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Equity & Diversity

How Carefully Tailored PD Can Help Principals Become Equity Leaders

By Denisa R. Superville 鈥 September 22, 2022 5 min read
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Principals in schools before they start the job. And districts are still working out how to fill that gap.

Jennifer Clayton, an associate professor of educational leadership and administration at George Washington University, examined a professional development program to help principals become better equity leaders in five Virginia districts. The program was a partnership with the districts and a local university, none of which were named in the study.

The observations and responses from the principal-participants, , give some insights into what can help principals become more skilled at identifying inequities in their schools and devising strategies to address them.

Focus on program design

The six-month PD program鈥攖he first cohort entered in 2019, before the pandemic鈥攚as designed by a team that included principals, district administrators, and university faculty, a cross section of stakeholders who brought important and diverse perspectives to the table in the development phase.

The design team鈥檚 makeup allowed people from different roles 鈥渢o say, 鈥楾his is what I think principals need to know,鈥 or 鈥楾his is a way that we might design a particular activity for school leaders for this experience,鈥 or ... 鈥楾his might be too much for principals to have on their plates right now,鈥 鈥 Clayton said.

The program itself included opportunities for personal reflection and practical strategies that principals could implement immediately鈥攈elping to address a common shortcoming in PD, which is that it can be heavily theoretical and far removed from the practical realities of educators鈥 daily lives.

The program also required that principals tackle an equity-related concern in their schools, and provided chances for them to get feedback from colleagues.

It also continually operated on feedback from participants which the administrators collected and used to make tweaks. The small scale鈥15 participants鈥攁lso made it easier to respond to participants and make changes to improve the experience, Clayton said.

Personal reflection is a key component

Principals had to be vulnerable in the program, sharing personal stories of their first encounters with race.

That vulnerability helped school leaders to examine their personal experiences and how those experiences influence their leadership.

鈥淵ou really need to help people begin with their own personal story,鈥 Clayton said. 鈥淲e found power in principals being able to share their stories, being able to share with each other the moments they begun to understand race in their own lives.鈥

Vulnerability is also important, not just for the participants, but also the district leaders higher up in the hierarchy, said Clayton. If a superintendent, for example, is also open about their own personal stories that signals tremendous support for principals and those at the school-level who are working on equity initiatives.

鈥淚 think if we approach this with a toolkit mentality, we are missing the major ingredient, which is the humans who will do the work,鈥 Clayton said.

Networks build support

Research on effective school leadership has touted the important role that peer networks play in helping school leaders deal with the isolation of the job.

That鈥檚 also the case with equity. Principals in the program highlighted how they relied on fellow participants for support and learning. Those relationships became even more vital during the pandemic, Clayton said.

While some principals said they had initial misgivings , the common themes, and, as one principal put it, 鈥渢he authenticity鈥 of the participants, helped their growth.

Surrounded by a group of like-minded colleagues, participants said they gained courage to approach issues they may have been hesitant to address even as they acknowledged those issues needed attention, Clayton said.

鈥淚 think the part that was perhaps unexpected was the way that the network actually helped bolster their confidence in speaking out and taking action toward equity,鈥 Clayton said.

鈥淭he network, including principals from multiple school districts, began to give people this boost of confidence to go do the things they knew needed to be done, to actually be able to take that risk and be vulnerable in taking some of the steps that they did. That was a little bit surprising. 鈥

Their circle of support also expanded beyond their individual schools to school and district leaders in other systems.

Real-time practice strengthens learning

The program included chances for principals to try out in their schools, in real time, what they were absorbing in their sessions. Participants didn鈥檛 just learn about testing for implicit bias in theory, for example. They were able to take that learning to their schools and conduct the tests with staff.

They were also asked to highlight an equity-focused undertaking, record it, and share the impact with their colleagues. Examples included an equity-focused book study, student-shadowing, and creating 鈥渆quity-focused groups鈥 on their campuses.

The practice-focused nature of the program is important, Clayton said.

鈥淚t has to really come from their own school鈥檚 data stories,鈥 she said. 鈥淧rincipals鈥 and teachers鈥攁re so short on time that to have them engage in these sort of hypothetical scenarios is less immediately useful to them than if you have them work with data, or work with students or issues that their particular schools face.鈥

How to maintain the success of an equity-focused professional learning program is still a question, said Clayton.

But a lot of things have changed in districts since the program started in 2019, she said. Many more districts have created positions or offices designed to address inequities, which has created greater opportunities for equity-related initiatives to take root.

The pandemic and the national reckoning on race have created additional challenges for school leaders.

Creating opportunities for 鈥済raduates鈥 to continue to meet and share ideas can help principals in the long run.

The principals themselves offered suggestions, including creating teams of participants that would comprise teachers, assistant principals, and teacher-leaders鈥攌ey players, in addition to principals, in developing and leading equitable practices on campus.

Clayton also stressed cross-departmental collaboration, which allows for 鈥渃ross-pollination鈥 of ideas and for new and different perspectives to emerge.

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