Effective Schools Framework

The Effective Schools Framework, also known as ESF, is a system that supports schools and districts in aligning resources and support in the area of needs for each school. The goal of the ESF is to provide “a clear vision to schools and districts of what excellent education looks and sounds like for all students in Texas.” (ESF Booklet) In other words, the ESF provides a foundation of what best practices are used daily by effective schools to promote continuous improvement.

While some may imagine a square when hearing the word “framework,” the visual image to imagine is a circle cut into five sections (as noted in the image above) called “Levers.” As a system, these five Levers work together to “ensure schools provide an excellent education.” (TOT day 1; esf overview) At the center of the framework is Effective Instruction. The outer elements, Strategic Staffing, Positive School Culture, and High-Quality Instructional Materials and Assessments, encircle and strengthen Effective Instruction. Finally, Strong School Leadership and Planning surround the previous four components mentioned.

ESF Framework Graphic

The ESF Process

The ESF framework is rooted in the continuous improvement process.

Identify the Needs:

Plan:

Implement and Monitor:

ESF Levers

The ESF framework is composed of 5 different components known as Levers. Each Lever is composed of: a narrative description, District Commitments, Essential Actions, and Key Practices, as shown below:

Lever 1: Strong School Leadership and Planning

Effective campus instructional leaders with clear roles and responsibilities develop, implement, and monitor focused improvement plans that address the causes of low performance.

Lever 2: Strategic Staffing

Campus leadership retains effective, well-supported teachers by strategically recruiting, selecting, assigning and inducting teachers so that all students have access to high-quality educators.

Lever 3: Positive School Culture

Positive school culture requires compelling and aligned vision, mission, goals and values, explicit behavioral expectations and management system, proactive and responsive student support services, and involved families and community.

Lever 4: High-Quality Instructional Materials and Assessments

All students engage daily with TEKS-aligned, high-quality instructional materials, and assessments that support learning at appropriate levels of rigor.

Lever 5: Effective Instruction

All students engage daily with TEKS-aligned, high-quality instructional materials, and assessments that support learning at appropriate levels of rigor.

Diagnosed Essential Actions

Listed below are the five different Levers with their Diagnosed Essential Action:

(This is the Essential Action that holds priority in each Lever. Please take notice that Effective Instruction has two Diagnosed Essential Actions):

Coaching with the ESF Essential Actions Success Criteria

It can become confusing for principals new to the ESF process to understand the framework and implement it within their campuses. Therefore, the role of coaching principals to understand and utilize the Success Criteria will be essential.

The Success Criteria are aligned to each Levers’ Essential Action, which contain:

Example:

Lever 1: Strong School Leadership and Planning

Essential Action 1.1: Develop campus instructional leaders (principal, assistant principal, counselors, and teacher leaders) with clear roles and responsibilities.

Key Practice

Campus instructional leaders have clear, written, and transparent roles and responsibilities, and core leadership tasks are scheduled on weekly calendars (observations, debriefs, team meetings)

Success Criteria

Making Connections

The DCSI provides principals with support in making connections between their actions on the campus and the Effective Schools Framework: