Unit 5 Lesson 3
Unit 5 Lesson 3
Introduction:
School culture matters. This influences to the great
extent how well students perform. School culture is a
creation of all people in school and in the community
especially the school heads. It can be positive or negative.
It can facilitate or adversely affect learning. A school
community must therefore strive to create a positive
culture.
Learning Outcomes:
Here are twelve norms of school culture where people and programs
improve. Study them.
2. Is there any element left out? If there is can you supply an episode or
a vignette? A vignette is a short description of an episode in school
like the 9 given above.
Eleven (11) vignettes in the first part of the lesson give a concrete picture of
a positive school culture.
Item #9 does not illustrate positive culture, specifically honest and open
communication.
Culture is a social construct not a genetic construct. This means that the
school culture is, therefore, something that we do not inherit or pass on through the
genes. It is something that we create and shape. It is shaped by everything that all
people in school see, hear, feel and interact with. It is a creation of the school head,
teachers, parents, non-teaching staff students and community.
School culture matters. Research confirms the central role of culture to school
success. School culture can be positive or negative or toxic. A positive school culture
fosters improvement, collaborative decision making, professional development and
staff and student learning. A negative culture fosters the opposite.
3. High expectations – It has been said one’s level of achievement is always lower
than one’s level of aspiration. So set high expectations for high achievements.
4. Trust and confidence – Students, teachers, school heads and parents relate
well and work well when relationships are solidly built on trust and confidence. In
fact, honest and open communication (#12 in this list) is possible only when there is
trust and confidence in each other in the school community.
5. Tangible support – Everyone in the school community gets concrete support for
the good that they do. Support comes in not just in words but in action. School head
sees to it that LCD’s in the classrooms are functioning.
8. Caring, celebration, humor –Kids don’t care what you know until they know
that you care. They don’t listen to teacher when teacher doesn’t care. It may be
good to remind teachers that many of students, especially those who struggle, don’t
receive nearly enough positive feedback in the classroom or in their personal lives.
12. Honest and open communication - No one gets ostracized for speaking up
his mind. The atmosphere is such that everyone is encouraged to speak his mind
without fear of being ostracized. The agreement at every discussion is “agree to
disagree.”
Shared norms for both teachers and students contribute to a positive school
culture. Boss and Larmer (2018) share teacher norm and student norms to
contribute to a fair and an engaging learning environment, a characteristics of a
positive school culture. They check on the following norms each week.
Direction: Do this task in your activity/reflection notebook. Choose the letter of the
correct answer.
4. School heads respects academic time so she does not just call on teachers
during class hours. Which element of a positive school culture is illustrated?
a. Tradition c. Protection of what is important
b. Collegiality d. High expectation