Skip to content

See the attendance impact we’re having in California! Read Now

Topbar Close icon
Site Logo
  • Products
    • Product Overview
    • Attend: Attendance Interventions
    • Connect: Family Engagement
    • Boost: Teacher Observation and Growth
    • Forms & Flows: Digital Forms and Payments
    • Sites: Accessible Websites
  • Who It’s For
    • Superintendents
    • District Leaders
    • School Leaders
    • Educators & Staff
    • Families
  • Resources
    • Resource Library
    • News & Press
    • Blog
    • Case Studies
    • Checklists & Infographics
    • eBooks
    • Guides & Playbooks
    • Reports
    • Webinars
  • About
    • About SchoolStatus
    • Careers
    • Contact
Request a Demo Log In
Request a Demo Log In
Educator Growth
Aug 15, 2014

Leadership Day 2014 repost: The Ultimate PD for School Leaders

SchoolStatus logo.
By SchoolStatus • 4 min
Share

In support of Leadership Day 2014, we are reposting this must-read article for all educators interested in true instructional leadership. Many thanks to EdSurge for featuring the article this past April, and to Justin Baeder for penning such a thoughtful piece. View the original on EdSurge.

The Ultimate PD for School Leaders: Step into the classroom, open your eyes, and put down your clipboard

Walkthroughs are powerful but not in the ways we’ve been led to expect. Done right, they provide school leaders the chance to become the “lead learners” in their organizations.

Over the past nine months, the Instructional Leadership Challenge has shown us how transformative classroom walkthroughs can be. However, the two ways in which most administrators assume walkthroughs make a difference by providing data and creating coaching opportunities may not be significant at all.

Many districts require walkthroughs that focus on data collection which makes sense from a central office perspective. Data can help district administrators monitor new initiatives, identify teacher PD needs, and ensure that principals are spending enough time in classrooms.

But there’s a problem with data-focused walkthroughs: they’re a waste of time.

This is a harsh conclusion to draw, but it’s based on two sources of evidence:

  • A recent study by Vanderbilt and Stanford researchers found that walkthroughs aren’t associated with better student learning outcomes, perhaps because “principals often do not use walkthroughs as part of a broader school improvement strategy.” The “focus” achieved by data-focused walkthroughs is a double-edged sword: by looking only for what’s on the walkthrough form, such as the use of specific strategies, administrators may get detailed data, but they also miss the big picture.
  • This is admittedly anecdotal, but still quite compelling: teachers hate data-focused walkthroughs. In our work with thousands of administrators across 24 countries, we’ve never heard a single report of a teacher saying “Thanks for the data!” Teachers appreciate feedback on their lessons, but they don’t like to be used as data points — especially when the data being collected has nothing to do with the lesson. For too many teachers, data-focused walkthroughs are an exercise in missing the point of their teaching.

If data collection isn’t the right approach, what about coaching-focused walkthroughs? By spending time in classrooms coaching and giving feedback, principals reason that they’re helping to improve instruction.

While there’s great promise in coaching, the reality is that time constraints make it hard for principals to serve as effective coaches. Walkthroughs are typically just a few minutes each, and may not happen on a regular basis. So, although there may be value in coaching via short classroom visits, their brevity makes it tough to provide in-depth support, especially without a face-to-face debrief.

But what if the true power of classroom walkthroughs lies elsewhere? As part of the21-Day Instructional Leadership Challenge, we encouraged administrators to get into classrooms not to collect data or provide intensive coaching, but for a simpler reason: to learn.

Given the many other duties resting on administrators’ shoulders, data collection and coaching may need to be delegated to other staff. But the one function leaders can’t fully delegate is decision-making. Even within shared governance structures, administrators play a crucial role in knowing what’s taking place in the organization and guiding their team in the right direction.

Nowhere is there a better source of information — about how students are progressing, about teacher practice, and about what needs to be done — than in the classroom.

Rather than specify a certain form or type of feedback, walkthroughs that facilitate leader and teacher learning have a few basic characteristics:

  • Frequency: Teachers are visited at least once every other week, which means administrators need to visit about 10% of their classrooms each day.

  • “Noticing” feedback: Leaders base their comments on what the teacher intended to accomplish in the lesson, not a preconceived checklist, so teachers get feedback on what they’re doing, not what they’re not doing.

  • Framework language: Rather than share miscellaneous suggestions, leaders provide feedback in the common language of their shared instructional framework, which makes it easier to identify opportunities for growth.

This type of walkthrough stands in stark contrast to the classroom visits most teachers are accustomed to.

What happens when administrators get into classrooms regularly, pay attention to what’s really going on, and provide rich, framework-linked feedback? It turns out that coaching and data collection still happen, but they become side benefits; when leaders go into classrooms with open eyes and share their learning, everyone learns more. Leaders learn how to be better decision-makers and support-providers; teachers learn how they can take their practice to the next level; and students learn more of what their teachers are striving to teach them.

SchoolStatus logo.
SchoolStatus
SchoolStatus is transforming K-12 education with an integrated suite of solutions that provide educators and administrators with real-time student insights and district attendance trends, enabling complete visibility across all levels of the education ecosystem. Through data-driven, multi-channel communications including calling, texting, video, and print materials, SchoolStatus empowers educators to implement proactive interventions that enhance student outcomes and family engagement. With millions of successful school-home interactions, SchoolStatus leads the way in bridging the gap between schools and families across the U.S. SchoolStatus partners with thousands of districts and serves over 22 million students across all 50 states.

Stay Connected

News, articles, and tips for meeting your district’s goals—delivered to your inbox.

More Resources

5 Excel Functions Every Educator Needs to Know
Educator Growth
Sep 18, 2023

5 Excel Functions Every Educator Needs to Know

read more
Messaging and Communication are Not the Same Thing
Communication
Sep 24, 2020

Messaging and Communication are Not the Same Thing

read more
Happy woman working on her laptop.
Communication
Sep 1, 2021

Why PowerSchool Districts Choose SchoolStatus for Data Analysis

read more
Buttons on an arcade game.
Communication
May 24, 2016

3 Easy Ways to Gamify Your Professional Development

read more
Collaboration between SchoolStatus and Operoo.
Communication
Oct 26, 2021

SchoolStatus Acquires Operoo; Accelerates Vision to Build World’s Leading Unified K-12 Analytics, Communications, and Workflow Platform

read more
Happy woman in a black blazer working on her laptop.
Communication
Nov 15, 2021

How to Use Family Communication Data for Student Success

read more

Logo

Want Updates?

Stay connected with news, articles, and tips delivered to your inbox.

Stay in the Loop

Solutions

  • How it Works
  • Attendance Interventions
  • Family Engagement
  • Teacher Observation & Coaching
  • Administrative Efficiency
  • Data Analytics

Who It’s For

  • Superintendents
  • District Leaders
  • School Leaders
  • Educators & Staff
  • Families

Products

  • Product Overview
  • SchoolStatus Connect
  • SchoolStatus Attend
  • SchoolStatus Boost
  • SchoolStatus Forms & Flows
  • SchoolStatus Sites

Company

  • About SchoolStatus
  • Careers
  • Contact

Resources

  • Resource Library
  • News & Press
  • Blog
  • Case Studies
  • eBooks & Whitepapers
  • Webinars
  • Help Center
  • Customer Support
  • Website Terms of Use
  • SchoolStatus Privacy Policy
  • Accessibility
  • Sitemap
© 2025 SchoolStatus. All rights reserved