If changing is really learning, if effective organizations need more and
more intelligent people, if careers are shorter and more changeable, above
all, if more people need to be self-sufficient for more of their lives,
then education has to become the single most important investment that any
person can make in their own destiny. . . . Education needs to be re-invented,"
says C.B. Handy in The Age of Unreason.1
If the United States and United Kingdom are to avoid becoming solely low-labor-cost
economies, then both countries need to be obsessed with investing in education
and learning. Thankfully, a transformation is underway in both countries.
Total quality philosophy and tools are being adopted throughout the education
systems in the United States and United Kingdom. As with any innovation,
success varies, and applications reflect the different political and social
environments. This article presents the principles, analyzes successful
applications, investigates the differences and similarities between the
two nations' approaches, and identifies challenges for the future.
What is total quality in education?
First, the industrial model does not have all the answers. Successful practition-ers
take the best from industrial experiences and combine this, in a holistic
framework, with the best learning theories and methods. The result is a
fascinating hybrid that naturally varies from school to school. There does
appear to be at least three levels of application.
The first and possibly the lowest level of application is to the management
processes of a school or other educational establishment. Schools have many
processes in common with other organizations. They produce strategic plans,2
recruit and develop staff, deploy resources and require principle-centered
leadership.3 While the application of total quality at this level can produce
improvements in efficiency, it probably won't inspire students and teachers,
or deal with the real root issues that lie within the learning processes.
The next level is teaching total quality to students. The philosophy needs
to be covered in its totality, along with methods and tools. This becomes
more exciting because it enables the school to move to the highest level.
The highest level is total quality in learning. This is where application
impacts the classroom. Todd Bergman, quality coordinator at Mt. Edgecumbe
High School in Sitka, Alaska, and I define total quality in learning as
a philosophy supported by a comprehensive tool kit4 and driven by students
and staff in order to identify, analyze and remove the barriers to learning.
One view of the teacher's role is to motivate students to learn. Another
is for the teacher to work with students to remove the barriers to motivation.
All of us are born with an inherent love of learning. The "forces of
destruction,"5 which are built into our systems, work to drive this
out of us. Some of us are lucky enough to survive the system.
An important myth in education needs to be destroyed. There is no such thing
as "value-free" education. Any human activity or process will
be influenced by principles or values.6 These need to be managed to avoid
the systemization of unhealthy or negative values. Results cannot be achieved
without applying methods, and methods will embrace certain values and principles.
A pyramid is one way of viewing the relationship between results, methods
and principles (see Figure 1). These need to be founded on a solid understanding
of practical psychology and theories of learning, systems and variation,
what W. Edwards Deming referred to as profound knowledge.7
The desired results vary according to the stakeholders being questioned.
Students want schools to equip them to deal with very uncertain futures.
Rather than being "stuffed full" of information, they need to
leave their formal education with a love of learning and an understanding
of how they learn best. Parents want greater choice and involvement in their
children's education. They expect higher academic standards to be achieved
but want their children to be balanced, mature citizens. Employers require
greater learning skills, teamwork and self-motivation based on a good grasp
of the basics.
Governments, however, while in theory representing the electorate, require
much more from less. Western economies, particularly the United States and
United Kingdom, have been in a gradual process of decline since World War
II. As the profitability of industry has declined, the available resources
to invest in education have also declined.8 Governments are under intense
pressure to reduce public spending. In these circumstances, quality is the
answer, not the problem. It is the only way to increase outputs and reduce
costs, as the leading industrial practitioners discovered in the 1980s.
In order to achieve the desired results for all stakeholders, schools and
other educational establishments must question their core processes and
methods. New ideas are emerging, but these need to be based on sound educational
and management principles. The most holistic set of principles for quality
are Deming's 14 points. Combine an understanding of profound knowledge with
the deadly diseases, and you'll have a solid foundation on which to develop
methods. If methods contravene these principles, they should be ignored.
If they align well, then they should be considered for development. The
students and staff at Mt. Edgecumbe have interpreted the 14 points for an
educational environment.9 Some of their conclusions will challenge the core
beliefs of our current approach to education.
In terms of methods, both the Malcolm Baldrige National Quality Award and
European Quality Award frameworks can be usefully applied to education if
they are interpreted sensitively. Figure 2 shows a translation of the European
Quality Award framework for a school. This gives an overall framework in
which to fit more detailed methods such as self-assessment; portfolios;
cross-curricular, project-based learning; student improvement teams; and
others.
Any application of total quality in an educational establishment needs to
be founded on sound principles. Frameworks such as the Baldrige Award can
be useful, but they must allow for flexibility and diversity. The school
must fit the approach to itself, not the other way around. The best must
be taken from the industrial model and combined with the best from the world
of education.
Progress in the United Kingdom
"If you don't shape the future, someone else will," says Joel
Barker in Future Edge.10 The conservative government in the United Kingdom
had long seen education as a bastion of trendy, progressive, left-wing thinking,
focused on ideology rather than service. This perception is far from true,
with some of the more progressive schools being closely aligned to quality
principles. However, through the media, teachers were portrayed as being
in need of a radical shake-up. Change was definitely required, but the government
went about this in a very confrontational style. A series of central government
changes were implemented in record time. The speed and magnitude was unprecedented
and, some would argue, poorly managed.
The first major change was the introduction of a national curriculum. This
was implemented rapidly with little stakeholder involvement. Those in tune
with government philosophy designed and implemented a well-defined curriculum
based on key stages, with standardized tests to evaluate performance. The
British National Curriculum is very prescriptive and bureaucratic. Inevitably,
there was a backlash from the teachers who refused to cooperate with the
testing regime. After many months of conflict, the government listened and
the curriculum was redesigned to allow schools 20 percent of teaching time
to use as they wish.
A cornerstone of John Major's government has been the Citizen's Charter.
This aims to ensure that all citizens receive high-quality services, responsive
to their needs, provided efficiently at a reasonable cost. The parent is
identified as the main customer for schools. The Parent's Charter defines
standards and encourages openness of information. League Tables have been
introduced, and choice has led to greater competition. Many teachers have
responded negatively to the charter, but initial simplistic measures are
being improved. However, because the Citizen's Charter is based on "carrot
and stick" principles and is mandatory, a lot of manipulation occurs
in order to give the appearance of improvement. On the positive side, the
Citizen's Charter has encouraged many public-sector organizations to investigate
and start to implement total quality.
The government also introduced major changes in the way schools are inspected.
The government established the Office of Standards in Education, and inspection
was opened up to market forces, including laypeople on inspection teams.
Schools have to "buy in" a full inspection every four years. This
is a very expensive approach, and the quality of inspection varies considerably.
Deming's third point, cease dependence on inspection to achieve quality,
seems to have been ignored by the government, which appears to be doing
the opposite.
Very little in British education has remained constant over the last 10
years. Funding mechanisms have also been completely revised. One very successful
change has been the introduction of local management of schools. This has
empowered schools considerably and has led to more innovation. Also, the
government has offered schools large financial incentives to leave local
authority control and to receive their funds direct through a central funding
agency. Schools can thus opt out and become grant-maintained. Many argue
that the grant-maintained system is creating a two-tier state education
system. The take-up varies considerably across the country. Some might conclude
that this is another attempt by a conservative government to undermine traditionally
left-wing local authorities.
Finally, two voluntary standards are being implemented in education. The
first is "Investors in People." This is a national initiative
designed to help organizations improve performance through a planned approach
to setting and communicating goals, and developing people to meet these
goals. Designed by Britain's best companies, IIP is proving popular and
effective in schools. It is starting to address years of under-investment
in teachers. We will not have competent, confident students unless we have
competent, confident teachers.
A less welcome development has been the application of ISO 9000 to certain
educational establishments. ISO 9000 is an international standard that aims
to introduce disciplines, procedures and systems to assure that the production
of goods and services meet the customers' requirements. It has its origins
in the defense industry and is completely manufacturing-focused. This causes
a lot of resistance in education. More important, ISO 9000 only ensures
consistency. A registered company "does what it says it does,"
even if this is not the best approach. Our schools need to reinvent themselves,
not proceduralize ineffective and inefficient ways of working.
The British education system has gone through a period of unprecedented
change. Much has been imposed on the system by central government. Some
initiatives align well with the principles of total quality. Others have
conflicted with basic principles and created a real tension for schools
trying to apply continual improvement.
Many applications of total quality are being reported across the United
Kingdom. These are spread across the spectrum of educational establishments.
Often, these initiatives come with different labels, such as school improvement
or effectiveness,11 but they embrace many of the underlying principles of
total quality.
Hamblett School in St. Helens was one of the first special schools to officially
introduce TQM,12 but many others have been close to the spirit of the philosophy
for a long time. The idea of focusing on the individual's wants and needs
is more second nature in this environment. Also, special schools are less
constrained by the national curriculum and are often allowed to be more
innovative. The level of commitment from teachers is usually very high.
Similarly, the concepts of total quality, particularly based on Deming's
teachings, are generally well-received in primary schools. The more progressive
primary schools have been developing collaborative, project-based learning
approaches for many years. Some have even questioned reward and punishment
concepts13 and moved away from grading and ranking to concentrate on intrinsic
motivation. Ironically, government initiatives designed to improve quality,
by concentrating on standards and testing, have forced many of these pioneers
to abandon their work and return to "chalk and talk" and "teaching
to the test." Many primary teachers have a fundamental belief in the
same principles articulated by Deming but are frustrated by a national system
that seems to be driving them backward.14
Many secondary schools around the country have been making gains. Somervale
Comprehensive School in Midsomer Norton has been implementing total quality
for three years.8, 15 They were supported by Avon Training and Enterprise
Council, a government-funded organization aimed at improving prosperity
by increasing investment in education and training throughout the community.
Somervale, which is now exchanging students with Mt. Edgecumbe High School,
started with a strategic review involving all stakeholders, including students.
This identified the critical proc-esses for improvement. Improvement teams
involving parents, teachers, support staff and students were established
and facilitated through a cycle of process improvement. The school established
a steering group that meets every month.
A major breakthrough occurred when some teachers, support staff, students
and a parent went through a six-month training process to become facilitators.
These people went on to lead improvement initiatives in many areas. One
of the most successful was the complete redesign of the process for reporting
with parents and students. Another facilitator course is about to start
with a similar mix of people. This will concentrate more on the learning
proc-esses themselves. Somervale now intends that all students will experience
total quality in order to use the philosophy and tools at the center of
the curriculum.
There are many other examples of secondary schools implementing total quality
across the country. Another innovator is Westwood St. Thomas School in Salisbury.
They have used total quality to engage 150 stakeholders in strategic planning.
They, too, are using the tools in the classroom. Most of these schools realize
that they have begun a long process and that there are no quick fixes.
Further, education colleges have become very aware of quality because they
have recently been incorporated as businesses, and local authorities are
no longer able to bail them out if they get into financial difficulties.
There is a Students Charter and much greater competition. New funding regimes
also require that quality objectives be met. Some colleges have taken a
very procedural approach to quality, and several have achieved ISO 9000.
Many others are taking a more balanced approach.
Finally, universities still appear to be keener to teach students total
quality rather than to practice the concepts themselves. There are some
exceptions, but progress in higher education is very slow. Recently, polytechnics
achieved university status, and many of the new universities are more responsive
to students' needs and have clearer organizational structures.
Sometimes the impetus for total quality comes from outside the educational
establishment. Leading total quality employers like Rank Xerox, ICL and
the Royal Mail have been assisting local schools to start implementation.
It is clearly to their advantage if the quality of students can be improved.
The Royal Mail has in fact sponsored the Centre for Total Quality in Education
and Community, which exists to promote total quality nationwide. Other bodies
such as local education authorities and training and enterprise councils
have been acting as catalysts. The British Deming Association has taken
a lead, mentoring many schools throughout Leicestershire.
Progress in the United States
The pioneers of total quality in education generally come from the United
States, but the ideas have spread rapidly around the world, particularly
to the United Kingdom, Canada, Australia and New Zealand. The United States
can boast of schools that have been implementing total quality the longest
and as a consequence have learned a great deal. Their willingness to share
has helped many others. Every year the American Society for Quality Control
publishes the results of its Quality in Education survey. The list grows
dramatically each year, but only a handful of schools have been going for
more than five years. These leaders include Mt. Edgecumbe High School, Fox
Valley Technical College, George Westinghouse High School and Millcreek
School District.
Mt. Edgecumbe High School is a state-operated residential school serving
students throughout Alaska. Ages range from 14 to 18 years. The school serves
about 300 students, 82 percent of whom are native Alaskans.
The school's quality journey started in 1988. At the heart of a quality
school must be a quality curriculum. All entering students learn quality
philosophy, tools and techniques, and learning theories and practical psychology,
including Stephen R. Covey's Seven Habits for Highly Effective People. They
then have opportunities to apply this core knowledge in all subject areas.
Some quality experts used to think that adults define the curriculum and
then the students work with the teachers on improving the delivery process.
Mt. Edgecumbe has gone further. Because the students are engaged in understanding
why they are learning something and participate in regular reviews of the
curriculum, they now directly influence future curriculum as well as delivery.
The school achieves this by using competence-based learning and Bloom's
taxonomy. The original curriculum was influenced by state guidelines and
other reports about the types of skills that students will need in the future.
Curriculum delivery does not just happen in the classroom. It happens throughout
the student's time at school. Marty Johnson, a science teacher at Mt. Edgecumbe,
refers to the "kiss" principle. Most people remember their first
kiss. They do not remember when they first heard about kissing or were told
how it is done. Learning must relate to application, and so great effort
is placed on cross-curricular projects.
Finally, the most controversial subject of all: assessment. Deming taught
about the harmful effects of grading and ranking, as well as depending on
mass inspection. Applying his teachings to education, as Mt. Edgecumbe has
done, means monitoring learning, not controlling the students. The school
uses the learning matrixes and Bloom's taxonomy in order for students to
assess their own learning. This is not done lightly. Students are taught
learning theories and assessment techniques. They have to document, demonstrate
and defend their learning. The documentation ends up in extensive portfolios,
soon to be put on CD-ROMs.
Some results achieved by Mt. Edgecumbe include:
Sixty-eight percent of graduates
continue on to college or university. The average progression rate to college
for rural high schools is below 5 percent.
Another 28 percent go to technical/trade
school or into military service.
The drop-out rate varies between
zero and 0.5 percent.
Ninety-seven percent of students
believe that the quality of education received was better than the education
available in their home communities.
Ninety-two percent of the 1992
graduates would like their children to attend Mt. Edgecumbe High School.
The academic challenge was cited as the main reason.
Seventy-five percent of graduates
felt that the school did a good job preparing them for continuing education.
Drug and alcohol abuse has fallen
dramatically.
Parent satisfaction has risen.
Fox Valley Technical College in Wisconsin has achieved similar results but
on a larger scale.16 The college started implementing total quality in 1985
by understanding the students and the business community's wants and needs.
They have also directly engaged the community in the process.
As a result of listening to customers, Fox Valley created customer-driven
meas-ures and indicators. Because getting a job is so important to students,
the school developed a job-placement tracking system. This emphasis encouraged
lecturers to focus on the relevance of their courses in preparing students
for the working world. Guarantees are offered to students and businesses
to compensate in cases of dissatisfaction.
Fox Valley recognizes that all students are different, with different wants
and needs, and different learning styles. However, it must be remembered
that students are not only customers but also suppliers, and are responsible
for their own learning processes. They are co-workers in improving the learning
process, but ultimately they remain the primary customers.
The National Alliance of Business's report "The Cutting Edge of Common
Sense"17 investigates seven leading examples of TQM in education. In
the report, they use the Baldrige Award framework to compare the different
approaches. The seven examples are all courageous pathfinders and worthy
role models. They include George Westinghouse High School, New York; Millcreek
Township Public Schools, Pennsylvania; Mt. Edgecumbe High School, Alaska;
Rappahannock County Public Schools, Virginia; Prince William County Public
Schools, Virginia; Southwestern Wisconsin Quality Consortium, Wisconsin;
and Vermont Department of Education, Vermont. They show, without a doubt,
that total quality in education does work and is essential in transforming
the system. What is apparent is the sheer diversity of application based
on some common principles.
The federal government has identified the need for change, but the failing
Goals 2000: Educate America Act schools initiative is another example of
using the old paradigm to assess the new. The highly innovative New American
Schools initiative is falling victim to short-term and narrow measures of
performance. Total quality is not a quick fix and does not sit comfortably
with the rampant short-termism of many western governments. Few world leaders
appear to understand the quality paradigm.
Every year, there seem to be more and more schools starting on the total
quality journey in the United States. The innovators are highlighting a
clear path and developing new and creative solutions to some of society's
most systemic problems. While a handful of U.S. schools have been in the
vanguard, the majority will benefit from looking at best practices across
the world as others rapidly adopt total quality principles and tools.
Differences and similarities
The main differences in the total quality approaches adopted in the United
States and United Kingdom are rooted in the past. Their social and political
systems differ greatly. The United States was started as one great experiment
to break away from the traditional. The United Kingdom has a long history
of strong central government. Over the last 15 years, more and more power
has gone to the center, and local government has become very weak. The schools
are caught up in this process with some interesting irony. Just as the most
critical process, curriculum design, has gone to the center, schools have
been given much greater responsibility for their own management. This creates
an enormous tension because many of the root-cause problems lie outside
teachers' influence. The only way to resolve this is to work in partnership
with other stakeholders on the system itself. With many government initiatives
contradicting the total quality philosophy, this has become increasingly
difficult and frustrating.
References
1. Handy, C.B., The Age of Unreason, Harvard Business School Press, 1990,
p. 211.
2. Marsh, J., The Strategic Toolkit, IFS International Ltd, 1993.
3. Covey, S.R., Principle-Centered Leadership, Summit, 1991.
4. Marsh, J., The Quality Toolkit­p;An A to Z of Tools and Techniques,
IFS International Ltd, 1993.
5. Deming, W.E., The New Economics for Industry, Government and Education,
MIT, CAES, 1993.
6. Covey, S.R., The Seven Habits of Highly Effective People, Simon and Schuster,
1989.
7. Deming, W.E., Out of the Crisis, Cambridge University Press, 1986.
8. Marsh, J., "Economics to Fight Decline," Managing Service Quality,
MCB University Press, Nov. 1993, pp. 15­p;20.
9. Cotton, K., "Applying Total Quality Management Principles to Secondary
Education," School, Community and Professional Development Program,
Northwest Regional Educational Laboratory, Snapshot #35.
10. Barker, J., Future Edge, Morrow, 1992.
11. West-Burnham, J., Managing Quality in Schools, Longman, 1992.
12. Brownlow, R., "TQM at Hamblett, Quality and Learning," Journal
of Centre for Total Quality in Education and Community, Vol. 1, No. 1, 1994.
13. Kohn, A., Punished by Rewards, Houghton-Mifflin Co., 1993.
14. Haigh, G., "Causes for Celebration in Common," Times Education
Supplement, May 12th, 1995, pp. 10­p;11.
15. Marsh, J., "Quality Within the Community," Managing Service
Quality, MCB Press, January 1993, pp. 453­p;456.
16. Osborne, D., and Gaebler, T., Reinventing Government, Plume, 1993.
17. Siegel, P., and Byrne, S., The Cutting Edge of Common Sense, National
Alliance of Business, 1993.
About the author
John Marsh has many years' experience implementing total quality
in business, government, education and more recently with whole communities.
While based in the United Kingdom, he regularly works in the United States.
He has written two books, many papers and co-authored several British and
international standards. He is a passionate enthusiast for using total quality
to develop new solutions for whole communities.
For more information, telephone Marsh at (44) 117-949-2119, fax (44) 117-949-7784.