
Asking the Right Questions
Techniques for Collaboration and School Change
Edie L. Holcomb(Author)
Corwin Press Inc
2nd Edition
Published on 25. January 2001
Book
Hardback
176 pages
978-0-7619-7675-2 (ISBN)
Description
In this Second Edition, Edie L Holcomb richly expands her offerings to school change leaders. The additional examples, illustrations, and stories provide the user of the material with a cachet of new information and applications. Edie Holcomb provides tips for facilitators and an example of each tool's purpose, when to use it, who to involve, and materials that are needed. From histograms to weighted voting and force field analysis, Edie L Holcomb provides tips for facilitators and an example of each tool's application, making for user-friendly accessability. This book's practical content provides down-to-earth information and guidance for conducting the day-to-day work of school change and improvement, in the attempt to make schools more effective.
Reviews / Votes
"What Edie Holcomb teaches actually works." -- Deb Larson and Tom MooneyMore details
Edition
2nd Revised edition
Language
English
Place of publication
Thousand Oaks
United States
Publishing group
SAGE Publications Inc
Target group
Professional and scholarly
Edition type
Revised edition
Dimensions
Height: 279 mm
Width: 216 mm
Weight
840 gr
ISBN-13
978-0-7619-7675-2 (9780761976752)
Copyright in bibliographic data and cover images is held by Nielsen Book Services Limited or by the publishers or by their respective licensors: all rights reserved.
Schweitzer Classification
Other editions
Previous edition
Book
05/1996
1st Edition
Corwin Press Inc
€60.85
Article exhausted; check for reprint
Person
Edie L. Holcomb is executive director of curriculum and instructional services for Kenosha Unified School District No. 1 in Kenosha, Wisconsin. She has experienced the challenges of improving student achievement from many perspectives:
From classroom teacher to university professor
From gifted education coordinator to mainstream teacher of children with multiple disabilities
From school- and district-level administration to national and international consulting
From small rural districts to the challenges of urban education
She is highly regarded for her ability to link research and practice on issues related to instructional leadership and school and district change-including standards-based curriculum, instruction, assessment, supervision, and accountability. She has taught at all grade levels, served as a building principal and central office administrator, and assisted districts as an external facilitator for accreditation and implementation of school reform designs. As associate director of the National Center for Effective Schools, she developed a training program for site-based teams and provided technical support for implementation of school improvement efforts throughout the United States and in Canada, Guam, St. Lucia, and Hong Kong. She developed a comprehensive standards-based learning system for the staff and 47,000 students of the Seattle, Washington, city district and has supervised K-12 clusters of schools and evaluated principals.
Her work received the Excellence in Staff Development Award from the Iowa Association of Supervision and Curriculum Development in 1988. In 1990, her study of the needs of beginning principals was recognized by the American Association of School Administrators with the Paul F. Salmon Award for Outstanding Education Leadership Research.
She served as an elected member-at-large on the Leadership Council for ASCD International, played an active role in Washington State's School Improvement Assistance Program, and contributed to development of the new School System Improvement Resource Guide. Holcomb is the author of four previous books and numerous articles and reviews.
From classroom teacher to university professor
From gifted education coordinator to mainstream teacher of children with multiple disabilities
From school- and district-level administration to national and international consulting
From small rural districts to the challenges of urban education
She is highly regarded for her ability to link research and practice on issues related to instructional leadership and school and district change-including standards-based curriculum, instruction, assessment, supervision, and accountability. She has taught at all grade levels, served as a building principal and central office administrator, and assisted districts as an external facilitator for accreditation and implementation of school reform designs. As associate director of the National Center for Effective Schools, she developed a training program for site-based teams and provided technical support for implementation of school improvement efforts throughout the United States and in Canada, Guam, St. Lucia, and Hong Kong. She developed a comprehensive standards-based learning system for the staff and 47,000 students of the Seattle, Washington, city district and has supervised K-12 clusters of schools and evaluated principals.
Her work received the Excellence in Staff Development Award from the Iowa Association of Supervision and Curriculum Development in 1988. In 1990, her study of the needs of beginning principals was recognized by the American Association of School Administrators with the Paul F. Salmon Award for Outstanding Education Leadership Research.
She served as an elected member-at-large on the Leadership Council for ASCD International, played an active role in Washington State's School Improvement Assistance Program, and contributed to development of the new School System Improvement Resource Guide. Holcomb is the author of four previous books and numerous articles and reviews.
Content
Foreword - Shirley M Hord
Asking the Right Questions
Answering the 'Where are we Now?' Question
Answering the 'Where do we Want to Go?' Question
Answering the 'How Will we Get There?' Question
Answering the 'How Will we Know we are (Getting) There?' Question
Answering the 'How Will we Sustain the Focus and Momentum?' Question
Bonus Questions
Using this Book
Asking the Right Questions
Answering the 'Where are we Now?' Question
Answering the 'Where do we Want to Go?' Question
Answering the 'How Will we Get There?' Question
Answering the 'How Will we Know we are (Getting) There?' Question
Answering the 'How Will we Sustain the Focus and Momentum?' Question
Bonus Questions
Using this Book