Current through Register Vol. 50, No. 9, September 20, 2024
A. Ethics
and Integrity
1. Education leaders ensure the
success of all students by being ethical and acting with integrity.
a. Dispositions Exemplified in Expectation 5.
The education leader believes in, values, and is committed to:
i. the common good over personal
interests;
ii. taking
responsibility for actions;
iii.
ethical principles in all relationships and decisions;
iv. modeling high expectations;
v. continuously improving knowledge and
skills.
B. Narrative
1. Local and state education agencies and
professional organizations hold educators to codes of ethics, with attention to
personal conduct, fiscal responsibilities, and other types of ethical
requirements. The performance expectations build on concepts of professional
ethics and integrity and add an emphasis on responsibilities of leaders for
educational equity and social justice in a democratic society. Education is the
primary socializing institution, conferring unique benefits or deficits across
diverse constituents.
2. Leaders
recognize that there are existing inequities in current distribution of
high-quality educational resources among students. Leaders remove barriers to
high-quality education that derive from economic, social, cultural, linguistic,
physical, gender, or other sources of discrimination and disadvantage. They
hold high expectations of every student and assure that all students have what
they need to learn what is expected. Further, leaders are responsible for
distributing the unique benefits of education more equitably, expanding future
opportunities of less-advantaged students and families and increasing social
justice across a highly diverse population.
3. Current policy environments with
high-stakes accountability in education require that leaders are responsible
for positive and negative consequences of their interpretations and
implementation of policies as they affect students, educators, communities, and
their own positions. Politically skilled, well-informed leaders understand and
negotiate complex policies (such as high-stakes accountability), avoiding
potential harm to students, educators, or communities that result from
ineffective or insufficient approaches.
4. Ethics and integrity mean leading from a
position of caring, modeling care and belonging in educational settings,
personally in their behavior and professionally in concern about students,
their learning, and their lives. Leaders demonstrate and sustain a culture of
trust, openness, and reflection about values and beliefs in education. They
model openness about how to improve learning of every student. They engage
others to share decisions and monitor consequences of decisions and actions on
students, educators, and communities.
C. Element A-Ethical and Legal Standards.
Leaders demonstrate appropriate ethical and legal behavior expected by the
profession.
1. Indicators. A leader:
a. models personal and professional ethics,
integrity, justice, and fairness and expects the same of others;
b. protects the rights and appropriate
confidentiality of students and staff;
c. behaves in a trustworthy manner, using
professional influence and authority to enhance education and the common
good.
D.
Element B-Examining Personal Values and Beliefs. Leaders demonstrate their
commitment to examine personal assumptions, values, beliefs, and practices in
service of a shared vision and goals for student learning.
1. Indicators. A leader:
a. d emonstrates respect for the inherent
dignity and worth of each individual;
b. models respect for diverse community
stakeholders and treats them equitably;
c. demonstrates respect for diversity by
developing cultural competency skills and equitable practices;
d. assesses own personal assumptions, values,
beliefs, and practices that guide improvement of student learning;
e. uses a variety of strategies to lead
others in safely examining deeply held assumptions and beliefs that may
conflict with vision and goals;
f.
respectfully challenges and works to change assumptions and beliefs that
negatively affect students, educational environments, and every student
learning.
E.
Element C-Maintaining High Standards for Self and Others. Leaders perform the
work required for high levels of personal and organizational performance,
including acquiring new capacities needed to fulfill responsibilities,
particularly for high-stakes accountability.
1. Indicators. A leader:
a. reflects on own work, analyzes strengths
and weaknesses, and establishes goals for professional growth;
b. models lifelong learning by continually
deepening understanding and practice related to content, standards, assessment,
data, teacher support, evaluation, and professional development
strategies;
c. develops and uses
understanding of educational policies such as accountability to avoid
expedient, inequitable, or unproven approaches that meet short-term goals (such
as raising test scores);
d. helps
educators and the community understand and focus on vision and goals for
students within political conflicts over educational purposes and
methods;
e. sustains personal
motivation, optimism, commitment, energy, and health by balancing professional
and personal responsibilities and encouraging similar actions for
others.
AUTHORITY NOTE:
Promulgated in accordance with R.S. 17 and
R.S.17:6(A)(10).