
Dr. David Schexnaydre, who successfully defended his dissertation in December, has earned the Louisiana Educational Research Association Outstanding Graduate Student Research Paper Award for his dissertation, The Impact of Louisiana's COMPASS Teacher Evaluation System on Principals in One School District. Here is an overview of Schexnaydre's study:
As teacher evaluation practices become increasingly high-stakes, principal observation has been made an important source of data in the evaluation process. Driven by the federal Race to the Top initiative, implementation of teacher evaluation systems has been rapid, and questions remain about the preparedness of principals to successfully implement the new evaluation processes. The researcher conducted a qualitative case study that focuses on the implementation of the Louisiana Department of Education's COMPASS teacher evaluation system and its impacts on principals in one school district. Findings indicate that principals perceive that COMPASS was implemented too quickly, and they have had to change several of their practices as a result. Additionally, principals believe their biggest success in implementing COMPASS was supporting teachers, while they believe their biggest challenge in implementing COMPASS to be setting student learning targets that are both reasonable and challenging and aligning school practices with those set forth in the COMPASS Rubric. Implications of this research include practical knowledge for current principals and administrators and a ground-level view for policy makers regarding how mandates and change impact principals, as well as scholars seeking to understand the change process.