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PDS The Simultaneous Renewal of School & University Defining a vision Shirley Lefever - Davis Janice Ewing Wichita State University . Goodlad’s vision of Simultaneous Renewal is the creation of a new “institution”. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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PDS

The Simultaneous Renewal of School & University

Defining a vision

Shirley Lefever-DavisJanice Ewing

Wichita State University

Goodlad’s vision of Simultaneous Renewal is the creation of a new

“institution”

Tomorrow’s Schools: Principles for the Design of Professional Development Schools.

(Holmes Group, 1990)

Response to realization that fundamental changes in conditions of teaching and learning seldom occur outside “isolated islands of exemplary practice”.

PDSs are an attempt to “institutionalize” the development of new knowledge and practice. PDS as a center for the study of teaching and learning.

Institutionalize not HomogenizePDS is NOT a one size fits all.

However, there are common functions of successful PDS partnerships.

Four functions of a Professional Development

School Support P-12 student learning Prepare future educators Support Professional Development of

university and school faculty Engage in inquiry about practice

What It Means to Be a Professional Development School (2008) A Statement by the Executive Council and Board of Directors of the National Association for Professional Development Schools

What it means to be a PDS: 9 Essentials(What it means to be a PDS: NAPDS, 2008)

Essentials 1 through 5 establish the philosophical underpinnings for PDSs

1. A comprehensive mission that is broader in its outreach and scope than the mission of any partner and that furthers the education profession and its responsibility to advance equity within schools and, by potential extension, the broader community

2. A school–university culture committed to the preparation of future educators that embraces their active engagement in the school community

Essentials 1 through 5 establish the philosophical underpinnings

for PDSs

3. Ongoing and reciprocal professional development for all participants guided by need

4. A shared commitment to innovative and reflective practice by all participants

5. Engagement in and public sharing of the results of deliberate investigations of practice by respective participants

Essentials 6 through 9 describe the logistical

requirements of a PDS relationship:

6. An articulation agreement developed by the respective participants delineating the roles and responsibilities of all involved.

7. A structure that allows all participants a forum for ongoing governance, reflection, and collaboration

8. Work by college/university faculty and P–12 faculty in formal roles across institutional settings

9. Dedicated and shared resources and formal rewards and recognition structures

Participant roles in a PDS reflect the work of the PDS

Principal Vice Principal

GuidanceCounselor

Secretary

Nurse

Teacher Teacher Teacher Teacher Teacher Teacher Teacher Teacher Teacher Teacher Teacher Teacher Teacher Teacher Teacher Teacher Teacher Teacher Teacher Teacher Teacher

Chief Instructor(A&B Teams)

ProfessionalTeacher

Teacher

TeachingIntern

ProfessionalTeacher

Special Ed.

Teaching InternSpecial Ed.

UniversitySupervisor

A Team100 Students

Specialist TeachersArts

Media/ComputerPhysical Education

Music

AssociateTeacher

AssociateTeacher

InstructionalAide

InstructionalAide

University

B Team

Emphasis is on shared understanding and commitment to lifelong learning of all participants/stakeholders.

Kansas and NCATE definitions of PDS

NCATE Definition “innovative institutions formed through

partnerships between professional education programs and P-12 schools”

Real schools with distinct characteristics Learning environments where

individuals posses a shared responsibility for candidate and faculty development in the context of meeting P-12 student needs.

Group activity: 1. At your table skim and scan the two documents: Kansas Model

PDS Standards and the NCATE PDS Standards. 2. List the three most salient ideas/concepts from both

documents. Kansas Definition

•Innovative institutions formed through partnerships between professional education training programs and preK-12 schools.•PDS have distinct characteristics.•Learning environments that support the training of preservice teachers, the professional development of PDS and university faculty and committed to improving student achievement.

NCATE and Kansas Standards for Professional Development Schools

Kansas standards developed based on the work of the NCATE Standards. NCATE Standards development by a working group of universities representing a wide range of geographic regions and type of institution. Kansas Sate University was one of the institutions involved in the process.

1. Learning community2. Accountability & quality assurance3. Collaboration4. Diversity and equity5. Structures, resources, and roles

Characteristics of successful PDS collaborations

Mutual trust and respect Mutual self-interest and common

goals Shared decision-making Commitment from top leadership Clear focus Long-term commitment Dynamic nature Information sharing and

communicationRobinson, S. & Darling-Hammond, L. (1994). Professional Development Schools: Schools for Developing a Profession.

The Power of Collaboration

“PDS are organizations that cannot be created by either public schools or universities acting alone. The grow out of and depend upon collaboration for their very existence.”

Robinson, S. & Darling-Hammond, L. (1994). Professional Development Schools: Schools for Developing a Profession.

Citations Darling-Hammond, L., (1994). Professional Development

Schools: Schools for developing a profession. New York: Teachers College Press.

Holmes Group, (1986). Tomorrow’s teachers: A report of the Holmes Group. East Lansing, MI.

Holmes Group, (1990). Tomorrow’s schools: Principles for the design of professional development schools. East Lansing, MI.

Goodlad, J. (1990). Teachers for our nation’s schools. San Francisco: Jossey-Bass, Inc.

Teitel, L. (1992). The impact of professional development school partnerships on the preparation of teachers. Teaching Education 4 (Spring), 77-85.

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