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High-performing schools with middle grades are
learning organizations that establish norms, structures, and organizational
arrangements to support and sustain their trajectory toward excellence.
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A shared vision of what a high-performing school
is and does drives every facet of school change. Shared and
sustained leadership propels the school forward and preserves
its institutional memory and purpose.
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Someone in the school has the responsibility
and authority to hold the school-improvement enterprise together,
including day-to-day know-how, coordination, strategic planning,
and communication.
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The school is a community of practice in which
learning, experimentation, and reflection are the norm. Expectations
of continuous improvement permeate the school. The school devotes
resources to ensure that teachers have time and opportunity
to reflect on their classroom practice and learn from one another.
At school everyone's job is to learn.
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The school devotes resources to content-rich
professional development, which is connected to reaching and
sustaining the school vision. Professional development is intensive,
of high quality, and ongoing.
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The school is not an island unto itself. It
draws upon others' experience, research, and wisdom; it enters
into relationships such as networks and community partnerships
that benefit students' and teachers' development and learning.
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The school holds itself accountable for its
students' success rather than blaming others for its shortcomings.
The school collects, analyzes, and uses data as a basis for
making decisions. The school grapples with school-generated
evaluation data to identify areas for more extensive and intensive
improvement. It delineates benchmarks, and insists upon evidence
and results. The school intentionally and explicitly reconsiders
its vision and practices when data call them into question.
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Key people possess and cultivate the collective
will to persevere and overcome barriers, believing it is their
business to produce increased achievement and enhanced development
for all students.
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The school works with colleges and universities
to recruit, prepare, and mentor novice and experienced teachers.
It insists on having teachers who promote young adolescents'
intellectual, social, emotional, physical, and ethical growth.
It recruits a faculty that is culturally and linguistically
diverse.
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The school includes families and community members
in setting and supporting the school's trajectory toward high
performance. The school informs families and community members
about its goals for students and students' responsibility for
meeting them. It engages all stakeholders in ongoing and reflective
conversation, consensus building, and decision making about
governance to promote school improvement.
Schools to
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