Inspired
by our school’s 2012 edcamp, we organized a group of teacher leaders last
spring to create our School Improvement Planning Team.
In
prior years, we offered little in terms of true professional development. Our
PD lacked focus. When it had focus, it didn’t directly relate to instructional
goals. Like many educators, despite 20 years of experience at 4 different schools, I can count one hand the number of quality
PD sessions I’ve participated in. In my third year as an administrator, I’d
done little to create quality PD within our school.
It
was time for a change!
With a dedicated group of a dozen educators who formed our School Improvement Team, we
set out to create professional development that was:
1.
Teacher-led
2.
Student-driven
3.
Research-based
After
an initial brainstorming session, members of the School Improvement Team took
to the classrooms, hallways and break rooms, and asked their peers, “What do we
want to focus on for the 2013-2014 year?”
After
whittling down the list, we decided to narrow our focus to ensuring
instructional engagement for the entire class period (90 minutes).
We
set out to equip teachers with an arsenal of resources, something that each educator
will be able to use immediately. At the very least, we want to move our school
in a unified direction by developing a common vocabulary and clear
expectations. Ultimately, we wanted each of us to challenge ourselves to become
an even better educator.
Our Process
We
broke our faculty into 6 heterogeneous teams. Each team consists of
approximately 15 teachers from a variety of disciplines, varied expertise and,
of course, their own experiences. At least two members from the School
Improvement Team were on each committee. Administrators would rotate between
the six sessions.
With
the ever-changing monthly focus (September’s focus was on beginning and ending
class, November’s was on cooperative learning), we’ve sought volunteer teachers
to serve as facilitators for the monthly sessions. For example, for our
Cooperative Learning sessions, we sought out expert teachers volunteered to
lead this session.
Each
teacher is to take away at least one method from each of the monthly meetings
to use it in his/her classroom. We’ve developed reflection sheets for purpose.
At the beginning of each monthly meeting, teachers will be asked to reflect and
share their experiences.
So
how’s it worked?
The
good
1.
We don’t need to pay high-priced presenters. Our teachers
understand our students, our strengths and our problems and are experts.
2.
It’s grown teacher leadership.
3.
It’s sparked collaboration and communication between teachers.
4.
It’s not the same-old-same-old lecture to the teachers format.
5.
The meetings themselves include solid instructional strategies
that teachers can implement and use in their classes
If
professional development intends to improve ALL teachers’ instruction, we must
tweak our current process. Improvements include:
1.
We must develop, measurable objectives for each meeting. These
objectives must clearly define, “At the end of this session, each teacher will
be able to…”
2.
Our focus must be on instructional strategies that will have the
biggest bang for their buck. PD sessions
must focus on areas that will improve student learning.
3.
We must encourage further teacher reflection and projection.
4.
We must make sure that our PD goes beyond simple conversations.
Talk is cheap. We must make sure it genuinely changes classroom practice.
5.
Individualize and differentiate future PD.
Even
with room for improvement, our current approach to PD has produced exciting
results. The first step in achieving this success: entrusting our teachers to
develop, organize, and lead our professional development meetings.
Looking forward, our dedicated members of the School Improvement Team will continue to push the envelope to ensure our professional development is meaningful and ensures improved teaching and learning.
1 comment:
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