Report
Infographic
Video

Towards a Common Vision of Continuous Improvement for California

Authors
Alicia Grunow
Improvement Collective
Heather J. Hough
Policy Analysis for California Education, Stanford University
Sandra Park
Improvement Collective
Jason Willis
WestEd
Published

Summary

Under emerging policy structures in California, the responsibility for school improvement is increasingly placed on local school districts, with County Offices of Education (COEs) playing a critical support role. In this system, districts are responsible for school improvement, while counties are in charge of ensuring quality across districts and providing feedback and support where necessary. Underlying this major policy shift is the idea that local leaders are in the best position to drive real educational improvement and ensure quality across multiple schools and contexts.

While a continuous improvement approach involves many changes to the way educational systems work, strategic data use is central to effective implementation. Although there is wide agreement that data are critical to the state’s policy vision, many questions remain: What does it look like to use data for improvement in California’s context? What data are needed, by whom, and for what purpose, at various levels of the education system? And what can we learn from innovative practices in our state?

This report provides a framework for how data use for improvement differs from data use for accountability, how data should be used by actors at different levels of the system, and shares lessons from the CORE Data Collaborative about how data can be used for improvement within networked structures, including what data are needed and how learning and collaboration can be facilitated.

Suggested citation
Grunow, A., Hough, H. J., Park, S., Willis, J., & Krausen, K. (2018, September). Getting down to facts II: Towards a common vision of continuous improvement for California [Report]. Policy Analysis for California Education. https://edpolicyinca.org/publications/towards-common-vision-continuous-improvement-california