Walk into a school and pause. Not to inspect the bulletin boards or scan test scores, but to feel the air. Within seconds you can sense whether this is a place where children thrive. That sense of connection is rarely captured in a spreadsheet, but every school leader knows accountability plays a role in shaping it.
At its best, accountability acts as a mirror—helping us reflect, align, and grow. At its worst, it becomes a checklist, pushing compliance over learning. Data is everywhere, but meaningful reflection is rare.
True accountability asks better questions. It creates conditions where students feel safe, teachers feel supported, and leaders feel trusted.
Too often, accountability systems shift from support to control. The original intentions of guidance, growth, and improvement become lost in mandates and oversight.
In our conversation on the K–12 Change Equation podcast, Dr. Clinton Page, Chief Accountability Officer of Alexandria City Public Schools (ACPS), described a new way forward. Instead of demanding answers, accountability should begin with inquiry:
“What’s working, what’s puzzling, and what will we try next?”
This reframing transforms accountability from a pressure system into a compass. The purpose is not to “catch” educators but to nurture curiosity, reflection, and shared responsibility.
Data shows up in dashboards, tables, and reports. Behind each figure is a child, a teacher, and a system doing its best. When educators confront difficult data, the reaction is often defensive: blame, shame, or justification.
The challenge for leaders is to create the conditions where data is not a threat but an opportunity. As Dr. Page notes, moving “above the line” means shifting from defending and explaining to listening, asking, and learning. In that space, data becomes a tool for growth rather than a weapon of judgment.
The Alexandria model highlights what is possible when accountability focuses on trust, growth, and collaboration.
This approach doesn’t ignore data. Instead, it brings meaning to data by connecting it with people, practices, and purpose.
For superintendents, principals, and teacher-leaders, the message is clear: accountability should not be about control. It should be about connection.
The work of education has always been about preparing students to be literate, responsible, and engaged citizens. Data matters, but so do compassion, voice, agency, responsibility, respect, and belonging.
When leaders use accountability to create conditions of safety and curiosity, schools become places where both adults and children can thrive.
In the end, perhaps the most important reminder of all is the purpose we became educators: love is a metric too.
Now what, so what?