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School & District Management

Turnarounds Can Be Effective When Used With Other Strategies, Report Finds

By Julie Depenbrock 鈥 November 11, 2016 1 min read
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The Center on Reinventing Public Education published a this month that shows different ways states have intervened in schools, mapping four turnaround approaches: state support for local turnarounds, state-authorized turnaround zones, school takeovers, and district takeovers.

The Every Student Succeeds Act, which goes into full effect next fall, directs states to intervene in low-performing schools and districts but gives them a freer hand in choosing how to go about it. The Every Student Succeeds Act, or ESSA, signed by President Barack Obama in December 2015, is the newest reauthorization of the Elementary and Secondary Education Act.

The report from CRPE has found that state involvement can be most effective when turnaround policies are 鈥渢ailored鈥 to a school or district鈥檚 particular circumstances.

鈥淥ne state鈥檚 success can easily be another鈥檚 failure if policy ideas are imported with little attention to the factors that made the turnaround effort effective in the first place,鈥 study author wrote.

Jochim, a research analyst at the CRPE, found that successful interventions required four key


  • The 鈥渨ill鈥 to make real change happen.
  • The 鈥渁uthority鈥 to execute effective strategies.
  • The 鈥渃apacity鈥 to perform the turnaround.
  • The 鈥減olitical support鈥 to sustain change.

鈥淪tates should do more to learn from the experiences of other states, but they must approach imitation cautiously,鈥 Jochim wrote.

She gave the example of Louisiana, 鈥渨here large infusions of talent and philanthropy and weak opposition enabled reforms to take root.鈥

鈥淭he variability in local contexts gives no guarantee that a strategy deployed with success in one district or state can be replicated in another,鈥 Jochim wrote. The report also notes that states can combine strategies as well.

ESSA mandates that states identify schools performing in the bottom 5 percent every three years, as well as those with graduation rates below 67 percent. Such schools qualify for 鈥渢耻谤苍补谤辞耻苍诲鈥 treatment.

Read Jochim鈥檚 report

Chart: Who takes control during a turnaround depends on the state you live in. Source: 鈥淢easures of Last Resort: Assessing Strategies for State-Initiated Turnarounds鈥 by Ashley Jochim from The Center on Reinventing Public Education.

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A version of this news article first appeared in the State EdWatch blog.