Office of K-12 Outreach Programs, Michigan State University College of Education
The Michigan Principals Fellowship (MPF) is a research-based approach to school improvement that provides principals and their instructional leadership teams with essential knowledge, skills, experiences and support that enable them to lead systematic instructional improvement and increased student achievement. Not just another initiative or obligation competing for your time and attention, participation in the Fellowship can help you manage your current school and district initiatives more effectively.
This three-year program has been developed as a central component of the Statewide System of Support (SSOS), the Michigan Department of Education's strategy for supporting high poverty, low performing schools. Participation in the Fellowship continues to be available through the Statewide System of Support (SSOS). MPF is a program within the College of Education at Michigan State University.
The goal of the Michigan Principals Fellowship is to increase the capacity of the school principal and instructional leadership team in the following areas:
Work throughout the three-year cycle of the Fellowship focuses on creating and expanding the essential school conditions for improved student achievement. Rather than an off-the-shelf program, the Fellowship is designed to build the collective capacity of the adults within a school and its particular context.
The organization of the Fellowship work ensures that principals and teachers have the fundamentals to begin and sustain instructional improvement in their schools as well as the practical tools and skills to identify which changes will translate into significant gains in student achievement.
| Year One: Beginning the Work | Year Two: Deepening the Work | Year Three: Sustaining the Work |
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Working as a team, the principal, school improvement coach (see below) and instructional leadership team work on:
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The principal, coach and leadership team continue their growth by:
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The principal, coach and leadership team work on institutionalizing a culture of accountable practice by:
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Participants in the Michigan Principals Fellowship are strongly encouraged to include a school improvement (leadership) coach as part of their reform plan and budget. Just as principals are the key mechanism for improving instructional quality in schools, leadership coaches are the key mechanism for providing on-site support that builds the capacity of school leadership teams.
Specifically, the role of a leadership coach is to increase the capacity of school leaders to develop and exercise skills and practices related to visionary, instructional and operational leadership, as well as the cross-cutting skills needed to exercise leadership in all areas.
The Michigan Coaches Institute, also developed by the MSU Office of K-12 Outreach, has developed a cadre of highly trained leadership coaches focused on building the capacity of principals to turn around struggling schools.
Through the Michigan Coaches Institute, effective coaches have developed both a mindset—a way of approaching and thinking about coaching—and a skill set—specific competencies related to coaching practice—that equip them to help principals and other school leaders build the capacity to turn around troubled schools. They leverage their knowledge, skills, experience and demonstrated expertise in building the capacity of principals to lead systematic instructional improvements and turn around high priority schools.
A supportive community of learners is developed through active participation in a combination of residential summer institutes and ongoing seminars throughout the school year. Teams of six faculty/professional staff members and the principal work to create and sustain a common commitment to a shared understanding of what effective practice is and what practices need to change to produce improved student outcomes.
New schools are those that are either initially entering the Fellowship, or continuing in the Fellowship having experienced significant staffing changes.
Schools will focus on the foundations of improving instructional quality through leadership for coherence (professional community, instructional program coherence and resources and requirements). The emphasis here will be on helping you and your team identify and leverage a few key ideas for improving instructional quality.
Continuing schools are those that posess foundational knowledge of the Leadership for Coherence Framework, have identified a problem of practice and experience with observing classrooms.
These schools will select one of two customized strands. The instructional program coherence strand will focus on improving instructional quality through working on the alignment of curriculum, assessments and instruction, connecting this work to other professional development and school goals. The professional community strand will focus on improving instructional quality through developing internal accountability within your school.
Schools participating in the MPF will also be able to send up to four teachers to a series of three two-hour workshops. These workshops, taught by faculty of MSU’s #1-ranked College of Education, will focus on providing highly effective instructional strategies for specific grade levels and content areas. In addition to teachers with subject matter responsibility, we will provide space for up to two instructional coaches to attend.
By virtue of participating in the MPF you will receive up to four registrations for periodic opportunities to learn from internationally renown education experts.
Office of K-12 Outreach Programs
College of Education
Michigan State University
263 Erickson Hall
East Lansing, MI 48824
Phone: 517.353.8950
Email: nauss@msu.edu