Supporting Professional Learning- Empowering Staff Through...
Transcript of Supporting Professional Learning- Empowering Staff Through...
Supporting Professional Learning- Empowering Staff Through Choice and Inclusion
Kenzie Rushton, BSc., M.Ed. Learning Leader for Professional
Development Centennial High School [email protected]
Call to Grow
“To grow in the work of teaching, teachers must themselves be constantly learning, learning more about each of their students, learning more about the subjects they teach and the worlds explored in their academic areas, learning more about what works with different kinds of learners” (Starratt, 2010, p. 31)
Professional Development
What do you feel are the core components of effective professional development and its organization for your staff?
Foundational Principles of High School Redesign • Mastery Learning
• Rigorous & Relevant Curriculum
• Personalization
• Flexible Learning Environments
• Educator Roles & Professional Development
• Meaningful relationships
• Home and Community Involvement
• Assessment
• Welcoming, Caring Respectful and Safe
With a focus on Educator Roles and Professional Development • structures are created to better support new types of learning
relationships
• collaboration and shared decision making are encouraged
• administrators participate in the learning community and expand their leadership roles
• teachers build and have access to a growing repertoire of approaches to learning
• teachers work together to improve the design and delivery of the curriculum.
Retrieved from: https://ideas.education.alberta.ca/media/74562/edrolesandpd.pdf
Re-Thinking Professional Development
“The time has passed for professional development programs that rely on one-shot workshops to improve teacher practice.” (Goldenberg & Gallimore, 1991, p.69).
Setting the Context
Centennial High School
• Relatively new (est. Sept 2004)
• Staff
• 100 teaching/ 20 support staff
• 1 principal/ 3 Assistant Principals
• Students
• 1800 grades 10-12
• Heterogeneous (Mix between academic and skills)
• Community
• SE Calgary- Mid to High SES
Professional Development
• Committee run
• Members from each of the PLC’s(departments)
• AP supports the committee
• Includes individuals from support staff
• 10 non-instructional days
• (2-4 professional development days) a year
Mission
Planting seeds of Innovation • promoting innovation of practice through
collaboration
• Nudging/rubbing elbows
Cross pollination • making our work visible for others
• Organize whole staff structures for this to occur
Our job: provide time and organizational opportunities for this to happen
Guiding Principles
• Moves away from the one shot workshop
• Embedded and ongoing
• Given a priority
• Offers meaningful choice and autonomy
• Contextual considerations
• Provides room for adaptation
• Opens classroom doors and practice
• Requires long term planning
• Involves formative and summative evaluations of the PD
Implementation Plan
Empowering Staff by Letting Go Move from accountability framework to structures which promote responsibility for professional growth
“Accountability is the remainder that is left when responsibility has been subtracted” (Hargreaves & Shirley, 2012, p.62)
Image of the Teacher
Embrace that teachers are: • trustworthy
• well meaning
• extremely busy
• competent
• strong
• inventive
• full of ideas
If provided with the appropriate support, many will participate in programs and activities beyond the scope of their contracted duties, creating an authentic learning environment where they are meeting their moral obligations as educators.
Letting Go by Providing Choice
Keeping in Mind:
• Every context is different
• Each individual has specific needs that are very difficult to meet in a one-size fits all approach
Choice
What
Context Specific
Who
CORE Group
How
Evidence Based • Action
Research • PLC • Peer Coaching
Evidence Based Professional Learning • Problems of practice are at the center of the learning
conversations.
• Three approaches:
• Action Research
• Professional Learning Communities
• Peer Coaching
All staff become co-researchers of learning
Teachers as Co-researchers of Learning • Evidence based
approach
• Bring a problem of practice to focus your conversation
• Lines can be defined
• Lines can be blurred
• Center your conversation on learning
Action Research
Peer Coaching
PLC
Innovation through Collaboration
“Giving away or openly sharing your best ideas with other[s]. . . keeps you on your toes and make you keep on innovating further in order to stay ahead.” (Hargreaves, 2012, p. 86)
Setting the Expectation of Collaboration • Staff are expected to work together
• Staff choose with whom they will work
• May be someone from outside of the building
• Leads to:
• open conversations,
• generating new ideas and
• provides the opportunity to share our work with each other.
Avoid the creation of contrived professional groups where staff are expected to comply as opposed to becoming engaged with their work
Professional Learning Groups
• Primary CORE sharing group
• Secondary support
PD Committee
Administration
System Supports
Department
Students
Community CORE
Problems of Practice- Ideas
Focus on Learning
Student Engagement
Integration
Making Learning Visible
Literacy/ Numeracy
Metacognitive Approaches
Giving Effective
Feedback/ Assessment
Putting it into Practice
• There are four major ideas that have emerged through our experience in the implementation of this plan:
1. Time must be embedded,
2. Whole staff events are organized with the intent of promoting cross-pollination of ideas
3. Communication of the vision must be clear
4. Making the work visible for others must be a primary purpose
Dealing with the Barrier of Time Our implementation:
1. shorten instructional time slightly to give time back to teachers (we have 30 minutes of contact time Monday through Thursday);
2. meeting times on a monthly basis is modified to provide additional professional learning time;
3. having 10 non- instructional days,
1. 7 of which are driven by departmental and individual work,
2. 3 for whole staff events
4. set aside regularly 10-15 minutes of whole staff meeting time or department meeting time to engage in professional learning conversations.
Whole Staff Events
• the core of whole staff sharing opportunities
• Removes the physical barrier of silos within the building
• Organize whole staff events to be inclusive
• use an Ethic of Critique
“By uncovering inherent injustice or dehumanization imbedded in the language and structures of society, critical analysts invite others to act to redress such injustice” (Starratt, 1991, p. 189).
Inclusive
What are some of the characteristics that you would consider to be essential in the organization of inclusive professional development?
Putting our Vision into Practice
Year 1
Introduction/ Selection of PD approach
Teachers as co-researchers of learning
• Using successfully developed evidence based approaches including:
• Action Research
• PLC
• Peer Coaching
How we Organized the day
• Opening Discussion (Impact of last PD day)
• Presentation- Effective PD (Whole staff)
• Selection of PD approach for next year (PLC; Action Research; Peer Coaching)
• Presentations on PD approaches (Smaller Groups)
• Round table (forming groups/ exploring ideas)
Forming Groups and Establishing Norms of Interaction • Establish norms of interaction
• Based on Protocol from the School Reform Initiative
• “Forming Ground Rules (Creating Norms)”
• Asked to make a record of it, Making our work visible for others
Mini Convention
Cross pollination opportunity
• Staff provide sessions that they would like to run.
• Interest is gauged from staff through a survey
• Staff sign up
• Staff attend sessions that are run based on choice and need.
Sessions
Sharing/ Celebration
Provide an opportunity for staff to:
1. Share the work they have been engaged in throughout the year
2. Reflect on the work and think about ways they might adjust their professional plan for the up and coming year
Putting our Vision into Practice
Year 2
The Adjustment Cycle
Revisiting, Reviewing and Revising • Staff revisit the work that they did
• New staff are incorporated
• Expect movement
• Group did not meet your needs? • Change in focus
• Change who you worked with
• Re-establish norms of interaction
PD work at Centennial 2013-14 • SPARK program
• PODS; Inquiry; Cross curricular; Teaching and learning
• Implementing theatrical technology into the theatre classroom
• Process in artistic language and teaching practices
• Female Empowerment; Girl Bullying
• Student engagement; Formative assessment
• Board work; Cumulative exams
• Making Learning Visible in High School Science Classes
Feedback
How does feedback from staff inform your decisions about up and coming professional development?
Formative and Summative Evaluations • Gathering feedback from staff has led to
many modifications of our initial ideas • Collected Data via: • Survey Monkey • Keep doing/ Start doing/ Stop doing • Informal conversations
• Teachers assess their own professional growth to make adjustments
Feedback from staff
• Community Enhancement
• Personalization of Learning
• Addressing Critical Needs
Communication
• It is through strong communication where misconceptions and ideas are addressed and clarified for staff.
• In the absence of clear information individuals are likely to generate and share misinformation.
Enhancing Communication
• creation of posters to be distributed through work spaces in the building to help make visible the mission and goals of the professional learning,
• distribution of a summative report to all Learning Leaders from each department in the building,
• the creation of an orientation handout for new staff.
Putting our Vision into Practice
Year 3
Adjustments for year three
• Enhanced communication
• Making our work more visible
• #yotespd
• Different sharing opportunity
• Edcamp with Area schools
• Possible vertical and lateral sharing
Educator Roles and Professional Development • structures are created to better support new types of learning
relationships
• collaboration and shared decision making are encouraged
• administrators participate in the learning community and expand their leadership roles
• teachers build and have access to a growing repertoire of approaches to learning
• teachers work together to improve the design and delivery of the curriculum.
Retrieved from: https://ideas.education.alberta.ca/media/74562/edrolesandpd.pdf
Closing Thoughts
•Ideas?
•Comments?
•Suggestions?
References • Auger, Wendy & Wilderman, Ron (Fall 2000). Using action research to open the door to lifelong professional learning. Education. 121, (1),
120-127. • Dick, W., Carey, L., & Carey, J. (2005). The systematic design of instruction: (sixth edition). Boston, M.A : Pearson/ Allyn & Bacon. • DuFour, R. (2007). Professional learning communities: A bandwagon, an idea worth considering, or our best hope for high levels of learning?.
Middle School Journal, 39(1), 4-8. • Evans, M., Lomax, P. & Morgan, H. (November 2000). Closing the circle: Action research partnerships towards better learning.
CambridgeJournal of Education 30 (3), 405-419. • Fraser, S., & Gestwick,i C. (2002). Authentic childhood: Exploring Reggio Emilia in the classroom. Albany, NY: Delmar- Thomson Learning. • Goldenberg C. & Gallimore, R. (1991). Changing teaching takes more than a one-shot workshop. Educational Leadership, 49(3), 69-72. • Government of Alberta. (2011). Educator Roles and Professional Development- Foundational Principles for High School Redesign. Retrieved
from: https://ideas.education.alberta.ca/media/74562/edrolesandpd.pdf. • Hargreaves. A., Shirley D. (2012). The Global Fourth Way- The quest for educational excellence. Corwin, Thousand Oaks, California • Rushton, K. (2014, June 26). Supporting Professional Learning – Empowering Staff through Choice and Inclusion [Blog]. Retrieved from
http://educ-matters.blogspot.ca/2014/06/supporting-professional-learning.html • Rushton, K. (2014, June 26). Supporting Professional Learning in Practice [Blog]. Retrieved from http://educ-
matters.blogspot.ca/2014/06/supporting-professional-learning-in.html • Scott, S., & Webber, C. F. (2008). Evidence-based leadership development: The 4L framework. Journal of Educational Administration, 46(6),
762-776. • Sergiovanni, T. (2004). Collaborative cultures and communities of practice. Principal leadership (Middle school edition), 5(1), 49-52. • Showers, B., & Joyce, B. (1996). The evolution of peer coaching. Educational Leadership, 53(6), 12-16. • Sparks, D., & Hirsh, S. (2000). A national plan for improving professional development. Oxford, OH: National Staff Development Council. • Starratt, R. J. (2010). Refocusing School Leadership: Foregrounding Human Development Throughout the Work of the School. Florence, KY:
Routledge. • Starratt, R. J. (1991). Building an ethical school: A theory for practice in educational leadership. Educational Administration Quarterly, 27(2),
185-202