I've been reading a lot about education reform lately.  What impressed me most 
about this particular network is that they're focusing on the *process* 
(management, teacher training) not just the content.

In short, it is integrated, holistic systems design applied to K-12 education. 
Very radical centrist:

> High Tech High is not a franchise, nor even a model, but rather an 
> organization advocating a set of design principles. We recognize a dynamic 
> relationship between vision and practice. We understand that any significant 
> innovation requires individuals at the sites to work out their own meanings 
> and develop their own learning agendas, building on their successes as they 
> go. We try to provide conditions of work that encourage teachers and students 
> to explore new ways of realizing the HTH design in practice. We subscribe to 
> Michael Fullan’s view:
> 
>> First, under conditions of dynamic complexity one needs a good deal of 
>> reflective experience before one can form a plausible vision.  Vision 
>> emerges from, more than it precedes, action.  Even then it is always 
>> provisional.  Second, shared vision, which is essential for success, must 
>> evolve through the dynamic interaction of organization members and leaders.  
>> (Changing Forces: Probing the Depth of Education Reform)

> As an organization, we engage in ongoing reflection about our growth efforts. 
>  Rather than devising a rigid scheme for intended future impact that presumes 
> to understand an unknowable future, High Tech High places a premium on 
> retaining flexibility and agility. We know that whatever leverage we may have 
> hinges upon High Tech High continuing to be known as an organization that 
> operates only excellent schools.  This is why we follow a slow deliberative 
> process of building each new school “in brick,” securing ownership of our 
> buildings and staffing new schools with experienced HTH educators.

> We also understand that schools are not closed systems. For all their 
> internal routines and rituals, the work of schools and the possibility of 
> change are influenced profoundly by post-secondary entrance requirements, 
> teacher training practices, standardized testing, community pressures and 
> other external forces.  Part of our work is to understand and articulate 
> those external influences that our schools must counter in order to control 
> their own destiny. That is why, for example, we have secured approval from 
> the state to certify our own teachers.

I wish them luck, and have some hope this model will become widespread in the 
next decade or so.

Next we need someone to do the equivalent for politics...

-- Ernie P.

http://www.hightechhigh.org/about/


Mission
High Tech High’s mission is to develop and support innovative public schools 
where all students develop the academic, workplace, and citizenship skills for 
postsecondary success.


High Tech High Goals

At each HTH school, our goals include:

        • Serve a student body that mirrors the ethnic and socioeconomic 
diversity of the local community.
        • Integrate technical and academic education to prepare students for 
post-secondary education in both high tech and liberal arts fields.
        • Increase the number of educationally disadvantaged students in math 
and engineering who succeed in high school and post-secondary education.
        • Graduate students who will be thoughtful, engaged citizens.

The goals for the HTH central organization include:

        • Support the development of excellent schools based on the HTH design 
principles.
        • Become a self-sustaining central organization conducting “behind the 
whiteboard” management practices that are as exemplary as the “in front of 
students” programs offered at HTH schools.
        • Inspire and enable others in the public education community to adopt 
the HTH design principles and instructional practices.


History
Changing Schools
At HTH, we believe that change in schooling happens, not incrementally by 
adding programs, but by generating holistic designs that enable new ways of 
teaching and learning. We believe that even the language we use to describe 
schooling needs to change. School reformers need to develop—and commit 
to—simple, elegant language that speaks to the deep purpose of schools: to 
prepare all students for entry into the world of work and citizenship in a 
democratic society.

High Tech High is not a franchise, nor even a model, but rather an organization 
advocating a set of design principles. We recognize a dynamic relationship 
between vision and practice. We understand that any significant innovation 
requires individuals at the sites to work out their own meanings and develop 
their own learning agendas, building on their successes as they go. We try to 
provide conditions of work that encourage teachers and students to explore new 
ways of realizing the HTH design in practice. We subscribe to Michael Fullan’s 
view:

First, under conditions of dynamic complexity one needs a good deal of 
reflective experience before one can form a plausible vision.  Vision emerges 
from, more than it precedes, action.  Even then it is always provisional.  
Second, shared vision, which is essential for success, must evolve through the 
dynamic interaction of organization members and leaders.  (Changing Forces: 
Probing the Depth of Education Reform)

Knowing that in creating a new school, one is creating a culture, and 
understanding the power of the “default” culture of schooling, we employ a 
“mitochondrial” strategy to create new schools. That is, we “seed” our new 
schools with a principal, teachers, and even students who already have lived 
and worked in a HTH school. In this way we emphasize experienced leadership, 
reflective practice, and peer learning, all in the interest of an evolving 
sense of shared purpose.

We also understand that schools are not closed systems. For all their internal 
routines and rituals, the work of schools and the possibility of change are 
influenced profoundly by post-secondary entrance requirements, teacher training 
practices, standardized testing, community pressures and other external forces. 
 Part of our work is to understand and articulate those external influences 
that our schools must counter in order to control their own destiny. That is 
why, for example, we have secured approval from the state to certify our own 
teachers.

As we work for change in our own settings and think about change on a broader 
scale, we aim to do our work well, describe it well, and assist those who want 
to accomplish similar goals. We proceed via five basic strategies that 
positively affect the students, teachers and leaders in our schools:

        • Enact change by directly establishing and managing excellent schools. 
HTH currently operates three campuses of schools. The original campus is Point 
Loma Village in San Diego, which has six schools spanning K-12th grades. The 
Chula Vista Village, in the city of Chula Vista, currently serves grades 9-12, 
and expansion is underway to add grades K-8. The North County Village in San 
Marcos currently serves grades 6-12. The award of a statewide charter in 2007 
authorizes us to create ten additional HTH Villages in communities across 
California. We have broadened our scope to include middle and elementary 
schools, partly to reach our students earlier, and partly because we see great 
benefit to grounding our vision in a pre-K through graduate school perspective.

        • Inspire others to implement HTH design principles by encouraging 
outsiders to visit the schools, speak with the students and teacher, and 
observe its design principles in practice.   High Tech High schools are open 
and transparent settings where visitors are always welcome.  Over 2,000 
visitors arrive annually from nearly every state (including eight governors) 
and many nations (including seven education ministers).

        • Enable others to establish schools based on the HTH design. 
Recognizing that it takes more than inspiration to change the paradigm of 
public education, HTH has modeled itself as an “open source” organization, 
offering institutes, residencies, and a free web-based resource center for 
educators.

        • Develop teachers and leaders in its school network and beyond. HTH’s 
Teacher Credentialing Program guides scores of HTH teachers through the 
credentialing process each year.  The HTH Graduate School of Education opened 
its doors in the fall of 2007 and expands upon HTH’s professional development 
offerings through its Master’s of Education programs.

        • Influence policy makers and thought leaders to change public 
education policy. By changing some of the restrictive policies that affect both 
HTH and other public and charter schools, HTH enhances its own ability to 
function while improving the system for everyone who operates within it.
 
As an organization, we engage in ongoing reflection about our growth efforts.  
Rather than devising a rigid scheme for intended future impact that presumes to 
understand an unknowable future, High Tech High places a premium on retaining 
flexibility and agility. We know that whatever leverage we may have hinges upon 
High Tech High continuing to be known as an organization that operates only 
excellent schools.  This is why we follow a slow deliberative process of 
building each new school “in brick,” securing ownership of our buildings and 
staffing new schools with experienced HTH educators.

This “bricklaying” allows us to maintain a deep level of intimacy between our 
schools and our central organization.  Our growth efforts to date have taught 
us that quality replication requires that practitioners receive a higher level 
of support than is commonly thought necessary.  We also know that the central 
organization must be finely tuned to its schools so that it can change the 
supports it offers to meet ever-evolving needs.

Proceeding “in brick” also helps us make sure that growth occurs slowly enough 
to cultivate the pedagogical expertise and leadership capacity needed to 
develop new HTH schools.  HTH schools are very different from conventional 
public and private schools, and most of our incoming staff members have never 
seen HTH instructional practices on their feet.  Having supported many new 
school leaders, we are convinced that integrating a deep understanding of HTH 
design principles requires that future leaders spend significant time in a 
setting where those principles are being universally and enthusiastically 
embraced.

Finally, our commitment to building excellent schools requires that we attend 
carefully to the development of the HTH culture.  The reflective high stakes 
discussions that happen at High Tech High do not occur among strangers, and 
only time allows such trusting relationships to develop.  As our staff become 
committed to one another and develop consensus regarding both the “how” and the 
“why” for our collective undertakings, the HTH culture becomes an indispensable 
resource infusing the organization with the professionalism, energy and 
optimism needed to take on ever growing challenges.

In essence, then, bricklaying at High Tech High is a way to preserve the 
organization’s “soul” –  that part of us that knows well and cares for each and 
every family we serve and every staff member we employ.  High Tech High does 
not pretend to know how many schools the organization can develop without 
compromising its “soul.”  We also do not know whether the resources needed to 
support growth will be available in the future.  We are therefore focused on 
becoming a self-sustaining organization in the very near term so that we may 
have a stable platform from which to take stock of our efforts and assess our 
options for the future.


-- 
Centroids: The Center of the Radical Centrist Community 
<[email protected]>
Google Group: http://groups.google.com/group/RadicalCentrism
Radical Centrism website and blog: http://RadicalCentrism.org

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