Book Review: Coherence
By Michael
Fullan & Joanne Quinn
In the opening
chapter of Coherence, authors Michael Fullan and Joanne Quinn define coherence as follows: “the shared depth
of understanding about the purpose and nature of the work”. (1) When everyone
in the school or district can “talk the walk”, that is, when everyone can
articulate the key ideas and actions that define an organization, then
coherence is achieved. (2)
In Chapter 1,
they also identify the 4 elements of their Coherence Framework: focusing
direction, cultivating collaborative cultures, deepening learning, and securing
accountability. Their “big message”
pertaining to these drivers though is that “they go together and must be
addressed simultaneously and continuously”. (11)
The first component
of the Coherence Framework, focusing direction, is the topic of Chapter 2. It has 4 dimensions. First, there must be moral purpose, “a deep, relentless purpose”. (18) Secondly, the goals must have impact. The main threat to impactful goals is “the
presence of too many … ad hoc, unconnected, and ever-changing” goals and
initiatives. (19) The authors recommend
a 4-step approach to avoid such initiativitis. School district leaders must be
transparent by acknowledging and gaining clarity on the issues at hand. Next,
they need to build a common language and use a collaborative approach. They
also should employ a reduce, reframe, and remove strategy:
·
Reduce the clutter and overload of initiatives by
identifying 2 or 3 key goals or an “umbrella focus” (22);
·
Reframe the connections between goals to avoid fragmentation;
·
Remove distractors – by identifying “time wasters and
inefficiencies”, giving principals and leaders permission to say no, and
avoiding “shiny objects and alluring possibilities” (23).
Lastly, district leaders should cultivate
engagement by communicating often and listening even more often.
The third
aspect of focusing direction is
clarity of the strategy. When
explicitness of the ideas is lacking, the result will be inertia or superficial
activity; however, if there is clarity about the plan, effective action and
innovation are possible.
The last
element of focusing direction is change leadership. Fullan and Quinn use a metaphor of 2
fishbowls to describe the challenges of moving districts, schools, and individual
teachers in the direction of innovation.
To successfully jump from one bowl to the other, a fish requires both
competence and confidence. Likewise,
district leaders need to build the capacity of principals and teachers to take the leap in the direction of innovation,
and they should celebrate the successful leaps forward by early adopters in
order to encourage less confident and more reluctant staff to also move
forward. The authors recommend that
leaders consider the following research-informed practices for successful
change initiatives:
·
Participate as a co-learner;
·
Encourage leadership from the middle, and recognize that “shifting
practices” can come from all levels of the organization (30);
·
Balance push and pull strategies;
·
Create “safe places for risk taking” (31); and,
The authors
refer to the findings of John Hattie in support of the 3rd aspect
they identify – collaborative capacity
building. According to Hattie,
“collective efficacy” has the highest effect size (1.57) on student learning of
any single factor. The authors elaborate by noting that “The key
to a capacity building approach lies in developing a common knowledge and skill
base across all leaders and educators in the system.” (57) The 3 key features of collaborative capacity
building are learning partnerships within schools and across the system,
sustained focus over multiple sessions, and iterative learning cycles.
The final
element is quality collaborative
work. The following important caution is
given by the authors: “Groups are powerful, which means they can be powerfully
wrong.” (13) Their meaning is that
frustration, and at the best, only surface learning will result from PLCs and other
team work unless there is effective learning design. (ie. clear and measurable
goals, well established group norms, and effective protocols, such as critical
friends, for inquiry)
For the 3rd
driver for achieving coherence, deepening learning, Fullan and Quinn identify 3
elements. Clarity of deep learning goals
is the first element. School district
leaders should ask the following question to determine what the goals should be:
“What are the two or three things that will most improve student learning?” (80-81) The authors add that, in determining goals,
district leaders should be wary of confusing strategies with purposes. When it comes to digital technologies, they
need to recognize that “pedagogy is the driver and digital is the accelerator
to go faster and deeper into learning.” (81)
The authors then identify the 6 Cs as the key to deep learning goals:
·
Communication – multimodal and designed for different
audiences;
·
Critical Thinking – including making connections, problem
solving, and evaluating
information and arguments;
information and arguments;
·
Collaboration – interpersonal and team dynamics skills;
·
Creativity – entrepreneurialism and pursuing novel ideas
and solutions;
·
Character – grit, resiliency, tenacity, responsibility,
and empathy; and,
The 2nd
element for deepening learning is precision
in pedagogy, which is achieved across a school district by constructing a
common language and knowledge base, identifying research-informed learning
strategies, targeting capacity building, and establishing clear links between
learning and assessment.
As a part of
the focus on pedagogy, Fullan and Quinn introduce 3 strands of the New
Pedagogies for Deep Learning (NPDL) model.
The first of these is pedagogical
partnerships. Although they also
advocate for partnerships with families, the authors stress, in particular, a
student learning model that represents a more intimate partnership between
teachers and students such that students are agents who co-design learning and
assessment tasks. In this model, student
aspirations and interests help shape instruction, and positive student
expectations are constantly reinforced.
The second strand is a highly engaging learning environment that fosters
risk taking, innovation, differentiation, and authentic inquiry learning. The last aspect is effective leveraging of
digital technologies such that they augment and transform learning rather than
just serve as expensive substitutions (“$1,000 pencils”) for traditional
technologies. (98)
The 3rd
and final element for deepening learning is shifting teacher practices through
capacity building. The process for this
involves assessing current teacher capacity and planning professional learning
accordingly.
The final
driver to bring about coherence is securing accountability. However, Fullan and Quinn do not believe that external
accountability is the answer. For one
thing, they note that external accountability systems simply don’t get
results. Furthermore, although such
systems “tell us that the system is not performing …[they] do not give a clue
about how to fix the situation.”
(112) Worst of all, because of the
pressure they cause, external accountability systems have sometimes resulted in
cheating.
Instead, school
districts need to focus on building internal accountability and then reinforcing
it with external accountability. In
support of the emphasis they place on internal accountability, they note that
research on school effectiveness and improvement “…suggests that internal
accountability must precede external
accountability.” (111) For the authors, internal accountability in a school
system means that individuals and groups of educators willingly agree to take
personal, professional, and collective responsibility for success for all students.
The authors
stress that school and district leaders need to establish the conditions for
cultures of internal accountability to thrive.
The good news on this point is that if they “work diligently” on the
first 3 elements of the Coherence Framework, then the conditions for internal
accountability will inevitably follow. (124)
At the same time that district leaders build cultures in which
individuals and groups are accountable to themselves, they should also “… engage the external policy and accountability system.” (124) By doing so, they will achieve 2 important
purposes: They will both protect the
system from distractions and interference and project their goals and beliefs on the larger educational community,
with the hope of influencing it for the better.
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