It sounds ridiculous. How can you dare to question a new program or policy your district experts want to implement when you don't have all the facts you need? The answer is it's easy...And, you won't even look like a fool. To the contrary, you will be helping your district achieve excellence.
Here are four questions you can ask when any new program is proposed. If officials can satisfactorily answer them, wonderful. You can support the change. If they evade the questions, watch out. If they stumble in their answers, you know there's a problem. You shouldn't ask these questions to sabotage a program. You should ask them to spur the district on to excellence and greater accountability.
1. What will success look like? You want the district to give you measurable definitions of how the program will be called successful. Is success defined as increased performance? What measurable increase can be considered successful? Is success defined as increased production rates or decreased vandalism? What percentage of increase or decrease is considered successful? Ultimately, how is the performance increased by this change?
2. Where has this program been implemented successfully? Get the names and telephone numbers of districts where the program has been a success. Call up the mayor's office in each district. Explain that you are a citizen at another district exploring the pros and cons of the program. Then, ask what they like and dislike about the program. What would they do differently? Has the program been scrapped somewhere else? Why was it unsuccessful there?
3. What are the success benchmarks set up by the district? How does the district intend to tangibly measure the success or failure of the program over time? What will be the 6-month measure of success? What will be considered success after having implemented the program for one-year? Who will measure it? How will they measure it? When will they measure it?
4. If the program doesn't work well, at what point will it be deemed a failure and greatly modified or removed? Once the measure of success is established you'll want to know how long the district will push for success? Most programs take some adjusting once implemented. That's understandable. But at what point will the district stop chasing after success if it is clear that the previously set measures of success are not being met? One year? Two years? Five years?
These four questions will help you and the community hold the district
accountable. They'll also help the district be more successful in
establishing clear goals.
© 2002, Eric Buehrer, original at: http://www.gtbe.org/news/index.php/1/32/97.html
Use this to qualify school policy: question-schools.html