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The Truman Pierce Institute: Making a Difference in Alabama

The Truman Pierce Institute at Auburn University is dedicated to meeting educational needs, fostering collaborations, and improving education and community development in Alabama. Through various projects and initiatives, they work towards enhancing student learning, building leadership capacity, conducting policy research, and implementing job-embedded professional development.

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The Truman Pierce Institute: Making a Difference in Alabama

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  1. The Truman Pierce Institute: Making a Difference in Alabama Dr. Cindy Reed, Director Truman Pierce Institute College of Education Auburn University

  2. Who Was Truman Pierce? • The Truman Pierce Institute is named in honor of Dr. Truman M. Pierce, an educational visionary, who served as Dean for Auburn University’s College of Education for two decades and made regional and national contributions to educational arenas. He especially focused on ways to improve society and the lives of people across the state and nation.

  3. Purposes • To support progress toward meeting the educational needs of the state and region • To foster collaborative partnerships to improve education and educational opportunities • To assist in the development and implementation of professional development schools/systems in order to stimulate renewal of higher education and public schools • To improve the conditions within schools and communities that influence the effectiveness of leadership, education, and community and economic development

  4. Current Projects • West Alabama Learning Coalition • AU/Tallapoosa County Leadership Academy • Instructional Improvement Institute (I3) • Research on the History of Education/Community Involvement for Kettering Foundation (partnered with AU Center for the Arts and Humanities) • Educational Policy Research Initiative • Alabama Online Encyclopedia (secondary partners with AU History Dept., AL Humanities Foundation, and others) • Auburn City Schools/AU Professional Development School Relationship • On-going research and publications • Support for/creation of partnerships and school-based programs • Educational assessments conducted for the Alabama Communities of Excellence Initiative

  5. West Alabama Learning Coalition • Partnerships among K-12 schools, higher education, community colleges, and community/business leaders focused on simultaneous improvement of K-12 and teacher education as well as community and economic development • 9 West Alabama (or with similar demographics) counties [Hale, Sumter, Wilcox, Clarke, Monroe, Fayette, Macon, Lee-Loachapoka, Tallapoosa]

  6. What has been accomplished? • Expanded emphasis on need for educational improvement, economic development, and community development occurring simultaneously • 2 Coalition-wide meetings each year since 1997 • Coordinators (PT) hired for each partnership • Monthly coordinator meetings during 2001-2002 and 2002-2003, 2003-2004 academic years • Focus on capacity building • Many new partners added • Improved Student Learning Opportunities!!

  7. Progress Made Toward Improved K-12 Student Learning • After school and/or Saturday tutoring programs offered in most partnerships • Future Educator groups founded in 3 partnerships and more are being created • Distance Education classes offered • Improved libraries • Aquaculture programs created • Career preparation programs/opportunities • Standardized test scores have gone up in most partnerships

  8. Expanded Involvement of Business and Community Members • Banks (United, Frontier, Regions) • Area Businesses (Alabama River Pulp, Alabama River Newsprint, Frisco City Manufacturing, Scotch Lumber Company • State and National Businesses (Alabama Power, Weyerhaeuser, Blue Cross/Blue Shield) • Churches and church groups • Community Agencies (Betterment Assoc., Leadership NOW, Health Departments, DHR, BAMA Kids, Delta Kappa Gamma) • Politicians -- several serving as members of planning teams

  9. AU/Tallapoosa County Leadership Academy • Phase I: On-going professional development for principals and central office administrators (Began January 2003) • Phase II: On-going professional development for assistant principals and teacher leaders (Began February 2003) • Phase III: Student leadership development opportunities (Began Fall 2003)

  10. Goals • Prepare the district for accreditation • Develop leadership capacity and vision within the district • Identify potential leaders from within the system • Encourage students to consider teaching and school administration as viable careers • Conduct research about effective job-embedded professional development

  11. Professional Development Topics Covered to Date • Team Building • Creating and Communicating Vision • What Does it Mean to be a Leader in Today’s Schools? • Preparing for SACS Accreditation • Educational Law • Building Leadership Capacity

  12. Educational Policy Research Initiative • Conduct timely, contextually relevant educational policy research for legislators and the state department of education • Building upon 6 years of experience doing policy research for selected legislators • The spring 2003 focus was on policy issues pertaining to Teacher Recruitment and Retention for ALSDE • This spring’s focus was on School Safety and Violence Prevention for Congressman Artur Davis’ office

  13. Instructional Improvement Institute (I3) • Built upon successes and lessons learned from AU/Tallapoosa Leadership Academy and the West Alabama Learning Coalition • Cost-effective, job-embedded professional development for administrators, teacher leaders, and student leaders (traditional and non-traditional) in four school systems • Monthly professional development focused on instructional improvement, problem solving, communicating effectively, and action planning • Creation of principals’ advisory teams and district-wide advisory councils • Creation of school-based grant writing teams

  14. Anticipated Outcomes • Increased academic performance • Lower dropout rates • Increased grant money • Increased focus on teaching and learning • Grow your own approach to developing current and future community leaders

  15. Kettering Foundation Research • Research on the history of education and community involvement and its influence on public education • In partnership with AU Center for the Arts and Humanities • Exploration of what roles, if any, experiences and characteristics of community members play in how they view a community’s public schools • Public forums to be held for deliberations about these histories • Pilot phase to include Tallapoosa County School District and Choccolocco (Calhoun County) • Three-year study to include other communities, particularly those in West and South Alabama

  16. Alabama Online Encyclopedia • Lead partners are AU History Department and the AL Humanities Foundation • Our role is to connect/solicit input from K-12 educators throughout the process • Creation of an Online Encyclopedia of Alabama that will be useful for education, research, tourism, and economic development • Anticipated date of unveiling: Fall 2007

  17. On-going Research and Publications • Regular publication of two professional journals • Monograph series on research important to educational needs of the state and region • Forums to foster dialogue about teaching, learning, leadership, and policy

  18. Alabama Communities of Excellence • Non-profit organization comprised of businesses, community agencies, social service agencies, higher education, and others focused on helping small communities to improve their quality of life • Competitive process-8 communities selected the first year • Our role is to help conduct educational assessments

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