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Leading With Inquiry and Action

How Principals Improve Teaching and Learning
By: Matthew Militello, Sharon F. Rallis, Ellen B. Goldring

Foreword by Richard F. Elmore

Improve instruction in your school with this collaborative, inquiry-based process that helps identify areas for improvement, determine community-supported solutions, define an action plan, and evaluate program results.

Full description


Product Details
  • Grade Level: PreK-12, Elementary, Secondary
  • ISBN: 9781412964142
  • Published By: Corwin
  • Year: 2009
  • Page Count: 168
  • Publication date: November 28, 2012

Price: $39.95

Price: $39.95
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Description

Description

"This essential guide for educational leaders skillfully blends scholarship with practice and integrates theory with real-world examples. Through case studies, the authors show the reader how to develop, support, and improve a collaborative, inquiry-action process for improving teaching and learning. If we are going to have schools that successfully educate all students to high standards, then we need principals who translate the lessons of this book into practice."
—Andrew Lachman, Executive Director
Connecticut Center for School Change

Enhance learning with a collaborative, inquiry-based system of leadership!

With sociopolitical forces prompting calls for school improvement, school leaders look for ways to expand their expertise in instructional leadership and strengthen their role in shaping classroom practice.

Leading With Inquiry and Action presents a systematic, ongoing process for collecting information, making decisions, and taking action to improve instruction and raise student achievement. The authors illustrate this collaborative inquiry-action cycle with a running vignette of an experienced principal and offer questions and exercises to guide individual reflection and group discussion. Thoroughly grounded in research, this book helps administrators:

  • Identify areas for instructional improvement
  • Determine community-supported solutions and build stakeholder commitment
  • Articulate an action plan based on multiple data sources
  • Take steps that support teacher development
  • Systematically evaluate program results

Educational improvement requires informed leadership. This practical guide provides an efficient and functional framework for transforming current or aspiring principals into inquiry-minded, action-oriented instructional leaders.


Key features

  • Introduces and shows how to implement a collaborative inquiry-action cycle, an ongoing system of practice that emphasizes both thought and action in addressing the challenges of school improvement and that includes identifying the practice problem, determining outcomes, articulating the action plan, taking action, and evaluating

  • Illustrates the collaborative inquiry-action cycle in action through a running vignette of an experienced principal

  • The 3 chapters of Part 2 offer cases, with charts, inventories, rubrics, and illustrations that provide models of how the cycle can actually be used in schools

  • Good for book study groups: at the end of each chapter questions and exercises serve to guide both individual reflection and group discussion

Author(s)

Author(s)

Matthew Militello photo

Matthew Militello

Matthew Militello is the Wells Fargo Distinguished Professor in Educational Leadership at East Carolina University. He is currently the principal investigator for a million dollar National Science Foundation grant (NSF# 1738767) bringing computational thinking to music and art classes in rural NC middle schools. Militello is also currently implementing an innovative Ed.D. degree for ECU in Bangkok, Thailand. Militello received his teaching degree from the University of Michigan (B.Ed., 1992), his administrative certification (MSA, 1994) and doctoral degrees (Ph.D., 2004) from Michigan State University. He has held faculty positions at North Carolina State University (2008-2014) and the University of Massachusetts at Amherst (2005-2008). Prior to his academic career, Militello was a middle and high public school teacher, assistant principal, and principal in Michigan (1992-2003). Militello has received funding to conduct research from the College Board, the W.K. Kellogg Foundation, Xian Normal University, as well as a multi-million dollar Race to the Top grant to train school leaders in Northeast North Carolina.

Sharon F. Rallis photo

Sharon F. Rallis

Sharon F. Rallis is Dwight W. Allen Distinguished Professor of Education Policy and Reform at the University of Massachusetts at Amherst. Previously, she was professor of education at the University of Connecticut; lecturer on education at Harvard; and associate professor of educational leadership at Peabody College, Vanderbilt University. Her doctorate is from the Harvard Graduate School of Education. She has coauthored numerous books, including several on leadership: Principals of Dynamic Schools: Taking Charge of Change (with Ellen Goldring); Dynamic Teachers: Leaders of Change (with Gretchen Rossman); Leading Dynamic Schools: How to Create and Implement Ethical Policies (with Gretchen Rossman and others); and Leading With Inquiry and Action: How Principals Improve Teaching and Learning (with Matthew Militello and Ellen Goldring). Her numerous articles, book chapters, edited volumes, and technical reports address issues of research and evaluation methodology, ethical practice in research and evaluation, education policy and leadership, and school reform.

A past-president of the American Evaluation Association (2005) and current editor of the American Journal of Evaluation, Professor Rallis has been involved with education and evaluation for more than three decades. She has been a teacher, counselor, principal, researcher, program evaluator, director of a major federal school reform initiative, and an elected school board member. Currently, her teaching includes courses on inquiry, program evaluation, qualitative methodology, and organizational theory. Her research has focused on the local implementation of programs driven by federal, state, or district policies. As external evaluator or principal investigator (PI), she has studied a variety of domestic and international policy and reform efforts, such as alternative professional development for leaders; collaborations between agencies responsible for educating incarcerated or institutionalized youth; initiatives supporting inclusive education for children and youth with disabilities; local school governance and leadership; labor-management relations in school districts; and leadership development. Her work with students on evaluation and qualitative methodology has taken her as far as Afghanistan, Turkey, and Palestine.

Ellen B. Goldring photo

Ellen B. Goldring

Ellen B. Goldring is professor of education policy and leadership at Peabody College of Vanderbilt University, where she won the Alexander Heard Distinguished Professor award. Her areas of expertise and research focus on improving schools, with particular attention to educational leadership and access and equity in schools of choice. She is the immediate past coeditor of Educational Evaluation and Policy Analysis. She serves on numerous editorial boards, technical panels, and policy forums, and is the coauthor of three books, including Principals of Dynamic Schools (Corwin Press), as well as hundreds of book chapters and articles. Goldring is currently working on a project funded by the Wallace Foundation to develop and field-test an education leadership assessment system and establish its psychometric properties. She is also conducting experiments to study professional development and performance feedback for school leaders. She is an investigator at the National Center on School Choice and the Learning Sciences Institute at Vanderbilt. Goldring received her PhD from the University of Chicago.
Table of Contents

Table of Contents

Foreword by Richard F. Elmore


Preface


Acknowledgments


About the Authors


Part I. From Challenges to Possibilities


1. The Myth of the Great Principal

2. The Collaborative Inquiry-Action Cycle

Part II. The Collaborative Inquiry-Action Cycle in Action


3. What Are We Teaching? A Case of Curricular Alignment

4. What Do We Know? A Case of Data Informing Practice

5. What Do We Do in the Classroom? A Case of Changing Instructional Practice

Part III. Making It Happen


6. Roles the Inquiry-Minded, Action-Oriented Principal Plays

7. You Can Do It! Putting the Collaborative Inquiry-Action Cycle Into Practice

References


Index


Reviews

Reviews

Price: $39.95
Volume Discounts applied in Shopping Cart

For Instructors

Request Review Copy

When you select 'request review copy', you will be redirected to Sage Publishing (our parent site) to process your request.