Leadership magazine Sept/Oct 2014 V 44 No 1 | Page 33

my commitment and support, as well as the support of hundreds of partner organizations throughout the state. It held up the notion that local communities should have the flexibility to innovate and respond to student needs, coupled with a commitment to investing in our most vulnerable children in order to lift them up and provide them the knowledge and skills to successfully participate in our economy, society and democracy. These notions of flexibility and equity were bounded by the need for greater transparency, authentic community engagement and accountability for student outcomes – the tools to foster public trust. What being responsive to local needs means Over this last year, we have all been learning. After four decades of laboring under a compliance-oriented structure, educators and governing boards are testing out what it means to be more responsive to their local needs and then investing strategically to meet those needs. Parents, community partners, and even students are learning more about how to participate, organize and advocate at the district level and in the process are ideally building relationships and seeing in tangible ways why their engagement in decision making matters. One of the cornerstone elements of the law that I’ve been most hopeful about is the creation of local plans that are more directly connected to a school district’s budget. We’ve all been involved in the local planning process, especially if you’ve been in and around schools, where the plan is developed, approved and then quickly tucked between other bound documents only to be dusted off the next year for review. So why should this new Local Control Accountability Plan be any different? It will only be different if we collectively breathe life into it. My district jumped right in. It provided leadership even though we didn’t have all the rules in place while the State Board of Education was finalizing the LCAP template and the guidelines for how to demonstrate “improved or increased services” for the low-income students, English learners and foster youth generating supplemental and concentration funding. My district demonstrated through its LCAP development: Reflecting on what has worked so far A t this point in the year school districts have submitted their very first LCAPs and are well underway in implementing their plans. We all know the development of these plans didn’t necessarily happen under ideal conditions, given the “building the plane as we were flying it” phenomenon that we collectively experienced. As potentially painful as that was, it does afford us an opportunity to reflect on what did and didn’t work. For example: n Was there sufficient time to analyze and discuss how students are doing? • Did stakeholders receive accessible and understandable data on student outcomes? • Was that information provided on a broad array of outcomes?  • Did you hear from stakeholders on what the most pressing needs and priority areas are? • Did unique assets in the district, schools and broader community surface that could be leveraged to support improving student outcomes? n Does the plan have clear, challenging, achievable goals for student outcomes? • Which student success goals have moved front and center? Are they sufficiently comprehensive to demonstrate the district’s vision, while at the same time being actionable? • Do they reflect the unique needs of individual school sites and varying student populations, including low-income, English learners and foster youth? • How will these goals be tracked each year? What data will be used and is that data readily available to all stakeholders in an ongoing way to monitor progress? n Were the most strategic investments made? • Did the goals for student success drive determination of local funding priorities? • Was there a commitment to an equitable investment of that funding in ways that will improve outcomes for our high-need kids? • Does the community have a clear understanding of how those investments will be made? n How should local collaboration continue? • How should students, parents and community members continue to be engaged in an ongoing way during the planning, budgeting and local implementation review process that happens this year, and each year after? • How would parents and community members like to be involved in the process locally? • What can a district do to spark and support parent and community interest in getting involved? words and actions that there was a strong intent to engage the community. By seeing it firsthand and through our work with partner organizations throughout the state, I know that the intent to engage stakeholders and come up with a solid plan for the benefit of kids is present in districts, county offices and charter schools throughout the state. But, in a context with scarce resources to invest and where the muscles around local engagement and true decision making have potentially atrophied after decades of constrained use, how do we foster this intent and actually live up to the spirit of the law? Obviously there are many nuances to this question, but I believe we need to rethink planning and budgeting, in concert with our communities, so that they are ori- September/October 2014 33