PRESENTING SUPERB RESEARCH THAT ADVANCES THE FIELD OF EDUCATION

Teaching and Learning for Collaborative Continuous Improvement in Education

Challenges and Possibilities Across the Educational System

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August 2026
9781975508210
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$43.95
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August 2026
9781975508234
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$43.95

As educational systems worldwide grapple with complex challenges requiring sustained, evidence-informed solutions, collaborative continuous improvement in education (CCIE) has emerged as a transformative approach to systemic change. Yet a critical gap remains: how do we effectively teach and learn these powerful improvement methods across the diverse landscape of educational institutions and professionals who work in them? This groundbreaking book addresses this vital question with practical wisdom and research-backed strategies. Teaching and Learning for Collaborative Continuous Improvement in Education: Challenges and Possibilities Across the Educational System tackles the pressing need to build CCIE capacity among higher education faculty, professional developers, state education department associates, and the broader network of professionals driving educational improvement initiatives. As policymakers increasingly turn to CCIE to inform system-wide reforms, this book provides the roadmap for spreading and deepening expertise across organizational boundaries and professional contexts. The authors examine three fundamental challenges facing the field: bridging knowledge gaps across diverse professional roles and organizations; balancing scholarly and practical applications of CCIE learning; and navigating the spectrum of delivery modalities from fully asynchronous to synchronous, and in-person to remote formats. Through real-world examples, chapter authors reveal both challenges and promising practices that transcend traditional silos and create meaningful learning communities.

What sets this book apart is its collaborative approach to knowledge sharing. Rather than prescribing one-size-fits-all solutions, the editors and authors position themselves as colleagues and peers, sharing hard-won lessons from their own improvement journeys. Each chapter follows a systematic structure that includes contextual background, theoretical foundations, learning objectives and approaches, documented results, and honest reflections on lingering questions—providing readers with both inspiration and actionable guidance.

The book's organization reflects its commitment to addressing real-world complexity. Following an introductory chapter that maps the current terrain of CCIE teaching and learning, subsequent sections dive deep into specific challenges: designing CCIE learning experiences for different audiences, adapting approaches for varying purposes, and leveraging different modalities effectively. Rich case studies and illustrative examples demonstrate how theory translates into practice across diverse educational contexts. This comprehensive resource serves multiple audiences simultaneously. Higher education faculty will find research-based approaches to curriculum design and pedagogy. Professional developers will discover strategies for building organizational capacity using theoretically-grounded and tested approaches. State education leaders will gain insights into system-wide implementation approaches. Most importantly, all readers will find concrete tools for learning with and from each other—breaking down the isolation that too often hampers improvement efforts. The book concludes with a look to the future—highlighting emerging trends and future opportunities in CCIE teaching and learning, while supplementary materials provide readers with immediately usable resources. For anyone committed to spreading the knowledge and skills that drive educational change, this book offers both the vision and the tools to transform how we teach, learn, and improve together. It represents an essential contribution to the growing field of improvement science in education—and a vital resource for the professionals working to make that science accessible, applicable, and impactful across the entire educational ecosystem.

Perfect for courses such as: Continuous Quality Improvement in Education and Human Services; Networked Improvement Communities; Improvement Science Capstone; Leadership for Continuous Improvement; Leadership Experiences, Application and Development; Leadership for Equity for Equity and Improvement; Instructional Leadership; Doctoral Seminar: Dynamics of Improving Schools and Districts; and Supervision of Instruction

Acknowledgments

Foreword

Introduction

Section I: Designing for Diverse Learners

Chapter 1. Continuous Quality Improvement and Leadership Development in Early Childhood Education Programs
• John J. Hall and Shannon M. Calderone

Chapter 2. The Core Practice Test Kitchen: A Model for Collaborative Professional Learning through Small, Facilitated Instructional Improvement Teams
• Isobel Stevenson, Andrew Volkert, Thomas Nobili, and Rydell Harrison

Chapter 3. Designing Collaborative Learning Within and Across Districts for Equity-Centered Systems Change
• Alison Fox Resnick, Caitlin Farrell, Kim Wright, Marc Stein, Paula Arce-Trigatti, Terrenda White, Faith Stroud, Gregg Moffitt, Rosalind Ray, Bonifacio Sanchez, and Mickie Sebenoler

Chapter 4. Developing Learning-Focused Leaders Through Design-Based School Improvement: Lessons Learned Across Germany and the United States
• Elizabeth Zumpe, Corrine Aramburo, Nils Reubke, Julia Winter, and Nina Bremm

Chapter 5. Better Paths to Belonging: Designing Learning Experiences to Build Capacity for Critical CCIE
• Megan MacDonald, Katrina Struloeff, Kyra Williams, and Sasha Mejia-Bradford

Section II: Addressing Critical Learning Challenges

Chapter 6. Balancing Data and Reflection: Supporting Teachers in Meaningful PDSA Cycles for Instructional Improvement
• Alison Brockhouse, Rachel Ruggirello, and Gloria Pfeifer

Chapter 7. Practical Measurement as a Tool in Collaborative Continuous Improvement in Education: A Case Study of a Measure of Teacher Professional Learning
• Rebecca Perry, Angela Knotts, Andrew Brannegan, and Sola Takahashi

Chapter 8. Learning to Heal: A Conceptual Framework for Humanizing Collaborative Continuous Improvement in Education
• Manuelito Biag

Chapter 9. When Equity is Not Invoked: Transfer of an EdD Program’s Equity Curricula to Generalized Practice
• David A. R. Trautman, Maxwell M. Yurkofsky, and Randy W. Hetherington

Chapter 10. Converging and Tensioning: Alignment Practices in Continuous Improvement in Education
• Carlos Sandoval, Jonathan R. Dolle, and Rebecca Colina Neri

Chapter 11. Navigating the Tensions of Continuous Improvement: Balancing Accountability, Teacher Autonomy, and Collaboration in an Australian High School
• Catherine Challen

Section III: Using Different Modalities

Chapter 12. Designing and Sustaining an IPT EdD Program for Practitioners: Modalities, Strategies, and Lessons Learned in Collaborative Continuous Improvement
• Lauren Adlof and Holley Handley

Chapter 13. Learn, Model, Apply: A Framework for Collaborative Improvement in Administration Preparation Programs
• Michelle M. Beavers

Chapter 14. Supporting Local Educational Innovation through Collaborative, Continuous Improvement: Self-Directed/Community-Supported Learning in MOOCs
• Donald J. Peurach, Aysha Jerald, and Jacob M. Aguinaga

Chapter 15. Teaching Improvement Science in Online EdD Programs: Reducing Geographic Inequities in Leadership Preparation
• Sarah Zuckerman and Daniella Hall Sutherland

Conclusion

About the Editors and Authors

Index

NOTE: Table of Contents subject to change up until publication date.

Kristen Wilcox

Dr. Kristen C. Wilcox is a Professor in the Educational Policy and Leadership Department at the University at Albany and serves as Research & Development Director of NYKids.org, a groundbreaking University-School Improvement Hub that bridges research and practice to improve educational outcomes. As an accomplished educator and scholar, Dr. Wilcox teaches graduate courses in instructional leadership, research methods, and continuous quality improvement in education and human services, preparing the next generation of educational leaders through her innovative approaches to teaching and mentorship. Dr. Wilcox has established herself as a leading bridging and translational scholar who connects research, policy, and practice. Her work addresses critical questions about the complex relationships between educational policy, leadership effectiveness, curriculum development, and instructional excellence. Her research focuses on understanding the variability in children's and youth's educational experiences, examining how factors such as culture, language, and economic disadvantage influence student outcomes and success trajectories. Her scholarly contributions have been recognized through publication in premier educational journals including the Journal of Educational Change, Peabody Journal of Education, Educational Administration Quarterly, and Teachers College Record. Dr. Wilcox has authored and co-authored numerous books that provide practical, research-based guidance for educational practitioners. Her notable publications include Innovation in Odds-beating Schools, Best Practices from High Performing High Schools, and Best Practices from High Performing Middle Schools. Beyond these major works, she has contributed to numerous edited volumes, book chapters, research briefs, newsletters, and blog posts, many of which are featured on the NYKids website and serve as essential resources for educators nationwide. Dr. Wilcox's research has directly informed the development of improvement science-based resources and practical tools that support system-wide educational transformation. She actively shares these evidence-based strategies with practicing professionals through institutes, workshops, and professional development sessions throughout New York State and beyond, ensuring that research findings translate into meaningful classroom and school-level improvements.

Elizabeth Zumpe

Elizabeth Zumpe is an assistant professor of Educational Leadership and Policy Studies at the University of Oklahoma. Her research focuses on the development of collective agency and problem-solving mindsets for continuous improvement in schools and districts facing adversity. Through her work, she aims to understand how educators and researchers across the educational system develop collaborative capabilities to solve educational problems. Some of her work focuses on the dynamics of improvement-focused research-practice partnerships (RPPs) and how researchers develop identities for partnership-based research. Elizabeth also studies the development of alternative Ed.D. programs in universities focused on practitioner inquiry and improvement science. Her work has been published AERA Open, American Journal of Education, Journal of Educational Change, Leadership and Policy in Schools, Frontiers in Education, and School Administrator. A former K-12 public school teacher for over a decade with National Board Certification, Elizabeth holds a Ph.D. in Education from the University of California, Berkeley.

David H. Eddy-Spicer

David H. Eddy-Spicer is Professor of Education in the Department of Leadership, Foundations, and Social Policy at the School of Education and Human Development, University of Virginia. He designs and teaches courses and workshops on improvement science and continuous improvement to aspiring and advanced educational leaders in Virginia and nationally. At the University of Virginia, he led UVA’s partnership with Chesterfield County Public Schools as part of the iLEAD initiative of the Carnegie Foundation for the Advancement of Learning (CFAT). As a member of the Carnegie National Faculty, he has been recognized by CFAT for contributions to expanding the teaching and learning of improvement science and continuous improvement. He is a founding member of the Collaborative Leadership Board of the Improvement Scholars Network. He has authored or co-authored a wide range of major reports, book chapters, journal articles, and case studies on the diffusion of innovation, professional learning, and organizational change in the public sector. He served as lead section editor and chapter author of the Foundational Handbook on Improvement Research in Education (Rowman & Littlefield), co-edited The SAGE Handbook of School Organization, and co-authored the most recent volume in the Routledge PSEL/NELP Leadership Preparation Series, Leading Continuous Improvement in Schools: Enacting Leadership Standards to Advance Educational Quality and Equity.

educational leadership research; school improvement strategies; educational policy implementation; diverse student outcomes; instructional leadership; research-practice partnership; educational equity research; translational education scholar; continuous improvement; collaborative research