Delhi, India

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Working Draft Delhi, India October 2007 The Challenge of Achieving World Class Performance: Education in the 21st Century Michael Barber

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The Challenge of Achieving World Class Performance: Education in the 21st Century. Michael Barber. Delhi, India. October 2007. Three themes. The state of education The characteristics of high performing systems Sequencing reform. Theme 1: The state of education. Attended school. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of Delhi, India

Page 1: Delhi, India

Working Draft

Delhi, IndiaOctober 2007

The Challenge of Achieving World Class Performance:

Education in the 21st Century

Michael Barber

Page 2: Delhi, India

Three themes

1.The state of education

2.The characteristics of high performing systems

3.Sequencing reform

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Theme 1: The state of education

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The state of education: quality

•Access doesn’t guarantee achievement

98 100 100

65 6956

30 34 35

Brazil Indonesia Mexico

Attended school

Still in school age 15

Basic numeracy* age 15% of cohort

* Level 1 or above on PISA mathematicsSource:OECD, PISA

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The state of education: quality

• Increased funding alone is not the answer

Source: National Centre for Education Statistics, NEAP, Hanushek (1998), McKinsey

Linear Index

0

10

20

30

40

70

1970 1975 1980 1985 1990 1995 2000 2005

Literacy (17 years)

Literacy (13 years)

Literacy (9 years)

Spend per student ($2004)

Student-to-teacher ratio

50

60

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Theme 2: The characteristics ofhigh performing systems

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Teachers make an extraordinary difference

*Among the top 20% of teachers; **Among the bottom 20% of teachersAnalysis of test data from Tennessee showed that teacher quality effected student performance more than any other variable; on average, two students with average performance (50th percentile) would diverge by more than 50 percentile points over a three year period depending on the teacher they were assignedSource: Sanders & Rivers Cumulative and Residual Effects on Future Student Academic Achievement, McKinsey

50th percentile

0th percentile

100th percentile

Student performance

Age 8 Age 11

90th percentile

Student with high-performing* teacher

53 percentile points

37th percentile

Student with low performing** teacher

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“The quality of an education system cannot exceed the quality of its teachers.”

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“The only way to improve outcomes is to improve instruction.”

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“High performance requires every child to succeed.”

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Eight ingredients of great systems

Select great people for teaching

Train them well at the

outsetConstantly strengthen

their classroom practice

Select great leaders and

develop them well

PEOPLEPEOPLE

Setworld-class standardsTackle

failurequickly

Fund equitably

and consistently

Provide universal

pre-school

POLICYPOLICY

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Theme 3: A model of reform

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A model of reform

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A government’s approach to reform needs to change as the system improves

GREAT

Committing

GOOD

Staying

Grumbling

ADEQUATE

Exiting

AWFUL

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Choosing between the options

CIRCUM-STANCES

KEY ADVICE

Command and Control

• Where a service is awful• For very high priorities

which are urgent• In emergencies• To drive programmes

designed to tackle poverty (e.g., Surestart)

• Do it excellently

Devolution and Transparency

• Where individual choice is not appropriate (e.g., policing or criminal justice)

• To get from adequate to good or good to great

• Combines well with contestability (e.g., prisons)

• Transparency is crucial

Quasi-markets

• Where individuals can choose (e.g., schools, hospitals)

• Where a range of providers can be developed

• Where diversity is desirable

• Equity needs to be built in

Combination

• During transitions• Where variation of

performance within a service is wide

• Where market pressures are weak

• Needs sophisticated strategic direction

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The required cultural shift

• Hit & miss• Uniformity• Provision• Producers• Inputs• Generalisation• Talk equity• “Received wisdom”• Regulation• Haphazard development• Demarcation• Look up

• Universal high standards• Diversity• Choice• Customers/citizens• Outcomes• Specificity• Deliver equity• Data and best practice• Incentives• Continuous development• Flexibility• Look outwards

Comfortable Demanding