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What is school climate?

What is school climate?. School climate is the learning environment created through the interaction of human relationships, physical setting and psychological atmosphere. Perkins, 2006. Arithmetic. Writing. Reading. Reading. Writing. Social Services. Health Services. Special Ed.

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What is school climate?

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  1. What is school climate? School climate is the learning environment created through the interaction of human relationships, physical setting and psychological atmosphere. Perkins, 2006

  2. Arithmetic Writing Reading Reading Writing Social Services Health Services Special Ed Arithmetic Post-1960’s Pre-1960’s Standardized Tests

  3. Writing Arithmetic Social Services Reading Psychological Services Special Education Standardized Tests School Readiness/Early Childhood Services ESL Food Programs Health Services Supplementary Educational Services After-School Care Programs

  4. Writing Non-Profit Agencies Local Business After-School Care Programs Reading Arithmetic ESL Psychological Services School Readiness/Early Childhood Services Food Programs Standardized Tests Community Social Services Health Services Faith-based Institutions Supplementary Educational Services Special Education Government

  5. Trust, Respect & Caring Safety Bullying Racial Self-Concept Literacy Numeracy Science knowledge Language composition Affective/Cognitive

  6. Study Purpose To provide a description of teacher, student and administrator perceptions of climate in urban schools. 2006 – Where We Learn 2007 – Where We Teach

  7. Where We Teach • Teachers & Administrators • 12 Urban Districts • 10 States • 127 Schools • 4700 Teachers • 267 Building Principals & Assistant Principals

  8. Survey Dimensions • Bullying • Expectation of Success • Influence of Race • Professional Climate • Parental Involvement • Safety • Trust, Respect and Ethos of Caring ASC Survey 2006 Version 2.5

  9. Selected Results • Most students would not be successful at a community college or university • Students at the school are not motivated to learn • Teachers at the school care whether or not the students are successful

  10. Lily Eskelsen National Education Association

  11. Selected Results • This school is a safe place in which to work • Students at this school fight a lot. • I would benefit from more PD provided by the district/Teachers at this school would benefit from more PD

  12. John Mitchell American Federation of Teachers

  13. Selected Results • I am currently pursuing in-service opportunities to improve myself as an administrator. • I actively seek opportunities to help teachers learn new instructional methods • Students at this school are capable of high achievement on standardized exams.

  14. Cheryl Riggins National Association for Elementary School Principals

  15. Selected Results • Students at this school are capable of high achievement on standardized exams. • Students at this school are not motivated to learn. • Students in this school will have difficulty with core academic subjects regardless of strength of instruction.

  16. Judith Richardson National Association for Secondary School Principals

  17. Assessing Climate A safe and welcoming learning climate is a prerequisite to high student achievement. School districts need to understand climate issues, conduct assessments, pass policies, and take steps to make improvements where necessary.

  18. Recommendations: Bullying • Student Identification • Board Policies • Bullying Prevention

  19. Recommendations: Success • High Expectations for Students’ academic and social development

  20. Recommendations: Influence of Race • Recognize diversity • Develop culturally respectful & sensitive instructional programming

  21. Recommendations: Professional Climate • Staff collaboration around learning goals • Shared decision-making

  22. Recommendations: Professional Development • PD should deepen and broaden content knowledge • PD should train professionals to use data

  23. Recommendations: Parental Involvement • Engage families as partners • Parents/guardians should be active participants

  24. For Future Research • Why teachers feel significantly less optimistic about student potential in community college or university • Why significant numbers of teachers & administrators hold the view that students are not motivated to learn • Why administrators express more confidence in students’ ability to perform on standardized tests • Why significant numbers of teachers and administrators believe that students will be successful in their schools because of their race.

  25. Contact Information NSBA – Council of Urban Boards of Education www.nsba.org/cube Dr. Brian K. Perkins, Principal Investigator www.schoolclimatesurvey.com briankperkins@doctor.com

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