Leadership magazine Jan/Feb 2016 V45 No 3 | Page 34

Vision to action: Supporting the most underserved schools The SFUSD ‘Superintendent’s Zone’ provided the key shifts in leadership and learning needed to build the capacity of schools for improvement. 34 Leadership Here was a veteran principal within San Francisco Unified School District who knew a thing or two about school improvement. When he agreed to have his middle school be part of SFUSD’s new reform effort, the Superintendent’s Zone, he was not sure what to expect. His middle school was deemed a “turnaround” school for its performance on standardized tests when it became part of the Superintendent’s Zone. Consequently, half of the school’s staff would need to leave, and new teachers would be hired. This and a majority of the other Superintendent’s Zone schools doubled their budgets when San Francisco received a threeyear School Improvement Grant. Yet, what stood out the most to this veteran principal was the support he received when embedded within a network of learning opportunities and efforts to improve services and supports provided to students and schools. During his time working at the middle school in the Superintendent’s Zone, this principal started to see his school make improvements together with advancements in his own leadership. According to the principal, “My focus is sharper, my urgency is heightened, and my use of data is more precise. My evaluation of teachers is more sophisticated.” He singled out the practice of Instructional Rounds as a key element for his learning. “You can learn a lot from your colleagues when you are given the opportunity for discussion,” he said. “You put a challenge out and have colleagues there to help. In Instructional Rounds, you trust those leaders to give you the good advice that you need in a critical way, but not a judgmental way.” San Francisco USD Superintendent By Laura Wentworth, Ritu Khanna and Regina Piper