Go and See Program – Digital Promise
Salisbury, NC
Rowan-Salisbury Schools
Vision
Implementation
Support & Sustainability

Go and See Program

We’ve spent the last several years sending our teachers and administrators out of the district to go and see places all over the country where they can observe best practices that we can learn from and adopt. The goal is for teachers to learn not only from other schools and districts, but also from experts in higher education and industry. We want to learn from ethical businesses and focus particularly on what quality means to them and how they think about innovation.

Connections to Real World Learning Roadmap

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Vision

One of our core beliefs is that learning should be fun for teachers and students, and that happens when learning is student-centered. We pay attention to the natural curiosity of teachers and students and empower them to follow their passions. We have three areas of focus:

  • Academics: We focus on the academic standards that we believe are most critical to student success so that we can go deeper and spend more time on those areas.
  • Interpersonal Skills: We focus on seven interpersonal skills (creativity, leadership, teamwork, civility, work ethic, communication, problem solving) and encourage students to think and act in specific ways and reflect on their thoughts and actions;
  • Differentiation: We focus on what makes each learner unique, helping our students identify and define their interests, and connecting those interests to real-world learning experiences.

We don’t expect our students to fill jobs. We think our students will create the jobs of the future. We do not believe that standardized approaches to education serve students well in the modern world.

Implementation: How We Did It

We created a Go Visit playbook and challenged teacher-led design teams to identify areas of interest and potential growth and create a plan for their own professional learning. To create the playbook, we started by making lists of all of the places and examples we wanted to see. We thought about what teams would need to do before, during, and after each trip to maximize their learning. Then we thought about how we could support the trips financially. We sought initial funding so we could seed the program.

A group of principals traveled to California on a five-day Go and See trip. They visited Lindsay Unified School District to learn how they made a systematic shift toward personalized learning and read their book, Beyond Reform. They also went to Stanford University and visited Apple’s headquarters. They bonded as a group and spent time talking and reflecting on what they could learn from each of their visits and how they could apply it in their schools.

Teacher teams have gone to charter, public, and private schools across the country to learn about best practices and bring them back to our district. We have learned that everybody’s journey is different. Teachers and leaders need to think about their learners in their community and what will serve them best. We’ve also learned that many organizations are doing things we don’t want to replicate, which has helped us to reflect and focus on our own priorities and goals.

Related Resources

Community Partners
Curriculum
Measures
Professional Learning

Community Partners

We have funding partners to support our work. One foundation gave us enough funding to send teams from all of our schools somewhere. Prior to that, we had several individual companies or philanthropists who funded specific trips. At one point, I wanted to send a group of leaders on a trip, so I sent out an email to eight community partners and received immediate response and commitment. Program updates are often shared through the local newspaper and social media and are also sent directly to the funders. Funders also receive thank you notes from teachers.

The program does not inherently rely on the same relationships from one trip to the next. The playbook was created so that school teams could plan their trips without assistance, based on their needs and interests. It provides examples of different schools, businesses, and organizations that staff members can connect with, and suggestions for points of discussion.

Support Structures

At the urging of our superintendent, the State of North Carolina passed HB 986, enabling qualifying school districts to become a renewal district, which gives them more local control. The local Board of Education approved Rowan-Salisbury becoming the first renewal district in the state. This has enabled us to rethink everything about how we approach teaching and learning. We have been very fortunate to have local philanthropists and foundations give us funding to support the work. We have also looked at our budget and prioritized professional development.

The Future of this Work

We haven’t finished creating everything we need to make this work sustainable yet. Procedures and systems are hooked together, and it is a complex process to take apart existing systems and procedures to design new ones. For example, if we want our teachers to work toward our vision for renewal, the teacher evaluation system must be rewritten. We also have to rethink how we pay people and how our district office is organized. We are rethinking everything, not just teaching and learning. We have to recreate all of the systems around our organization so that we don’t fall back to the traditional standardized mechanism for education. That’s a long process, and we are in it for the journey.

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