Preface
Acknowledgments
About the Authors
Introduction
1. The Changing Realities of America′s Public Education:
Foundational Facts and Implications
Diversity
Poverty
School Readiness
Lack of Parent Involvement
Deficit Perceptions
Special Education and NCLB
Summary
2. The Unfortunate Link Between Low Socioeconomic Status and
Learning Disabilities
Understanding Learning Disabilities
Poverty Is Not a Learning Disability
Educators′ Lack of Understanding of Poverty
Teachers′ Role in Learning Disability Referrals
The Cost of Misidentifying Children as Learning Disabled
Summary
3. Teaching Strategies and Techniques Proven to Work With Low SES
Children
Four Teaching Strategies That Work
Creating a Positive Climate for Instruction
Summary
4. The Importance of Strong School-Home Relationships in Educating
Low SES Children
The Importance of Parent Involvement
The Importance of Home-Based Involvement
The Importance of School Climate
Meeting the Challenges Presented by Low SES Neighborhoods
Embracing Cultural Diversity
Summary
5. How Strong School-Business Relationships Can Benefit Low SES
Students
Creating a Partnership With Structure and Reciprocity
Looking Beyond Dollars in School-Business Partnerships
Recognizing the Partnership Value of Small Local Businesses
Summary
6. The Role Networking Can Play in the Effective Education of Low
SES Students
Networking With Central Offices
Networking Beyond the School District
Summary
7. Managing Change Successfully
Why People Resist Change
Strategies to Reduce Resistance to Change and Promote Successful
Implementations
Summary
8. Selecting the Right People
Identifying the Characteristics and Qualifications You′re Looking
For
Assessing Your Faculty and Staff′s Strengths and Weaknesses to
Clarify Your Needs
Communicating Your Needs and Interests to Human Resources
Structuring the Interview Process
Managing the Interview and Selection Process
Summary
9. Identifying the Core and Individual Competencies That Promote
the Most Successful Learning Environment
What We Mean by Competencies
Identifying Core School and Individual Competencies That Promote
Student Success
Summary
10. Identifying Expectations and Managing Performance
Some Basic Assumptions
Communicating Your Expectations
Managing Performance Around Your Expectations
Providing Constructive Feedback
Summary
11. A Proven Approach to Improving Educational Opportunities for
Low SES Children
Professional Climate
Behavioral Climate
Community Climate
Instructional Practices
Summary
12. Summary and Conclusions
Being the Leader in Your School
Making the Most of an "Ambiguous" Situation
References
Lizette (Tish) Howard has 20 years of experience as an educator
working with children and parents in low socioeconomic schools. She
is an elementary principal in a Title I school in which 43 percent
of its families are classified as living in poverty. In this
position, Howard is responsible for the design and implementation
of numerous programs and a school climate that raised the level of
student academic success and closed the achievement gap between
students of poverty and those residing in homes of economic
stability. Howard works with parents, civic associations, clergy,
and the business community to level the economic playing field for
disadvantaged students and has implemented numerous initiatives to
provide the necessary background knowledge many children from
poverty lack when entering school.
Prior to her role as a school administrator, Howard served 10 years
as a speech and language pathologist with a full caseload of
language delayed children. She spent eight of those 10 years
delivering services to emotionally disturbed adolescent males in an
alternative educational setting. It was in that capacity that
Howard introduced inclusion language therapy to her school district
as opposed to the standard pull-out method. This form of
therapeutic delivery is now widely used districtwide.
Howard has served as an education consultant for local preschool
and summer camp experiences. She designed an educational summer
experience for low socioeconomic children that focused on providing
a foundation for the academic challenges they would face in the
upcoming academic year. She also served on the Minority Student
Achievement Board for her school system and has presented programs
on intervention methods at the local school and university
level.
Howard earned her bachelor′s and master’s degrees in speech and
language pathology from Indiana University of Pennsylvania and her
PhD in education leadership from George Mason University. While
completing her postgraduate work, Howard was a contributing writer
to the USA Today educational web site, and she continues to mentor
prospective administrators through the university mentoring
program. She has been nominated for Principal of the Year honors in
her school district, recognized by the Association of Supervision
and Curriculum Development for development of positive school
climate, and featured in numerous television and print articles.
Sandy Grogan Dresser is a human resources management consultant who
consults with clients in the areas of compensation, performance
management, management development, employee communications, and
human resources policy and administration. She has more than 30
years experience in the field of human resources management,
including six years in her private consulting practice and 15 years
as an assistant vice president with Aon Consulting in Bethesda,
Maryland. Prior to joining Aon, Dresser served as a human resources
director in both the public and private not-for-profit sectors. She
has also served as an executive development consultant to a number
of federal departments and agencies.
Dresser served 12 years as a public school teacher and
administrator, during which time she was instrumental in the
development and implementation of significant educational change in
the implementation of middle schools and managed the human
resources function of a metropolitan school district. In addition
to standard personnel administration, she was responsible for
coordinating a reorganization plan that included the closing of
nine junior high schools, the opening of six new middle schools,
and the reassignment of 300 employees. In this role, she devised
and directed a staff reassignment procedure that effected minimum
disruption and a high level of satisfaction among teachers,
administrators, students, and parents.
A graduate of the University of North Carolina and Kansas
University, Dresser holds bachelor′s degrees in history and
education and a master’s degree in education policy and
administration. She is the author of numerous articles published in
professional journals and frequently presents seminars for
professional associations on topics in the human resources
management field. Dr. Dennis R. Dunklee is an Emeritus Professor in
the Education Leadership Department in the Graduate School of
Education at George Mason University. During his twenty-five years
in public schools, he served as a teacher, elementary school
principal, junior high and middle school principal, high
school principal, and central office administrator. During his more
than twenty years at George Mason University, he taught courses in
education law and school leadership and served as an advisor and
chair for master’s and doctoral candidates in school
leadership.
Because of his expertise and practical experience, he continues to
be frequently called on to consult in the areas of effective
schools, school law, administrator evaluation, instructional
supervision, school-community relations, problem solving, and
conflict resolution. In addition, he continues to be actively
involved as a consultant and expert witness in numerous
school-related lawsuits nationwide. As a university scholar and
researcher, he has published, and continues to publish, textbooks,
monographs, and articles on issues in the fields of school
law, business management, administrative practice, and leadership
theory. He also continues to present papers at international,
national, regional, state, and local conferences and is a widely
sought-after clinician for inservice workshops. Dr. Dunklee was an
invited participant and presenter at the 2005 Oxford (University)
Round Table on Education Law: Individual Rights and Freedoms.
He received his Ph.D. in school administration and foundations from
Kansas State University. His major area of research was in the
field of education law, and his dissertation was on tort
liability for negligence. He holds a master’s degree in elementary
and secondary school administration from Washburn University.
This is Dr. Dunklee’s eighth book for Corwin Press. His other
Corwin books are You Sound Taller on the Telephone: A
Practitioner’s View of the Principalship (1999); If You Want to
Lead Not Just Manage (2000); The Principal’s Quick Reference Guide
to School Law (2002 and 2006, with Robert J. Shoop); Strategic
Listening for School Leaders (2005, with Jeannine Tate); Anatomy of
a Lawsuit: What Every Education Leader Should Know About Legal
Actions (2006, with Robert J. Shoop); and Poverty Is NOT a Learning
Disability (2009, with Tish Howard and Sandy Grogan Dresser).
"This book is more than well-researched theory. This is a lifelong
study in practical experience that proves once again that the value
of building relationships within a community is vital to
success."
*Daren Berringer, Political Consultant*
"An excellent book. This book embodies a powerful message that
covers all the necessary steps to help transform individual
mind-sets regarding poverty and learning disabilities.”
*Belinda J. Raines, Principal*
"The issues with special education are rarely addressed because
many educators themselves do not feel qualified to tackle the
concerns. This book allows the reader to see that there is a need
to reform special education and to give a hard look at what we are
doing and to begin making a change not only for special education,
but for all students, so that as educators we lead them on the road
to success."
*Elizabeth Alvarez, Assistant Principal*
"This book is the perfect guide for those administrators and
teachers who are truly interested in equalizing educational
opportunities at all levels."
*Rebecca S. Compton, Professor of Elementary Education*
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