Drawing on the stories of real schools, this important book:
Explains why even schools that have strong principals, committed teachers, and involved parents continue to struggle while other schools can get by even without displaying the usual features of effectiveness.Provides practical strategies to help schools take advantage of opportunities and respond to pressures in the external environment.Explains why some of the usual solutions to improving schools—like increasing pressure on low-performing schools, scaling-up programs, and school choice—don’t seem to be working the way they are supposed to.Offers a vision of the work that needs to be done at both the local and national level to support school improvement on a wider scale.Thomas Hatch is an Associate Professor at Teachers College, Columbia University and Co-Director of the National Center for Restructuring Education, Schools, and Teaching (NCREST). His books include the coedited volume Going Public with Our Teaching: An Anthology of Practice.
“Tom Hatch draws on his vast knowledge gleaned from decades of involvement in school improvement efforts and his perceptive ethnography of six carefully selected schools. The result—which encompasses the essential big picture as well as the devilish details—is a wise synthesis of how to effect meaningful, lasting, positive changes in schools.”
—Howard Gardner, Harvard Graduate School of Education
“Tom Hatch paints a concise but complete picture. Context, common purpose, hiring, productive work environments, building capacity, working on national purpose—it's all here. This is a must have for those ready to tackle large scale reform in order to get new results.”
—Michael Fullan, Professor Emeritus at the Ontario Institute for Studies in Education, University of Toronto
“Hatch presents a rich body of research coupled with interesting case studies to illustrate the complexity of creating and sustaining successful schools. He makes a compelling case that true reform is created by building the capacity of educators to manage the changing environment rather than by implementing a series of prescriptive models or programs. His work gives educators an effective map by which to guide their thinking.”
—Richard A. Middleton, Superintendent of North East ISD, San Antonio, Texas