91制片厂视频

School & District Management Leader To Learn From

Veteran Educator Turns Around Cincinnati Schools

By Alyson Klein 鈥 January 29, 2013 7 min read
Mary Ronan
Mary Ronan
Recognized for 91制片厂视频 in School Turnarounds
Expertise:
School Turnarounds
Position:
Superintendent
Success District:
Cincinnati Public Schools
Year:
2013
  • Save to favorites
  • Print
Email Copy URL

The first order of business for Mary Ronan as the acting superintendent of the Cincinnati school system four years ago was making big changes at more than a dozen of the city鈥檚 lowest-performing elementary schools. Many of them had been plagued by stagnant student achievement for more than a quarter-century.
Four years later, none of the 16 schools that Ronan and her team targeted for special interventions is stuck in 鈥渁cademic emergency"鈥攖he lowest rung of the Ohio accountability system, and the label most of them shared before the turnaround. A dozen of those schools have reached the level of 鈥渃ontinuous improvement"鈥攖he midlevel rating鈥攁nd others have gone on to be rated 鈥渆ffective鈥 or even 鈥渆xcellent.鈥

鈥淭he first year [of the effort] was really hard,鈥 Ronan recalls. 鈥淲e were asking our teachers to do a lot of extra work; 鈥 we got a lot of pushback. There were folks who said we should call it off.鈥 But at the end of that year, some half-dozen of the 16 targeted schools made adequate yearly progress, or AYP, under the federal No Child Left Behind Act, something they had never achieved before.

鈥淭hat was really the turning point,鈥 Ronan says now. That was when the other schools鈥攁nd the rest of the community in this midsize city along the banks of the Ohio River鈥攔ealized what was possible, she says.

The schools in what became known as the 鈥渆lementary initiative鈥 in Cincinnati first had to embrace some major instructional shifts. Each was required to offer 90-minute blocks each of reading and mathematics鈥攁s opposed to the scattershot scheduling that some had been using. Instead of whole-class instruction, teachers were shown how to divide their students up into smaller groups based on their abilities and needs.

And school officials created 鈥渄ata folders鈥 to keep track of the academic progress of each student. Teachers were tasked with reviewing the data with their students every couple of weeks.

鈥淭hat gave principals a tool to see how every child was doing,鈥 Ronan explains. 鈥淵ou鈥檙e not just teaching to the middle anymore.鈥

The schools鈥 leaders, likewise, were given an extra boost of intensive training. Using money provided under the federal American Recovery and Reinvestment Act, Ronan sent the principals of the elementary-initiative schools鈥攁long with teacher leaders鈥攖o the University of Virginia鈥檚 educational leadership training program. She chose the University of Virginia program because it promised results, telling Cincinnati that it would be able to help schools make AYP鈥攐r gain at least 10 percentage points within two years.

鈥淵ou don鈥檛 get too many guarantees like that out there,鈥 Ronan says.

Training for Principals

As part of that partnership, which began in late 2009, principals learned to set goals, draw up 90-day plans for academic improvement, motivate teachers, and single out and develop leaders from within their existing staffs. Those strategies merged well with the new focus on data that was already at play in the district, Ronan says. University officials followed up several times, visiting the district throughout the school year. The 34,000-student district participated in the University of Virginia program for two years, then incorporated many aspects of its training into Cincinnati鈥檚 own professional development for leaders.

The training was enormously helpful, says Ruthenia Jackson, the principal of Carson Elementary School, a K-8 school, which was part of the elementary initiative. Experts from the university encouraged her to 鈥渢hink outside the box,鈥 she says, and use the resources already under her control to greater effect.

With those lessons in mind, Jackson decided to test out some new strategies at Carson, including grouping 7th and 8th graders into single-gender classes. Discipline incidents鈥攍ike office referrals and suspensions鈥攄eclined significantly, she says. The idea worked so well that others in the district are planning to try single-gender classes in those grades next year. And the school, which had been in academic emergency, has now been rated 鈥渆ffective"鈥攖he second-highest ranking.

To help oversee the turnaround process, Ronan tapped Laura Mitchell, herself a former turnaround principal, to serve as the deputy superintendent in charge of the initiative.

Not every aspect of the turnaround plan has been easy, Mitchell says. Ronan gave her significant political cover when the city teachers鈥 union pushed back on pieces of the turnaround effort, including staffing changes at four of the targeted schools that replaced nearly everyone鈥攅ven, in some cases, secretarial workers and custodians.

鈥淭here were grievances filed by teachers that came in with her name on them,鈥 Mitchell says. 鈥淪he took the heat.鈥

Ronan continues to stand by those personnel decisions. 鈥淭he culture was a culture of failure,鈥 she says. 鈥淲e just didn鈥檛 think we could transform a school without radically changing the culture.鈥

The U.S. Department of 91制片厂视频 made similar staffing shake-ups a key component of the School Improvement Grant program, the Obama administration鈥檚 prescription for turnarounds.

Ronan also used economic-stimulus dollars to extend the school year, adding what she calls a 鈥渇ifth quarter鈥 in some of the district鈥檚 most academically challenged schools. The program eventually added a month to the school year for schools taking part in the elementary initiative, and used the added time to pair academics with enrichment programs, such as art and music classes and field trips offered by community organizations in partnership with the district.

The culture was a culture of failure ... We just didn't think we could transform a school without radically changing the culture.

Ronan is hoping that community partners will help the district continue to offer the services now that the extra federal funding has dried up.

Ronan has also put substantial energy behind an initiative already under way in the district: community schooling. Nearly all the schools in the elementary initiative鈥攁nd many others鈥攏ow house a range of outside players, from tutoring providers to dentists to social service organizations for children and families. Mitchell and Ronan helped incorporate those groups into the schools鈥 overall goals and worked to ensure that the services went to the students who needed them most.

The district鈥檚 population includes a number of groups that have traditionally struggled to close the achievement gap. Seventy-three percent of the Cincinnati school system鈥檚 students qualify for free or reduced-price lunch, and nearly 70 percent are African-American.

Ronan also increased the number of 鈥渞esource coordinators,鈥 whose job it is to make sure the community groups complement the schools鈥 efforts, from just nine to 34 across the district. A resource coordinator might ensure that volunteer tutors focus on a particular student鈥檚 areas of academic weakness, for example.

Longevity Pays Off

Ronan, 59, has spent . She began in 1976 as a middle school math and science teacher, and later moved to a high school. In 1996, she became the principal of the Kilgour School, an elementary school in the district, which received a National Blue Ribbon Award for Excellence in the 2001-02 school year. She then took on leadership roles with the district, serving as an assistant superintendent, and then director of schools, overseeing the districts鈥 principals.

By the time she was named acting superintendent in 2008鈥攕he officially took over the top job the next year鈥攕he had served more than 30 years in the Queen City and knew it inside and out.

鈥淚 think it has made me more effective. You understand your community, you understand the politics,鈥 Ronan says. 鈥淚鈥檝e developed relationships over the years. 鈥 I knew to whom to speak when I needed something. I wasn鈥檛 groping around to figure out who the power brokers were.鈥

Ronan has been able to enlist allies among everyone from outside donors鈥攕he鈥檚 brought at least $30 million in additional grant funding to the district, according to Janet Walsh, a spokeswoman for the district鈥攖o classroom teachers.

鈥淪he probably knows more teachers than any superintendent,鈥 says Julie Sellers, the president of the Cincinnati Federation of Teachers, a 2,400-member affiliate of the American Federation of Teachers. 鈥淚 think it has been beneficial for her to get buy-in. Teachers feel comfortable talking to her.鈥

Sellers acknowledges that she and Ronan have had their differences. But when it comes to parts of the elementary initiative, including what Sellers sees as the prescriptive nature of classroom instruction in the turnaround schools, they are always able to come to a resolution, she says. And she praises the superintendent for trying out a range of strategies鈥攆rom instructional changes to wraparound services鈥攖o improve the city鈥檚 schools.

鈥淭here鈥檚 nothing we don鈥檛 do in Cincinnati,鈥 Sellers says. 鈥淭hese are the best urban, high-poverty schools in the country.鈥

Coverage of leadership, expanded learning time, and arts learning is supported in part by a grant from The Wallace Foundation, at www.wallacefoundation.org. 91制片厂视频 Week retains sole editorial control over the content of this coverage.
A version of this article appeared in the February 06, 2013 edition of 91制片厂视频 Week

More Leaders From This Year

Baltimore Leader Helps District Cut Suspensions
Jonathan Brice rewrote the district's code of conduct to give principals alternatives to out-of-school suspensions.
Boston Leader Connects Parents to Learning
Once a disgruntled parent, Brooks now leads the district鈥檚 efforts to engage Boston parents in their children鈥檚 learning.
Colorado District, Union Team Up to Solve Budget Crunch
In Jefferson County, Colo., Superintendent Cynthia M. Stevenson and teachers' union President Kerrie Dallmann showed that it's not impossible for districts and unions to collaborate on tough decisions.
Conn. Administrator Focuses on School Climate
Ciccone brought new attention to school climate issues in her school system by piloting a survey that is now used statewide to take a pulse on how students feel about their schools.