Designing Innovative High Schools Implementation of the Opportunity by Design Initiative After Two Years by Elizabeth D. Steiner, Laura S. Hamilton, Laura Stelitano, Mollie Rudnick
The Carnegie Corporation of New York's (CCNY)
Opportunity by Design (ObD) initiative is intended to address the ambitious
goal of preparing students for postsecondary success, based on the premise that
promising high school reforms need to be integrated into a comprehensive school
design and accompanied by appropriate, sustained levels of financial, policy,
and implementation supports. The ObD initiative was founded in 2013 to support
the design and launch of a network of small high schools of choice that focus
on ten design principles, which, if fully implemented, should result in a
school that functions differently from a traditional high school. Springpoint:
Partners in School Design supports the ObD districts in using innovative school
design to enable broader district reforms.
Key
Strengths
Implementation of key design principles (e.g.,
alignment of mission with school design, emphasis on mastery and personalized
instructional approaches) was reportedly strong across schools and has improved
over time and across cohorts.
Cohort II teachers reported more extensive adoption
of mastery-based and personalized instructional practices, and fewer obstacles
to adopting such practices, than Cohort I teachers.
Springpoint provided key supports to ObD districts and schools by helping spread best-practices and align systems in a way that has the potential to facilitate the spread of innovation.
Early
Challenges
Efforts to personalize instruction and implement
mastery-based approaches were often inconsistent and limited by varying access
to data, external pressure to advance students at a certain pace, and the
significant time required to create instructional materials.
Persistent teacher vacancies limited collaboration
and strained teacher capacity, and principals reported difficulties finding and
retaining qualified, experienced teachers.
High-quality instructional materials were not
readily available, and although some teachers reported valuing the autonomy to
create their own materials, they struggled to find the time to do so and
received limited district support.
Schools revised their models based on broad
feedback, but most schools had yet to develop clear systems for data-driven
improvement, instead addressing issues as they arose.
Recommendations
Provide teachers with support and assistance to
develop and select curriculum materials.
Ensure teachers have access to high-quality data to
implement mastery-based and personalized approaches and the support to use them
effectively.
Develop systems and processes to ensure that all
students receive high-quality instruction and are held to high expectations.
Offer specialized support for recruiting, hiring,
and retention, while encouraging autonomy and flexibility in district policies.
Consider ways to offer principals continued support
beyond the first two years of implementation as they refine their models and
hire new staff.
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