critical priorities in building a professional learning community illuminating the vision in cusd

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Critical Priorities in Building a Professional Learning Community Illuminating the Vision in CUSD

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Page 1: Critical Priorities in Building a Professional Learning Community Illuminating the Vision in CUSD

Critical Priorities in Building aProfessional Learning

Community

Critical Priorities in Building aProfessional Learning

CommunityIlluminating the Vision in CUSD

Page 2: Critical Priorities in Building a Professional Learning Community Illuminating the Vision in CUSD

“On Common Ground”

• Roland Barth• Doug Reeves• Rebecca & Richard DuFour • Jonathan Saphier• Robert Eaker • Mike Schmoker• Barbara Eason-Watkins • Dennis Sparks• Michael Fullan• Rick Stiggins• Lawrence Lezotte

Page 3: Critical Priorities in Building a Professional Learning Community Illuminating the Vision in CUSD

“On Common Ground”

“If there is anything that the research community agrees on, it is this: The right kind of continuous, structured teacher collaboration improves the quality of teaching and pays big, often immediate, dividends in student learning and professional morale in virtually any setting. Our experience with schools across the nation bears this out unequivocally.”

• Mike Schmoker

Page 4: Critical Priorities in Building a Professional Learning Community Illuminating the Vision in CUSD

A Simple Concept - Schmoker

• It starts with a group of teachers who – meet regularly as a team to identify

essential and valued student learning, – develop common formative

assessments, – analyze current levels of achievement, – set achievement goals, – share strategies, and then – create lessons to improve upon those

levels.

Page 5: Critical Priorities in Building a Professional Learning Community Illuminating the Vision in CUSD

A Simple Concept - Schmoker

• Picture these teams of teachers – implementing these new

lessons, – continuously assessing their

results, and then – adjusting their lessons in light of

those results.

Page 6: Critical Priorities in Building a Professional Learning Community Illuminating the Vision in CUSD

A Simple Concept - Schmoker

• Importantly, there must be an expectation that this collaborative effort will produce ongoing improvement and gains in achievement.

Page 7: Critical Priorities in Building a Professional Learning Community Illuminating the Vision in CUSD

Addition by Subtraction

The challenge of becoming a PLC demands more than adopting new programs and practices. We must also demonstrate the discipline to discontinue much of what we have done traditionally.

Page 8: Critical Priorities in Building a Professional Learning Community Illuminating the Vision in CUSD

The Need to Stop Doing

Most of us have an ever-expanding “to do” list, trying to build momentum by doing, doing, doing – and doing more. And it rarely works. Those who built “good-to-great” organizations, however, made as much use of “stop doing” lists as “to do” lists. They had the discipline to stop doing all the extraneous junk.

• Jim Collins

Page 9: Critical Priorities in Building a Professional Learning Community Illuminating the Vision in CUSD

A Powerful Guiding Principle

Great organizations simplify a complex world into a single organizing idea or guiding principle. This guiding principle makes the complex simple, helps focus the attention and energy of the organization on the essentials, and becomes the frame of reference for all decisions.

• Jim Collins

Page 10: Critical Priorities in Building a Professional Learning Community Illuminating the Vision in CUSD

The First (and Biggest) “BIG IDEA” of a PLC

The guiding principle of a PLC is that the purpose of the school is to ensure high levels of learning for all students.

Page 11: Critical Priorities in Building a Professional Learning Community Illuminating the Vision in CUSD

Making the Complex Simple

• If we could truly establish high levels of learning for all students as the guiding principle of the school….

• And if we were willing to honestly confront the brutal facts of the current reality in our school….

• The right decisions about what to do and what to stop doing often become evident.

Page 12: Critical Priorities in Building a Professional Learning Community Illuminating the Vision in CUSD

“To Do” “Stop Doing”

– Clarify what each student must learn by course, grade level, and unit of instruction by engaging all staff in an ongoing process to build shared knowledge of “essential learnings.”

– Stop teaching much of what we are teaching.

– Stop pretending that the work of individual teachers is directed by state standards and/or district curriculum guides. Recognize that the “intended” curriculum and the “implemented” curriculum are likely to be very different.

Page 13: Critical Priorities in Building a Professional Learning Community Illuminating the Vision in CUSD

Why Engage Teachers in the Discussion of Essential Learnings?

• The most wonderfully designed curriculum on the planet will have no impact unless it is taught!

• Professional study of and dialogue about essential learnings increases the likelihood that essential curriculum will actually be taught.

Page 14: Critical Priorities in Building a Professional Learning Community Illuminating the Vision in CUSD

“To Do” “Stop Doing”

• Create systems to monitor each student’s attainment of the essential learnings on a timely, ongoing basis through frequent, common formative assessments.

• Stop focusing on educational “inputs” (curriculum guides, textbooks, schedules, etc.) and focus instead on student outcomes – evidence of student achievement.

• Stop giving priority to the intended curriculum and begin to make the “attained” curriculum the priority.

Page 15: Critical Priorities in Building a Professional Learning Community Illuminating the Vision in CUSD

“To Do” “Stop Doing”

Create systems to ensure students receive additional time and support when they experience difficulty in mastering essential learnings.

Stop leaving it up to each teacher to decide how to respond when students don’t learn.

Page 16: Critical Priorities in Building a Professional Learning Community Illuminating the Vision in CUSD

Assess Your Collective Response to Kids Who Are Not Learning

• Is it TIMELY? How quickly are we able to identify the kids who need extra time and support? Is our focus prompt intervention rather than remediation?

• Is it DIRECTIVE rather than invitational? Are kids invited to put in extra time or does the system ensure they put in extra time?

• Is it SYSTEMATIC? Do kids receive this intervention according to a schoolwide plan rather than at the discretion of individual teachers?

Page 17: Critical Priorities in Building a Professional Learning Community Illuminating the Vision in CUSD

The Second “BIG IDEA” of the PLC

We can achieve our fundamental purpose of high levels of learning for all students only if we work together. We cultivate this collaborative culture through the development of high performing teams.

Page 18: Critical Priorities in Building a Professional Learning Community Illuminating the Vision in CUSD

“To Do” “Stop Doing”

• Create systems and procedures to develop the collective capacity of staff to work together interdependently as members of collaborative teams.

• Stop allowing teachers to work in isolation.

• Stop settling for “collaboration lite.”

Page 19: Critical Priorities in Building a Professional Learning Community Illuminating the Vision in CUSD

What Is Collaboration?

A systematic process in which we work together interdependently to analyze and impact professional practice in order to improve our individual and collective results.

Page 20: Critical Priorities in Building a Professional Learning Community Illuminating the Vision in CUSD

Critical Corollary Questions: If We Believe All Kids Can Learn:

• What is it we expect them to learn?

• How will we know when they have learned it?

• How will we respond when they don’t learn?

• How will we respond when they already know it?

Page 21: Critical Priorities in Building a Professional Learning Community Illuminating the Vision in CUSD

Keys to Effective Teams

• Collaboration embedded in routine practices.

• Time for collaboration built into the school day and school calendar.

• Teams focus on key questions.• Products of collaboration are made

explicit.• Team norms guide collaboration.• Teams pursue specific and

measurable performance goals.

Page 22: Critical Priorities in Building a Professional Learning Community Illuminating the Vision in CUSD

What Evidence Do We Have that Our Team Collaboration…

• Focuses on the critical questions of learning?

• Leads to change in classroom practice?

• Increases the team’s ability to achieve its goals?

• Helps individual teachers, the team at large, and the school do a better job of helping all students learn at high levels?

Page 23: Critical Priorities in Building a Professional Learning Community Illuminating the Vision in CUSD

The Learning Leader

PLCs will shift the focus of their school-improvement efforts from the supervision and evaluation of individual teachers to an emphasis on building the capacity of teams of teachers to take responsibility for their own learning.

Page 24: Critical Priorities in Building a Professional Learning Community Illuminating the Vision in CUSD

Individual Growth Does Not Ensure Organizational Growth

Developing the skills and knowledge of individual teachers is important, but insufficient. Effective leaders will focus on developing the culture and the capacity of the organization.

Page 25: Critical Priorities in Building a Professional Learning Community Illuminating the Vision in CUSD

A Third “BIG IDEA” of the PLC Concept

We assess our individual and collective effectiveness in helping all students learn at high levels on the basis of results rather than activity. We eagerly seek out multiple indicators of student achievement and use that information to promote continuous improvement.

Page 26: Critical Priorities in Building a Professional Learning Community Illuminating the Vision in CUSD

Interpreting Data

• Student Performance on the High-Stakes State Math Test:- Mean 178- Median 177- Mode 180

• Use the data presented above to answer the following question: To what extent is this school helping all students achieve at high levels in math?

Page 27: Critical Priorities in Building a Professional Learning Community Illuminating the Vision in CUSD

The DRIP SyndromeSchools typically suffer from the DRIP syndrome – Data Rich, Information Poor. Data alone will not inform professional practice. Data can become a catalyst for improvement only when we have a basis of comparison.

Page 28: Critical Priorities in Building a Professional Learning Community Illuminating the Vision in CUSD

Main Idea/Detail

Student #123456789

101112131415

Average Score# Proficient

Homeroom Class #4707080801004070508070505010010010074%

7 (47%)

Page 29: Critical Priorities in Building a Professional Learning Community Illuminating the Vision in CUSD

Main Idea/Detail

Student Class #1 Class #2 Class #3 Class #4 1 50 90 100 70 2 60 90 100 70 3 70 90 80 80 4 92 90 100 80 5 90 90 100 100 6 100 100 92 40 7 90 100 80 70 8 90 83 83 50 9 83 100 100 80

10 60 92 90 70 11 92 100 90 50 12 83 100 100 50 13 92 100 80 100 14 90 90 80 100 15 100 100 90 100 16 80 100 80 17 90 92 18 100

Average Score 84% 95% 90% 74%

# Proficient 14 17 16 7 % Proficient 78% 100% 100% 47%

Student Class #1 Class #2 Class #3 Class #4 1 50 90 100 70 2 60 90 100 70 3 70 90 80 80 4 92 90 100 80 5 90 90 100 100 6 100 100 92 40 7 90 100 80 70 8 90 83 83 50 9 83 100 100 80

10 60 92 90 70 11 92 100 90 50 12 83 100 100 50 13 92 100 80 100 14 90 90 80 100 15 100 100 90 100 16 80 100 80 17 90 92 18 100

Average Score 84% 95% 90% 74%

# Proficient 14 17 16 7 % Proficient 78% 100% 100% 47%

Page 30: Critical Priorities in Building a Professional Learning Community Illuminating the Vision in CUSD

To Inform and Impact Professional Practice, Ensure All Teachers Receive:

Timely and regular information on the achievement of their students

– In meeting an agreed-upon standard.

– On a valid assessment.

– In comparison to others.

Page 31: Critical Priorities in Building a Professional Learning Community Illuminating the Vision in CUSD

Sharing Data: Beginning of Community

Collecting data is only the first step toward wisdom, but sharing data is the first step toward community.

Henry Louis Gates, Jr.

Page 32: Critical Priorities in Building a Professional Learning Community Illuminating the Vision in CUSD

Insist on Common AssessmentsTeachers of the same course or grade level should have absolute common agreement on what they expect all their students to know and be able to do. Therefore, they should administer common, collaboratively-scored assessments at least once each quarter. The classroom activities leading up to those assessments might differ. The need to administer the same assessment should not differ.

Doug Reeves

Page 33: Critical Priorities in Building a Professional Learning Community Illuminating the Vision in CUSD

Assessment for Learning as the Catalyst for School Improvement

Assessment for learning, when done well, is one of the most powerful, high-leverage strategies for improving student learning that we know of. Educators collectively become more skilled and focused at assessing, disaggregating, and using student achievement as a tool for ongoing improvement.

Michael Fullan

Page 34: Critical Priorities in Building a Professional Learning Community Illuminating the Vision in CUSD

Creating the Foundation for Results

The combination of three concepts constitutes the foundation for results: meaningful teamwork; clear, measurable goals; and the regular collection and analysis of performance data…good faith efforts to establish goals and then to collectively and regularly monitor and adjust actions toward them produce results, and results goad, guide, and motivate groups and individuals.

Mike Schmoker

Page 35: Critical Priorities in Building a Professional Learning Community Illuminating the Vision in CUSD

“To Do” “Stop Doing”

• Sustain the PLC initiative by appealing directly to the heart - to the fundamental human longings.

• Stop using fear and test scores as the primary motivators for school improvement.

Page 36: Critical Priorities in Building a Professional Learning Community Illuminating the Vision in CUSD

If Your Goal Is Improved Test Scores…

• Increase the drop-out rate.• Assign more students to special education.• Eliminate electives to devote more time to

tested areas.• Redraw attendance boundaries to send high-

performing students to at-risk schools.• Warehouse low-performing students in one

school.• Identify kids “on the bubble.” Focus on them

and ignore the students too far behind and those who already meet standards.

• Doug Reeves

Page 37: Critical Priorities in Building a Professional Learning Community Illuminating the Vision in CUSD

What is our vision of a PLC?

• The Instructional Leader:– Expects that all teachers will be a part of a team– Keeps the focus on student learning in all

activities—professional development, evaluations/observations, walkthroughs

– Monitors teams for their progress toward the goals and action plans they designed to improve achievement

– Facilitates embedded professional development to address the goal areas in a sustained fashion over time, and supports the implementation of new learning

Page 38: Critical Priorities in Building a Professional Learning Community Illuminating the Vision in CUSD

What is our vision of a PLC?

• Teachers are held accountable to work within teams that center their focus on:– Clarifying the content and sequence of the

curriculum– Monitoring learning of all students in the areas

deemed priority for the course/grade level using common assessments

• Designed or selected by teams• Defined by collective agreement of “proficiency”

– Using Information/Data gained from a variety of sources to adjust instruction and improvement strategies

Page 39: Critical Priorities in Building a Professional Learning Community Illuminating the Vision in CUSD

An unexamined life is not worth

living…- Socrates

Unexamined efforts are not worth

doing…

Page 40: Critical Priorities in Building a Professional Learning Community Illuminating the Vision in CUSD

Where did your school

begin?

Where did your school

begin?

Where is your school

now?

Where is your school

now?

What are your next

steps?

What are your next

steps?

Page 41: Critical Priorities in Building a Professional Learning Community Illuminating the Vision in CUSD

Fundamental Human Longings

• To be successful (achievement)

• To belong (connection)

• To make a difference (significance)