcomes of doing nothing? 
  • What are the potentially positive and negative outcomes of taking action? 

Part 3: Create an Action Plan

Use the following questions to guide you in describing what approach you will take to assist the team lead/department chair to help the outlier teacher, including 3-5 specific action steps:

  • What is your plan moving forward?
  • How does your plan sustain a culture of collaboration, trust, learning, and high expectations?
  • How will you include the critical stakeholders in the decision-making process?
  • What challenges do you anticipate?
  • How will you provide ongoing support to your team lead/department chair?
  • How will you evaluate the results of your teacher leader’s efforts?
  • What does the timeline look like?

Support your analysis and plan with 2-3 scholarly resources.

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