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    5 Practices of Effective Principals What exactly is it that effective principals do that ripples through classrooms and boosts learning, especially in failing schools? Since 2000, The Wallace Foundation has been trying to answer that question. A Wallace Perspective report that takes a look at the foundation’s research and field experiences finds that five practices in particular seem central to effective school leadership (The Wallace Foundation, 2012): When principals put each of these elements in place — and in harmony — principals stand a fighting chance of making a real difference for students. Reference The Wallace Foundation. (2012, January). The school principal as leader: Guiding schools to better teaching and learning. New York: Author. Source: Mendels, P. (2012, February). The effective principal: 5 pivotal practices that shape instructional

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    1 Shape a vision of academic success for all students, one based on high standards.
    2 Create a climate hospitable to education in order that safety, a cooperative spirit, and other foundations of fruitful interaction prevail.
    3 Cultivate leadership in others so that teachers and other adults assume their part in realizing the school vision.
    4 Improve instruction to enable teachers to teach at their best and students to learn at their utmost.
    5 Manage people, data, and processes to foster school improvement.

    Powerful Words

    “The next wave of teacher leadership is when teachers can incu­bate and execute bold ideas in both policy and pedagogy beyond schools, states, and even nations.”

    Center for Teaching Quality founder Barnett Berry, in “Charting new career paths for teacher leaders,” The Leading Teacher, Spring 2013.

    Available at www.learningforward.org/publications/leading-teacher.

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