- What is Partners in School Innovation?
- What is PartnersSI's mission?
- What is PartnersSI's strategic vision?
- What is your impact on student learning?
- How is PartnersSI unique?
- How does PartnersSI transform schools and districts?
- How do you select partner schools?
- What is the role of a School Innovation Partner?
- How long do your partnerships with schools
last?
- What are the main challenges facing low-income,
low-performing schools?
- How is your organization funded?
What is Partners in School Innovation?
Partners in School Innovation is a leading nonprofit organization committed to transforming America's urban public schools and eliminating the achievement gap.
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What is PartnersSI's mission?
PartnersSI's mission is to transform teaching and learning in the lowest-performing American public schools so that every child, regardless of background, thrives in school. top
What is PartnersSI's vision?
Partners in School Innovation is becoming a leader in the education reform space and, more specifically, in school and district transformation. We envision a thriving system of urban public schools that fosters the growth of all of its students and works to eliminate the achievement gap by creating vibrant places to teach, learn and grow, with rigorous standards and an unwavering focus on results.
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What is PartnersSI's impact
on student learning?
The primary way we measure our impact is by looking at student achievement outcomes. On the 2011 administration of the California Standards Test-English Language Arts (CST-ELA), PartnersSI schools had an average of 5.4 percentage-point growth in students testing at or above proficient, more than triple the California average of 1.6 percentage-point growth and more than double our partner districts' average of 1.9 percentage-point growth. top
How is PartnersSI unique?
While our strategies have evolved over the years, we continue to fill a unique space in the education reform community, distinguished by the following qualities:
1) Multi-year partnerships: We work side-by-side with our school and district colleagues over a 3-5 year period.
2) Focus on existing human capital: We work to strengthen the capability of those teachers and leaders who are already in the system.
3) Data-driven, results-oriented, continuous improvement: We build the capability of teachers and leaders to use data to set goals, plan, implement, assess, reflect and adjust in cycles of inquiry and continuous improvement.
4) Sustainable systems change: We build essential knowledge and skills at multiple levels to ensure improvement practices are aligned, embedded and sustained across the system.
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How does PartnersSI transform
schools and districts?
PartnersSI staff work alongside our school and district colleagues to achieve significant gains in student achievement as well as build the organizational capacity required to sustain these results. We partner to:
1) Build a strong core instructional program, ensuring that all students learn at high levels;
2) Create an integrated system for professional learning so that all teachers are able to deliver excellent instruction;
3) Strengthen leaders' ability to focus on student outcomes and align school resources, structures and ways of working to achieve their goals.
We work in partnership with school and district leaders to create vibrant school environments where teachers can continually grow as professionals and students of color and English learners can excel as young scholars, college- and career-bound.
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How do you select partner schools?
We partner with schools that serve students of color, English
Learners and economically disadvantaged students. We look for
schools that are committed to getting results for their students
of color and closing the achievement gap. We also respond to direct
inquiries from interested school districts, school principals
and staff. top
What is the role of the School
Innovation Partner (SIP)?
The School Innovation Partner supports and guides teachers through
a continuous learning process using the Results-Oriented Cycle
of Inquiry. The SIP also works in close collaboration with the
principal to develop and work toward measurable student achievement
goals, articulate a coherent schoolwide improvement plan, monitor
student learning on a daily basis and regularly evaluate schoolwide
progress.top
How long do your partnerships
with schools last?
Our partnerships with schools typically last three to five years,
during which we use an "apprenticeship model" to build
sustainability for continuous improvement. In the first years
of the partnership, we provide a great deal of direction and guidance
and explicitly teach teachers and leaders new ways of working.
As they continue to develop their skills and gain competency,
we consciously shift to a coaching and advising role. At the close
of the partnership, our teachers and leaders will have internalized
the knowledge, skills and confidence to sustain the work without
the external support. top
What are the main challenges
facing low-income, low-performing schools?
Typically, a low-income, low-performing urban school is overburdened
because:
- There is a lack of resources.
- There is a disproportionate number of inexperienced teachers
and teachers with emergency credentials.
- Teachers are overburdened and lack the time to strategically
reflect on their teaching in order to accelerate learning for
their students.
- Teachers receive limited support and attend one-shot professional
development opportunities that fail to coach them on how to
use what they've learned back in the classroom.
- Teachers and staff lack access to rigorous and systematic
data, as well as the technology and support to effectively analyze
data with the intention of improving teacher practice.
- Principals have tremendous demands placed on them, leaving
them with little time to devote to instructional leadership.
- There is a lack of school leadership committed to student-centered
decision-making, where equitable teaching and learning outcomes
guide all decisions, including those related to instruction
and resource allocation. top
How is your organization funded?
Earned income from schools and districts make up approximately
54% of the costs of our service. Contributed income from community
foundations, corporate donors and individual donors make up the
rest of the costs of service. top
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