SCORE Roadmap to Success | Page 27

Business and Philanthropic Community 1. Be a strong voice for education reform efforts and the Tennessee Diploma Project. 2. Invest in SCORE’s five-year implementation plan. 3. Invest in expanding programs focused on recruiting high-quality candidates into teaching, especially in hard-to-staff schools and hard-to-staff subjects (e.g., Teach for America, The New Teacher Project, Teach Tennessee, Distinguished Professionals, Chattanooga / Knoxville / Memphis Teacher Residencies, UTeach, Math and Science Scholarships). 4. Invest in expanding high performing schools, including highperforming charter schools. 5. At the request of the Tennessee Department of Education, school districts, and individual schools, provide advice on business management principles to state, district, and school administrators. 6. Encourage your employees to volunteer in their local school, use your employee newsletter to emphasize the importance of education, and provide special recognition for excellent teachers (e.g., awards, coupons). Faith-based and Community Organizations 1. Encourage a culture of high expectations for students, educators, and schools in your area. Emphasize that no matter a child’s background, they can succeed. Underscore the importance of the Tennessee Diploma Project in setting high expectations for students. 2. Craft before-school, after-school, weekend and summer programs with the state and district’s academic goals and standards in mind. 3. Support school systems and be a resource for parents and families. Local non-profits can help a school meet the emotional, physical, and social needs of its students and their parents. 4. One non-profit should take the lead on developing a network of non-profits, higher education institutions, school districts, and Tennessee Department of Education programs that are currently assisting students in applying to postsecondary institutions. This network should provide these programs with opportunities to share best practices, resources, and training opportunities. School Boards 1. Create high expectations for every employee and student in your district. Believe that every child can succeed and make sure everyone in the district believes the same. 2. Develop a district strategic plan and connect mandated district and school improvement plans with this strategic plan. The district’s strategic plan, guided by a strong mission statement, should ultimately lead to improved instruction, student learning, and student achievement. 3. Create policies for your district that are consistent with your strategic plan. Leave the implementation and management of these policies to your superintendent, but hold your superintendent accountable for improving student achievement. 4. Pass a resolution supporting the higher standards of the Tennessee Diploma Project to illustrate your commitment to working over time to ensure students meet these standards. Communicate the importance of these standards within your district and to the general public. 5. Make it a priority to recruit, develop, support and retain highly effective principals and teachers. 6. Use data to inform all your policy decisions and help all employees in your district do the same. Superintendents 1. Create high expectations for every employee and student in your district. Believe that every child can succeed and make sure everyone in the district believes the same. 2. Develop a district strategic plan and connect mandated district and school improvement plans with this strategic plan. The district’s strategic plan, guided by a strong mission statement, should ultimately lead to improved instruction, student learning, and student achievement. 3. Ensure all principals, teachers, and guidance counselors in your district have opportunities to learn about the state’s new standards and provide opportunities for principals and teachers to learn from one another about how they are implementing these new standards. 4. Make it a priority to recruit, develop, support and retain highly effective principals and teachers. 5. Ensure principals have access to high-quality professional development that teaches them how to provide meaningful feedback and evaluations to teachers and how to develop professional learning communities within their schools. 6. Observe principals periodically throughout the year and provide them with constructive feedback. Provide principals with meaningful annual evaluations that highlight their strengths and weaknesses. Meet with principals throughout the year to discuss their progress.