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Ushma Shah
USP
Cohort 11, Second-Year Doctoral Candidate, Intern to Superintendent Arlene
Ackerman of the San Francisco Public Schools
The Urban Superintendents Program has challenged me and my colleagues
in the 11th cohort to do a 360 investigation of urban public school systems
and what it means to lead them. During our first year in the program,
we experienced course work that spans from the interpersonal skills of
effective communication to law, finance, microeconomics, organizational
theory, politics, and the quantitative tools of statistical research.
We attended seminars with superintendents, had meetings with youth groups,
and visited school systems with new eyes to study how ideas in the research
literature and in the educational policy arena play out in the three dimensions
of a district.
One of the central strengths of the program is ProSem, the year-long
Professional Seminar in which the cohort explores various facets of the
superintendency. In ProSem, our cohort synthesized learning from all courses
and worked collectively to develop new models for instructional improvement
and student success. Throughout the course, we drafted and delivered vision
speeches that articulated the core commitments with which we will lead
a district.
In some cases, the experiences in the Urban Superintendents Program have
rocked the assumptions that we came with as teachers and instructional
leaders from our home school systems, and in others, the experiences confir
med and enhanced insights that we had from our work in these roles. In
all cases, however, our attention has been and is continually focused
on the question: What are the most powerful points of leverage to bring
good teaching and learning to scale in urban school systems?
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