Quality Schools


After presenting these ideas at the NAREN (National At-Risk Education Network) in Wisconsin last week, I was asked to write an article that would be able to reach more people to spread the exciting word about Dr. William Glasser's work in the area of Quality Schools.

There are many characteristics that are required in order for a school to be listed as a Quality School. There are currently 13 such schools in the country, with many more on their journey to become Quality Schools.

In a Quality School, relationships are based upon trust and respect, and all discipline problems, not incidents, have been eliminated. Total Learning Competency is stressed and an evaluation that is below competence or what is now a "B" has been eliminated. All schooling as defined by Dr. William Glasser has been replaced by useful education. All students do some Quality Work each year that is significantly beyond competence. All such work receives an "A" grade or higher, such as an "A+".

Students and staff are taught to use Choice Theory in their lives and in their work in school. Parents are encouraged to participate in study groups to become familiar with the ideas of Dr. William Glasser. Students do better on state proficiency tests and college entrance examinations. The importance of these tests is emphasized in the school. Staff, students, parents and administrators view the school as a joyful place.

All of the above criterion must be in place to be listed as a Quality School. When a school is a Quality School, the dictates of "No Child Left Behind" take care of themselves. Now, of course there will be a few children who have totally rejected school that are unreachable but for the majority, they will learn and do quality work.

The way to achieve this is to implement the three conditions of quality. First, the school and each classroom must create an environment that will meet the needs of the students, and consequently of teachers. All humans are born with five basic human needs. We have the need for survival, connection/love, power, freedom and fun/learning. This is true of students and teachers.

In order to help students meet their need for survival, the school and classroom must be safe. They must feel that they won't be hurt physically or emotionally. When students feel safe, there is no need to threaten teachers or other students.

In order for students to satisfy their need for connection/love, they must have a relationship with the teacher and the other students. They must believe that the teacher has their best interest at heart. The more you give love and connection away, the more they come back to you.

In order to satisfy a student's need for power, teachers must listen to and respect their students' ideas and issues. This does not mean that teachers must agree with their students but they must at least let the students know that they are important. When students feel listened to and respected, they don't disrespect their teachers and they tend to listen more.

For students to have freedom, they must have choices. They must not be bogged down in rules and regulations. When students have choices, they won't have the need to create destructive choices of their own.

In school, learning should be fun. Learning is always fun when the learning is useful and the students want to learn what is being taught. Imagine students having fun learning! Isn't that the dream of teachers everywhere? When your students are having fun, you do too.

I know this sounds like an impossible task but there are many schools doing just that with training in Dr. William Glasser's Choice Theory. Creating a need-satisfying environment is what actually eliminates discipline problems. If someone has a legitimate, appropriate way to get his/her needs met, then there is no reason to create discipline problems.

Switching courses over to a competency-based approach is critical to the Quality School concept. Students are not permitted to get credit for less than B work and they have opportunities to improve their work until it meets the minimum standard for a B. Concepts are taught in such a way that reduces the need for memorizing facts that can be found in any encyclopedia or text.

This and more speaks to the second condition of quality that students will only be asked to do useful work. It is the teacher's job to convince students that what they are being asked to do is useful in the real world. If you are successful in that endeavor, you will have willing students. Wouldn't that make your job more enjoyable for you?

The final condition of quality is self-evaluation. Students are asked to grade their own work. There are two essential items that must be met in order to get accurate self-evaluations from students. First, they must have no fear that the teacher or anyone else will hurt them with an honest self-evaluation. Second, there must be a clear rubric in place that will give students a model against which to compare their own work.

Self-evaluation does not replace the need of the teacher or teacher's aide (another student already judged to be competent in that particular area) from corroborating the student's self-evaluation. Students are not punished for less than competent work. Rather they are shown where their work is lacking and given the opportunity to fix it. This, again, is a skill that is seen everyday in the real world. Rarely do people actually loss their jobs for substandard work. They are told what is wrong and asked to fix it.

Of course this is just a thumb nail sketch of what is necessary to become a Quality School but if you or anyone you know is interested in learning more, visit http://www.coachingforexcellence.biz and check our calendar for upcoming teleclasses, chats and workshops.

Kim Olver has an undergraduate degree in psychology, a graduate degree in counseling, is a National Certified Counselor and is a licensed professional counselor. Since 1987, Kim has extensively studied the work of Dr. William Glasser's Choice Theory, Reality Therapy and Lead Management. She was certified in Reality Therapy in 1992 and continued her studies to become a certified instructor for the William Glasser Institute. She is an expert at empowering people to navigate the sometimes difficult course of life---teaching them how to get the most out of the circumstances life provides them. These are incredibly powerful ideas with equal application to one's work and personal lives. Kim can work with you to empower your staff and clients and propel your organization to the next level.







Related News



Carroll wins federal grant to develop program - Bizjournals.com

Carroll wins federal grant to develop program
Bizjournals.com, NC -3 hours ago
Carroll University in Waukesha, formerly known as Carroll College, has received a $595000 federal grant to support the development of a new physician ...


More college cafeterias dump food trays - USA Today

More college cafeterias dump food trays
USA Today -19 hours ago
In a bid to discourage food waste and decrease energy use at all-you-can-eat campus cafeterias, dozens of college dining services — from New York University...

Pune University marks student ‘absent’ for all papers... when he’s ... - Expressindia.com

Pune University marks student ‘absent’ for all papers... when he’s ...
Expressindia.com, India -4 hours ago
Vinit then repeatedly visited the college and examination branch of the University of Pune, but in vain. “I visited the college and the university several ...
Average of 40 complaints per collegeExpressindia.com
all 2 news articles

Scrapbook sheds light on post-fire Elon - The Pendulum

Scrapbook sheds light on post-fire Elon
The Pendulum, NC -3 hours ago
“Typically, the presidents’ papers are the crown jewel of any college/university archive,” Nash said. Other items include acorns given out at convocation, ...

Report: Schiano can leave without penalty if project not finished ... - ESPN

The Star-Ledger - NJ.com

Report: Schiano can leave without penalty if project not finished ...
ESPN -12 hours ago
Schiano, who helped build Rutgers into an emerging college football power, has reportedly been sought by a number of high-profile programs in the past few ...
Royalty at RutgersDailyrecord.com
Secret deal could let Schiano leave RutgersFOXSports.com
Rutgers' quarterback sneakThe Star-Ledger - NJ.com
Asbury Park Press - NJ.com
all 55 news articles

University choice: The cost of getting it wrong - Independent

University choice: The cost of getting it wrong
Independent, UK -2 hours ago
At St Charles Catholic sixth-form college in Ladbroke Grove, west London, where 82 per cent of pupils are from ethnic minorities, a group of AS-level ...
Universities: Worcester's source of prideIndependent
all 2 news articles

Hispanic Chamber Scholarships Help Students - Woodlands Online, LLC

Woodlands Online, LLC

Hispanic Chamber Scholarships Help Students
Woodlands Online, LLC, TX -7 hours ago
... Montgomery, North Harris, and Tomball, six centers and Lone Star College-University Center. With 49250 students, it is the largest college system in the ...

National scholars petition to reopen Antioch - Bizjournals.com

National scholars petition to reopen Antioch
Bizjournals.com, NC -7 hours ago
The signatures urge Antioch University administration to transfer all assets of the 156-year-old, Yellow Springs school to the Antioch College Alumni ...

SC college hires Pfeiffer University VP - Bizjournals.com

SC college hires Pfeiffer University VP
Bizjournals.com, NC -6 hours ago
In his new role, he will head the SC college, which serves nearly 1900 students through 70-plus degree, diploma and certificate programs at three campuses. ...

The Business-Higher Education Forum (BHEF) to Build National ... - FOXBusiness

The Business-Higher Education Forum (BHEF) to Build National ...
FOXBusiness -6 hours ago
... a national organization of Fortune 500 CEOs, prominent college and university presidents, and foundation leaders working to advance innovative solutions ...
9 Reasons Your Salary Isn't HigherU.S. News & World Report
all 9 news articles