The Quality Schooling Framework (QSF) identifies the ten essential elements of quality schooling. Learn more by viewing the information below. In addition, visit the QSF Video Library for videos that focus on how all schools can apply effective planning and implementation practices.
Introduction to the Quality Schooling Framework
What is the Quality Schooling Framework?
California's Quality Schooling Framework
Background
Over the past 40 years, an ever-expanding body of qualitative
and quantitative research has described the characteristics of
successful schools. Most researchers and educators suggest that
quality schools focus explicitly on student outcomes and have a robust
and rigorous curriculum that is taught by talented teachers. In these
schools, student progress is assessed frequently and educators use the
results to modify instruction. These schools have a culture of
achievement and a climate of support and trust. They are guided by
competent, dynamic leaders, with support from families and the wider
community.

Across the nation, State Departments of Education, schools and
districts, support providers, and others have woven these components
together in a variety of ways to create frameworks to guide (and in
some cases dictate) organizational and instructional practices. The
California Department of Education has supported a number of frameworks
over the years. With so many frameworks and models available, one
might logically ask, “Does California really need a new framework?”
The Purpose of the Quality Schooling Framework
California’s Quality Schooling Framework (QSF) is a conceptual
model for gauging and supporting a school’s effectiveness. The QSF
starts with a systems approach to ensuring that all children learn and
thrive. It is not an underlying rationale for a checklist or set of
mandates, but a holistic model that connects critical dimensions of
quality schools to help you figure out what is, or is not, working to
support student success. It provides practical research and
evidence-based practices that you can use as you plan and implement
strategies to strengthen your human, fiscal, and organizational
environment. QSF is grounded in the belief that good ideas and
innovative practices originate when California’s education stakeholders
work together to identify educational challenges and share strategies
for improving teaching and learning. It also assumes that education is
an increasingly complex endeavor that is not well served by a simple
list of attributes or by a one-size-fits-all approach.
With 6.2 million public school students, the number of California
public school students is greater than the entire population of more
than 30 states. California has one of the most ethnically and racially
diverse student populations in the country, including almost 1.4
million students in the process of learning English. In acknowledgement
of and to build on this diversity, the QSF incorporates a wide
variety of research- and evidence-based practices to enable schools to
help all of their students learn and thrive across a range of contexts.
We encourage you to use the QSF as a resource, regardless of your
school or district’s baseline performance, level of diversity, size,
location, or other factors. The QSF is intended to support all
districts and schools in strengthening their school practices. QSF
resources should help you to:
- Take a systemic and reflective approach to implementing evidence-based practices.
- Engage others in constructive conversations about educational improvement by beginning with shared concepts and vocabulary.
- Redefine student success as extending beyond core academic performance in a Kindergarten through Grade Twelve environment.
- Access and share evidence-based practices and tools to support improved educational practices.
- Respond proactively to equity issues and the needs of all
students, including students at risk of failure; students from diverse
racial, ethnic, and linguistic backgrounds; lesbian, gay, bisexual,
transgender, students; students with cognitive and physical
disabilities; and low-income students.
- Make policy, planning, and fiscal decisions based on a broadly shared conceptual model for educational improvement.
- Engage in productive organizational partnerships to improve California’s schools.
How is the Quality Schooling Framework Organized?
The Quality Schooling Framework (QSF) is a set of interrelated elements with students learning and thriving at its center. QSF elements are research-based and they describe
universal features of quality schooling that remain relatively constant
despite the rapidly changing context of 21st Century schools. Students Learning and Thriving—the
aim of QSF—represents outcomes that Californians envision their public
school system will achieve for its students. These outcomes include
not only academic outcomes based on the California state standards
across all subject areas, but those outcomes that will ensure our
students lead healthy lifestyles, are engaged members of our democracy,
are prepared for the world of work, and are able to make good ethical decisions.

The instructional core of QSF acknowledges that the real work of
achieving those goals takes place in thousands of classrooms across the
state, where teachers use solid instructional practices to give students access to a rich and robust curriculum and conduct periodic assessment to improve teaching and learning.
Resources that support the instructional core include the teachers and leaders who engage in professional learning to provide direct instruction and support to students. Resources also include budgets, facilities, materials, and personnel supports. This
section of the model describes ways the school identifies and
allocates resources to support the goals and activities of the school.
In addition, schools can engage families/caregivers and the wider community in supporting their educational efforts.
School culture and climate emphasizes how the school environment, like family and community
environments, has either a powerful positive or negative effect on
whether students learn and thrive. These environmental conditions
affect school experiences, attitudes, behaviors, and performance of
both students and staff: how they think, feel and act; whether students
are motivated to learn and stay in school; and whether teachers are
satisfied with, and engaged in their work.
The QSF elements are designed to meet the needs of ALL students.
Therefore, student groups such as English Learners or students with
disabilities are integrated across the elements rather than segregated
from the whole. Each element in the QSF includes discussions, research,
tools, and examples of effective practices to meet specific needs of
individual students and schools.
How to Apply the Quality Schooling Framework
Applying the Quality Schooling Framework
Educators can use a variety of Quality Schooling Framework (QSF) resources to ensure that students are learning and thriving.
However, QSF concepts and resources are less likely to generate
positive results for students if they are adopted in a partial or
piecemeal manner. A great deal of research has shown that new
educational programs and practices are often unsuccessful because they
have been implemented in partial, inconsistent, and costly ways. (1)
Although implementation failures can sometimes be traced to the
selection of inappropriate practices, in many cases they result from a
lack of coordinated action. Effective and sustained improvement in any
organization requires shared goals and information, strong leadership,
active stakeholder engagement, sufficient administrative and
technological supports, and thoughtful evaluation. (2) Whether you
represent a School Improvement Grant school, a Program Improvement school, an achieving school, or a brand
new charter school, you can use implementation models to guide your
work as you implement specific programs or practices associated with
elements of the QSF.
A number of implementation models are now available to help
districts and schools plan and implement new programs and practices in a
coordinated manner. These models identify multiple, but overlapping
stages of implementation that typically take place over a two to
four-year period and include the following steps:
Building Teams and Strengthening Leadership
Leaders should take an active role in guiding the
implementation of major programs and practices. Ideally, leaders or
leadership teams will possess both technical and adaptive skills that
allow them to direct and coordinate specific activities while adapting
to changing circumstances and inspiring others to act. (3) Leaders
should also work to build diverse implementation teams made up of
individuals with the knowledge, skills, and influence needed to build
capacity and motivate others to adopt new practices. A number of tools supply recommendations for systematically including teachers, parents
and other school stakeholders in district and school leadership groups.
Identifying a Shared Vision and Goals
A clear vision and supporting goals provide the reference point against
which organizational members can make decisions, take action, and
assess their progress. (4) The QSF serves as a theory of action,
encouraging all districts and schools to begin with their definition of students learning and thriving and establish goals to support this vision and outcomes to measure
progress. A thorough needs and capacity assessment will help focus the
work to a manageable level. Goals should involve a wide variety of
student outcomes related to academics, physical and emotional health,
etc. They should also respond to the needs of all student groups,
including English learners and students with Special Education needs.
Data on student performance are critical to identifying and
prioritizing goals (e.g. addressing performance of English learners and
Students with Disabilities). Ultimately, the impact of goal setting is
influenced by factors such as individual commitment and confidence and
the level of clarity about the nature of the goal and potential
challenges. (5)
Assessing Needs and Capacity
The needs assessment should be structured around the elements of the
QSF, but should be customized to provide information related
specifically to the identified goals. Anyone undertaking this work will
need to think broadly and look at data sources that include not only
state achievement scores, but results of local assessments, course
grades, fitness scores, healthy kids surveys, etc. While the gold
standard for needs assessments includes surveys, interviews, focus
groups, document reviews, student achievement data reviews, and
classroom observations, it is critical that planning groups synthesize
evidence and include a process to prioritize the needs, so that a real
improvement focus can be articulated, supported and sustained. The end
product of the needs assessment describes these areas in need of
improvement and includes: what was the need and how it was identified,
the target population, how programs or practices to be adopted address
each need, and the implementation processes for programs/practices.
Selecting New Programs and Practices Based on Available Evidence
Wherever possible, new programs and practices should be identified and
selected based on solid and relevant evidence produced by a reliable
source. (6) Before allocating limited resources to new initiatives or
entering into contracts with outside vendors, district and school
leadership teams should ask critical questions about whether the
recommended practices are based on clear evidence: are students more
likely to learn and thrive when these practices are in place? Have
pilots or studies been conducted in similarly sized districts with
positive outcomes? In many cases, evidence is limited, but the QSF
website provides a wide range of vetted resources in the form of
promising practices, practical tools, and research reports.
Expanding Stakeholder Support for New Programs and Practices
Stakeholder interest and commitment is critical to program success. A
number of prior educational reform failures have been attributed to
insufficient stakeholder engagement. For example, a study of
California’s short-lived Learning Assessment System found that a
lack of teacher commitment and public communication contributed
significantly to the system’s failure. (7) New programs and practices
should typically be integrated into existing professional learning activities and leaders should take steps to make sure that those responsible for implementing new practices have the appropriate skills and resources to succeed.
Creating an Implementation Action Plan
An effective implementation action plan helps organizational members
clarify expectations, establish realistic goals, and align their time,
energy, and financial resources to support key programs and practices.
Action plans should be organized around the QSF elements, but specific
goals should support the school or district definition of what it means
for students to learn and thrive. Action plans guided by
implementation models address key factors that are likely to impact
implementation success. For example, action plans based on
implementation models will identify necessary administrative supports,
establish roles and responsibilities, outline necessary coaching, and
stipulate assessment methods. A number of tools are available throughout the QSF to help districts and schools engage in implementation action planning.
Developing a Cycle of Assessment and Improvement
Most implementation models are designed around some version of the
Plan-Do-Study-Act cycle. Therefore, schools and districts should adopt
concrete strategies for encouraging implementation stakeholders to
engage in reflective cycles. Leadership teams should use data on an
ongoing basis to inform practices, but should refrain from making major
modifications to practices until stakeholders have had time to
implement practices fully and to thoroughly assess available data. Most
implementation models suggest that full and sustainable implementation
requires at least three years. The cycle of continuous improvement
should be built into collaborative time early in an implementation
process and supported by professional learning practices and tools.
Most importantly, students should always be at the center of this
process.
Although implementation models guide organizational improvements,
they do not—and should not—be viewed as a series of checklists or
straightforward recipes for organizational improvement. Implementation
will always vary, to some degree, based on local context, varied levels
of organizational complexity, and changing social and political
circumstances. Nevertheless, by applying implementation models and
tools to your work across the various areas of the QSF, you can:
- Better anticipate factors that frequently support or hinder implementation.
- Develop more effective—and realistic—implementation timelines and budgets.
- Apply a common vocabulary and set of definitions to improve communication about implementation processes and challenges.
- Share tools and resources that might spark important conversations, support new practices, and reduce duplicated efforts.
- Develop progress assessment approaches that are constructive rather than punitive.
Ultimately, implementation models should help you make informed choices about
how to select and develop programs and practices that support key elements of the QSF to help students learn and thrive.
Students Learning and Thriving
What Does it Mean?
We seek the day when all children in California — regardless of
where they live, the color of their skin, or their economic
circumstances — receive the start in life that comes with a world-class
education. We seek the day when all students are prepared to pursue
their dreams, participate in the rich cultural life of our state and
compete in our global economy. (1)
The Quality Schooling Framework (QSF) is centered around an expanded
understanding of what it means for California students to learn and
thrive. Social and technological changes are transforming educational
expectations in the United States and educators need new ways of
thinking about—and supporting—student success.
Initially, schools focused on religious readings and then on the
mastery of Greek and Latin. This education was provided to only a
select segment of the population, so that some students received
academic preparation while others were limited to vocational training.
Then, in the 1960s, the Elementary and Secondary Education Act established expectations for equal access to education and high
learning standards for all students. Although this act technically
provided equal access, a disparity in learning conditions and outcomes
persisted across different student populations. In 2001, the passage of
the No Child Left Behind (NCLB) act defined a common goal for all
students, seeking to highlight and close this continued disparity. NCLB
focused primarily on English Language Arts and Mathematics
proficiency, leading many to argue that the act unduly narrowed the
curriculum as well as our definition of student success. The QSF seeks to honor NCLB’s intent to narrow the
achievement gap while expanding the definition of what it means for all
students to learn and thrive.
An Expanded View of Student Success
Despite an emerging consensus that definitions of a quality
education should support an expanded view of success for every student
(the “whole child”), much variation still exists in what we want for
our public schools. (2) Nonetheless, most stakeholders agree that
intellectual, social, and emotional development are worthy goals for
public education. (3) A number of educational stakeholders also believe
civic development should remain a central purpose for public schools.
(4)
Intellectual Development
Intellectual development refers to the academic
skills and knowledge we want all students to acquire as a result of
their schooling. Critical thinking and problem solving are central to
most intellectual growth models (e.g., Blooms Taxonomy, Marzano’s New
Taxonomy of Educational Objectives). Emerging research indicates that
intellectual development is also influenced by intellectual attitudes,
including curiosity and a drive to learn. (5) In California, desired
intellectual skills and knowledge are clearly defined in the new Common Core State Standards.
Social and Emotional Development
Social and emotional development refers to positive
social behaviors such as respect for others, ethical concern, and the
ability to work in teams. It also refers to individual characteristics
and outcomes such as motivation, self-discipline, empathy, confidence,
and independence. Research shows that social and emotional development
plays an important role in improving students’ academic performance and
lifelong learning. Positive social and emotional development also
influences physical health. (6) Discussions of possible outcomes
related to emotional development are often contentious, but this does
not diminish the importance of positive social and emotional
development for individual students and for society. (7)
Civic Development
Civic development has been a consistent topic in
debates about the purpose of education in the United States. Civic
development outcomes are associated with responsible citizenship at the
local, state, national and now often global levels. Despite tensions
over the specific content of civic instruction, there is a general
consensus that civic development is about more than voting—that it is
closely aligned with critical thinking capacity and social problem
solving. Educational stakeholders in a University of California Los Angeles study about the value of
education in California emphasized the role of public schools in
promoting civic engagement and leadership in local communities. (8)
Determining What Students Need in Order to Learn and Thrive
Because the United States, California and local communities all
have a stake in ensuring that students in our state are learning and
thriving, all have a say in defining what that means at the school
level. For example, the United States has a vested interest in making
sure that schools across the nation are producing globally competitive
graduates with the skills needed to meet increasing 21st Century workforce standards. Similarly, California, with its diverse
student population, has a great responsibility to encourage the civic
development of those students. In turn, many communities prioritize
specific outcomes such dual language immersion, drug-free schools, and
improved physical health. In the end, the definition of students learning and thriving will not be the same for all schools and students. While most schools
in the state will include both federal and state outcome priorities in
their definitions, they will also develop a definition that addresses
local priorities. A range of stakeholders have legitimate claims on
defining outcomes, but it usually falls to the school community to
weave these disparate interests into a coherent statement of
purpose—what students learning and thriving means on a day-to-day
basis.
This expanded definition of all students learning and thriving should not result in an overloaded curriculum that attempts to speak
equally to all outcomes. In individual schools and districts,
educators, families and district administrators should develop a shared
understanding of what learning and thriving means to them so their
definition can serve as the organizer for curriculum, instruction and
assessment. For example, California academic standards for English
Language Arts emphasize careful reading of non-fiction texts. Rather
than creating two separate learning initiatives, communities wishing to
emphasize civic engagement can ask students to read ballot initiatives
and op-ed pieces as they prepare to meet English Language Arts
standards. Similarly, schools can look for ways to help students apply
mathematical or scientific knowledge to solve practical social or
public health challenges. Meeting these standards not only contributes
to a student’s cognitive development, but can also prepare him or her to
be an informed and active citizen.
Even though California schools will have different definitions of all students learning and thriving,
the expectation remains the same—all students will leave the school
having met the most rigorous standards inherent in those definitions.