1st Edition

School Effectiveness and Improvement Research, Policy and Practice Challenging the Orthodoxy?

    312 Pages 12 B/W Illustrations
    by Routledge

    308 Pages 12 B/W Illustrations
    by Routledge

    This book provides a contemporary overview of school effectiveness and improvement. It charts the development theory and research in this area and looks at the contribution made to policy and practice. It also challenges some assumptions that have become ingrained into the theoretical and methodological traditions of the field. By challenging these orthodoxies, it provides a framework that sets a new agenda and repositions the field to meet the emerging challenges of the twenty-first century.

    It argues that traditional measures of school effectiveness are challenged as systems have attempted to adapt to a complex range of emerging agendas. New theoretical perspectives are required which consider 'education' and a 'broader set of outcomes'. This shift requires a rethink of how effectiveness and improvement have been understood by the field, and a reconstruction by policy makers and practitioners. Attention must be given to promoting equity as well as effectiveness so that one school or student's gain no longer means another's loss. The field must develop new methodologies if inequities are to be challenged and a broader set of outcome measures are to be developed. The two questions guiding this book are:

      • How can educational effectiveness and improvement research and practice support the development of a more equitable education service?
      • What are the key indicators of educational effectiveness and improvement and what are the new methodologies required to facilitate a shift from 'school' effectiveness and improvement to 'educational' effectiveness and improvement?

    This book uses lenses of research, policy and practice to explore these key questions and articulate what such a repositioning may look like and how it may be achieved. It will prove invaluable for teachers, school leaders and anyone involved in policy and educational research.

    INTRODUCTION – Paul Armstrong, Chris Chapman, Alma Harris, Pam Sammons, Daniel Muijs & David Reynolds

    Part 1: FOUNDATIONS OF THE FIELD

    1 School Effectiveness Research - Pam Sammons

    2 School Improvement Research & Practice – Chris Chapman

    3 School Effectiveness and School Improvement Theory - Leonidas Kyriakides

    4 School Effectiveness and School Improvement Methods - Daniel Muijs

    Part 2: School Effectiveness and School Improvement in Practice: Examples from the field

    5 The Challenge of Equity - Mel West

    6 Dealing with Division? - Tony Kelly

    7 The Potency of History and Culture - John Macbeath

    8 The imperative of Improvement - David Egan

    Part 3: CURRENT DEVELOPMENTS AND FUTURE DIRECTIONS

    9 Placing improvement at the centre of practicee - Jim O’Brien

    10 Changing times for changing systems - David Hopkins

    11 Thinking locally acting globally Tony Townsend

    12 Towards sustainable schooling Paul Clarke and Tony Kelly

    13 Daring to think of the future David Reynolds

    14 Policy and Practice Ben Levin

    Part 4: Meeting the challenge; beyond the orthodoxy

    15 Conclusion - Paul Armstrong, Chris Chapman, Alma Harris, Pam Sammons, Daniel Muijs & David Reynolds

    Biography

    Christopher Chapman is Professor of Education at the University of Manchester, UK.

    Paul Armstrong is a researcher for the Effectiveness and Improvement Research Group at the University of Manchester, UK.

    Alma Harris is Professor at the Institute of Education, University of London, UK.

    Daniel Muijs is Professor of Education at the University of Southampton, UK.

    David Reynolds is Professor of Educational Effectiveness at the University of Southampton, UK.

    Pam Sammons is Professorial Senior Research Fellow at Jesus College, University of Oxford, UK.

    "The success of this approach requires two things. Firstly, the small number of teacher dinosaurs who believe that once qualified, their professional learning is complete, need to change or go. Secondly, government (national and local) should set broad strategic directions for education but end the micro-management habit. Chris Chapman and his colleagues have done British education a valuable service with this publication." - Alex Wood, Educational Consultant, The Herald Scotland April 2012