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Reduce Change to Increase Improvement
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Bestseller!

Reduce Change to Increase Improvement

First Edition


August 2017 | 152 pages | Corwin

Too much change, not enough improvement

 

Planned changes often fail because those designing them underestimate the complexity of implementation.

 

Reduce Change to Increase Improvement provides a practical structure for helping system and school leaders increase improvement while reducing ineffective change and innovation. By drilling down to the beliefs and values that inform the actual practice of change leaders, Robinson identifies the mindset, processes, and actual behaviors that contribute to successful reform efforts and, importantly, provide school leaders with concrete tools that enable them to be more effective.

 

The structures described in the book are illustrated by numerous examples, cases, and conversation extracts and center on four phases of engagement:

  • Agreeing about the problem to be solved
  • Revealing the beliefs that sustain the current practices
  • Evaluating the relative merit of the existing practices and proposed theory
  • Implementing and monitoring the new theory of action

“Finally, a serious, evidence-proven book about educational change that takes a different tact – beginning with the impact on the learner. Reduce Change to Increase Improvement is a treasure-trove of concrete information for educational leaders. Robinson, always cautious about “change for change sake”, brilliantly delineates each step of the way for leaders using authentically-documented conversations and practical discussion-starters that guide us through this collective inquiry approach towards student improvement. All leaders need this concise, clearly-stated text to guide their intentional improvement practices.

Dr. Lyn Sharratt, International Consultant and Author

OISE, University of Toronto, Ontario, Canada


 
List of Tables and Figures
 
Preface
 
Acknowledgments
 
About the Author
 
1. Too Much Change, Not Enough Improvement
Not All Change Is Desirable

 
Distinguish Between Change and Improvement

 
Improvement Means Positive Impact on Learners

 
The Impact of Leadership on Student Outcomes

 
Reflection and Action

 
 
2. Understand the Challenge of Improvement
Understand Theories of Action

 
Espoused Theories of Action Versus Theories in Use

 
Helping to Change Theories of Action

 
Reflection and Action

 
 
3. Two Approaches to Leading Improvement: Bypass and Engage
The Limitations of the Bypass Approach

 
The Bypass Approach: A National Initiative

 
From Bypass to Engagement

 
Reflection and Action

 
 
4. The Four Phases of Theory Engagement
Phase I. Agree on the Problem to Be Solved

 
Phase II. Inquire Into the Relevant Theory of Action

 
Phase III. Evaluate the Relative Merit of the Current and Alternative Theories of Action

 
Phase IV. Implement and Monitor a New, Sufficiently Shared Theory of Action

 
Reflection and Action

 
 
5. Learning How to Lead Improvement: Coaching That Engages Principals
Excerpt 1: Engage Others’ Thinking

 
Excerpt 2: The Self-Referential Critique

 
Excerpt 3: Bypass and Reframing

 
Reflection and Action

 
 
6. Learning How to Lead Improvement: Professional Learning That Engages Participants
The Context

 
Phase I. Agree on the Problem to Be Solved

 
Phase II. Reveal the Relevant Theories of Action

 
Phase III. Evaluate the Relative Merit of the Current and Alternative Theories of Action

 
Phase IV. Implement and Monitor a New, Sufficiently Shared Theory of Action

 
Reflection and Action

 
 
Afterword by Stephen Dinham
 
References
 
Index

Sample Materials & Chapters

Chapter 1


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ISBN: 9781506325378
$37.95

For large school/district orders, volume discounts, availability and shipping times contact customer service at 800-233-9936
or order@corwin.com.