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Technical Assistance Key to Rural School Principals in SIG Work, Report Finds

By Andrew Ujifusa 鈥 May 19, 2016 3 min read
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A study of rural schools implementing one of four turnaround model under the federal School Improvement Grant program found that few rural schools fully implemented all the 鈥渢ransformation鈥 model, and that implementation challenges were more common for strategies related to staff and community engagement than they were for curriculum- and data-related approaches.

was written by Caitlin Scott and Nora Ostler at the Regional Education Laboratory At Education Northwest, and prepared for the Institute of Education Sciences. It鈥檚 not part of the federal 鈥淪tudy of School Turnaround鈥 that has looked at SIG more broadly across the country.

The study was conducted in the spring of 2014, after most of the SIG activity undertaken by the first cohort of schools was done. It included a survey of 135 principals, or roughly two-thirds of the 201 schools surveyed.

There were a total of 12 strategies available to principals under the SIG transformation model, but they reported receiving varying levels of technical assistance for each area. And there鈥檚 a clear pattern, which you can see here:

And which of the above strategies were principals able to push over the finish line most often? The report says, 鈥77 percent of principals reported that their school had fully implemented the use of student achievement data to inform instructional decisions, whereas 52 percent reported that their school had fully implemented staff-evaluation systems that tied evaluation to student achievement, and 40 percent reported that their school had engaged families.鈥

鈥淥verall, it was really an important connection between technical assistance and full implementation鈥 of transformation strategies, Scott told me in an interview.

However, just 5 percent of principals reported implementing all 12 of the SIG transformation strategies, and on average, principals reported fully implementing six out of the 12.

Partnering with outside organizations beyond districts and states proved particularly challenging for many of the schools, Scott told me, in part because the areas where the school are located are often not just at some distance from large urban areas where universities and other K-12 organizations tend to cluster, but also in impoverished areas.

鈥淭hey may have businesses that are struggling, or that are non-existent ... you don鈥檛 have businesses to partner with to do a fundraiser, or to bring in community volunteers,鈥 or to help provide care for students outside of schools, Scott said.

Here are a few more findings from the report:

  • 鈥淎lmost all schools received technical assistance from at least one provider, with districts the most frequently identified provider. Most principals (93 percent) reported that their school had received technical assistance from at least one provider for at least one of the transformation strategies examined in the survey.鈥
  • "[A]lmost half (47 percent) of principals reported challenges to rewarding staff financially鈥攁 strategy related to ensuring high-quality staff鈥攁nd about a third (34 percent) reported challenges to engaging families and communities. In contrast, fewer principals (26 percent) reported challenges to expanding learning time to improve instruction.鈥
  • 鈥淲hen principals reported challenges with three or more strategies, they also reported that their school had fully implemented an average of only 5.2 strategies. In contrast, when principals reported challenges with fewer than three strategies, they reported that their school had fully implemented an average of 7.5 strategies.鈥

Read the full study below:

A version of this news article first appeared in the Politics K-12 blog.