Will plus skill needed for healthy school culture
Developing a healthy school culture takes will and skill according to author and school improvement guru Dr Anthony
Muhammad. Healthy school cultures are essential to provide equal opportunities and reduce the achievement gap.
Teaching skills and qualifications are important in producing equal opportunities for all students to succeed, but those
skills will not be enough unless there is also a strong shared will to make the outcomes fair for every student, he
said. School boards in New Zealand, like the USA, are responsible for creating a school culture where there is a strong
shared will to improve outcomes that matches the high levels of skill we expect from our teachers.
The keys to developing a healthy school culture are moving the conversation from “me” to “we” and learning to see data
as information not condemnation, says Dr Muhammad.
Confidence that every student can learn and achieve at a high level becomes a self-fulfilling prophecy. Low expectations
also become self-fulfilling. High-achieving schools are ones that succeed in creating that confidence in students
regardless of whether they get it at home. This is the definition of a healthy school culture.
Schools that condemn students because they come to school less prepared, less motivated, or less compliant have toxic
cultures, he says.
Dr Muhammad was addressing an audience of 890 school trustees at the 25th NZSTA annual conference in Auckland at the
weekend.
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