''Student outcomes don't change until adult behaviors change.'' So states a graduate of the Texas foster care system who is now the state's Deputy Commissioner of Governance.
Linking student success to board performance is not entirely new. The hallmark Iowa Lighthouse Studies of 2000 identified board behaviors that consistently characterized districts with strong student achievement. The successful board meeting results in stronger student outcomes. Such meetings don't occur by accident. The recipe for their success is an agenda book with one feature: goal-tracking indices. Such an agenda is but one step in a process that keeps boards consistently focused on student outcomes:
- At the annual meeting, the board develops a strategic plan with lofty aspirations for the coming year. Traditionally, this document then sits on a shelf collecting dust.
- This time, those aspirations are converted to quantifiable goals. If the strategic plan calls for improving ESL (English as a second language) reading proficiency, that objective is broken down into measurable components: ''Raise ESL reading scores on sixth-grade state exams by 20%'' and ''Cut failing grades in literature classes for ESL students by 32%.''
- Clear graphs are continuously updated to monitor progress toward these goals. Links on the graph can lead readers to detailed discussion of particular tests or initiatives that resulted in the changes they record.
- These graphs appear front and center on the board agenda - and on the board portal. Agenda items include links to documentation of the relation of that action item to this fixed set of goal-based metrics.
Interactive Monitoring
Such software converts new information into measurements of progress toward goals set by the board. Say high school seniors have just received their SAT scores. An administrator can enter the data on their scores. An embedded formula will convert the data to a figure reflecting the percentage of progress made toward the stated goal of improving certain scores by a fixed amount. With no further effort, the bar graph changes accordingly.Record Keeping
All communications and inputs relevant to each goal can be retained as records accessible by links. Links to that goal in the chart can send viewers to a list of next steps (e.g., when students are re-taking the exam, etc.). If a board member spent all day researching what classroom practices improve SAT scores, she can enter that information in a link to the goal for time-tracking. The board meeting agenda item ''SAT scores'' includes links to all such information, which accumulates over time. After a quarter passes - or a year - there is no scrounging for records on scraps of paper to reconstruct the actions taken on each agenda item.Collaborative Editing
Furthermore, good goal-tracking software makes collaborative editing easy. One person might track his changes to a document relating to a student-centered goal and then send that version to another official for comments. All of the versions would be tracked within the portal, and nothing would be posted until an authorized editor posted a concluding draft. Then, the document would be placed in the online portal's library under the tab for the category to which it pertains.Video Embedding
Ideally, software allows video recordings of board meetings to be embedded for public viewing. It doesn't get more transparent than that.User Training
Using the software should simplify and streamline the record-keeping, note-taking and results-monitoring that is already taking place. Making the transition, however, will require education for users. (Texas legislation requires its users to attend trainings provided on various weekends over 18 months.) Software that does not offer training assistance may simply sit on the shelf. Goal-tracking materials in agenda books can reconnect school board meetings to that often-elusive goal of improving education. Like businesses, schools have a ''bottom line.'' It's just harder to see. With revamped materials, any school board can see it, discuss it and improve it.Media Highlights
Environmental, social and governance (ESG) issues have become more complex and multifaceted than ever before. At the same time, ESG continues to ascend on board and leadership agendas.
In this buyer’s guide, we explore what a market-leading ESG solution should look like and highlight the key areas organisations should be prioritising as they embark on their search.