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  • Boston Public Schools making strides in human capital policies

    January 22, 2015

    Way back
    in 2010, NCTQ released Human Capital in Boston
    Public Schools: Rethinking How to Attract, Develop and Retain Effective
    Teachers
    in partnership with the Massachusetts
    Alliance for Business Education
    . The typical life span of such a report
    might be about a year or two— yet five years later, we’re learning it still has
    considerable legs, largely due to the leadership of Boston’s top-notch interim superintendent, John McDonough

    While the
    report found many strengths in the district, it raised real concerns about such
    areas as teacher evaluations and transfer and hiring processes. Evaluations were
    inconsistent and the district’s professional development was not aligned with
    evaluation outcomes. In 2012-2013, Boston
    not only revised the instrument (which every school district loves to do) but
    also the training and the frequency of evaluations. In the first year of the
    new system, 93 percent of teachers received an evaluation compared to less than
    23 percent in 2009. The district continues to analyze patterns in evaluation
    outcomes and provide more support where needed, refining the system each year.

     The district didn’t stop there. It no longer
    requires principals to hire teachers who have transferred from other schools,
    giving principals the autonomy to hire teachers they believe will best serve
    students. Excessed teachers who don’t find a position are given a coach and assigned
    to a co-teaching position with an exemplary teacher in a high-performing
    school. The roughly $6 million required to pay for these teachers is considered
    part of the cost of doing business.

    In
    addition, Boston now has a goal of
    hiring 75 percent of its new teachers in March and April, rather than hiring
    the bulk of new teachers in the summer months. This earlier hiring timeline
    gives the district access to a larger group of prospective teachers in a
    particularly competitive hiring environment and allows them to hire
    highly-sought-after candidates before other districts. In 2013, Boston hired just 9 percent of teachers
    by the end of June. For the 2014-2015 school year, the district reports hiring
    83 percent of new teachers before July 1. In addition, they report that
    early hiring has allowed them to employ the most racially diverse cohort of
    effective educators in more than six years.

    This
    winter, the district worked with the Boston
    Teachers Union
    to reach an agreement to extend the school day by 40 minutes,
    giving both teachers and students more time and putting another NCTQ
    recommendation into place. In addition to providing students the equivalent of
    an additional month of school, the extra time nearly doubles the amount of
    planning and development time available to teachers.

    Boston, you are making us proud.