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Overview
PEN's Theory of Action
Strategic Interventions
Standards & Accountability
Schools & Community
Teacher Quality
Middle Schools "Skills for Life" Initiative
No Child Left Behind
NCLB Action Briefs
NCLB Hearings
New York Life Revitalizing High School Libraries
Public Engagement

 

Theory of Action: PEN’s Formula for Public School Success

Schools reflect their communities—healthy communities have good public schools and take responsibility for the quality of education these schools provide. The public must take responsibility for determining policies for its schools and communities must make sure that leaders appropriately apply those policies.

To help communities achieve good schools, Public Education Network has developed a “theory of action” for community engagement and public school success centered on the following elements:

Three audiences: the general public, stakeholders, and policymakers

Three strategies: community organizing, community-wide strategic planning, and advocacy

Three school-reform issues: standards and accountability, schools and community, and teacher quality



National initiatives build demand for quality public schools

PEN has launched three national initiatives to test its theory of action. The initiatives, centered on organizing strategies that engage broad audiences in school reform, are grounded in real practice in real communities.

Local education funds (LEFs)—independent community-based school reform advocates—are pioneering the theory of action in communities across the country, helping these communities develop the power and the constituencies to transform public schools.

At the end of the four-year initiatives, PEN envisions robust communities able to continuously produce new leaders and sustain public involvement, with accountability systems that place shared responsibility for success with everyone in the community. Implementation of policies that positively affect public schools is the desired result. As the initiatives progress, communities will also see a stronger civic infrastructure, greater economic stability, a better ability to solve problems, and more citizen participation.