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Pre-PLC Conference Workshop Series: Session 1

Pre-PLC Conference Workshop Series: Session 1. “Making the Case for Professional Learning Communities”. Placer County Office of Education . Renee Regacho-Anaclerio- Assistant Superintendent Educational Services Gerald Williams- Coordinator Professional Development.

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Pre-PLC Conference Workshop Series: Session 1

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  1. Pre-PLC Conference Workshop Series: Session 1 “Making the Case for Professional Learning Communities” Placer County Office of Education Renee Regacho-Anaclerio- Assistant Superintendent Educational Services Gerald Williams- Coordinator Professional Development

  2. Schools Don’t Make a Difference • Schools have little influence on achild’s achievement that is independent of the background and social content of that student. James Coleman, Equality in Educational Opportunity, 1966

  3. Schools Do Make a Difference Effective Schools Research of Ron Edmonds, Larry Lezotte, Wilbur Brookover, Michael Rutter, and others included: all children can learn; and the school controls the factors to assure student mastery of the core curriculum.

  4. Correlates of Effective Schools • Strong Instructional Leadership • Clear and Focused Mission • Safe and Orderly Environment • Climate of High Expectations • Frequent Monitoring of Student Progress • Positive Home/School Relations • Opportunity to Learn & Student Time on Task

  5. Schools DoMake a Difference • An analysis of research conducted over a thirty-five year period demonstrates that schools that are highly effective produce results that almost entirely overcome the effects of student backgrounds. Robert Marzano, What Works in Schools, 2003

  6. Sustained & Substantive School Improvement • The most promising strategy for sustained, substantive school improvement is building the capacity of school personnel to function as a professional learning community. The path to change in the classroom lies within and through professional learning communities. - Milbrey McLaughlin

  7. Secondary School Principals Endorse PLCs • Breaking Ranks II outlines the need for current high schools to engage in the process of change that will ensure success for every student. Its first set of recommendations and tools focuses on the development of professional learning communities. – NASSP, Breaking Ranks II,2004

  8. NSDC Endorses PLCs • Staff development that improves the learning of all students organizes adults into learningcommunities whose goals are aligned with those of the school and district. NSDC. Standards for Staff Development, 2001

  9. National Board for Professional Teaching Standards Endorse PLCs • “In order to take advantage of the broad range of professional knowledge and expertise that resides within the school… Teachers are Members of Learning Communities.” -What Teachers Should Know and Be Able to Do: The Five Core Propositions of the National Board

  10. National Commission on Teaching and America’s Future • “The commission recommends that schools be restructured to become genuine learning organizations forboth students and teachers; organizations that respect learning, honor teaching, and teach for understanding.” - National Commission on Teaching and America’s Future, 1996

  11. NEA KEYS Initiative:A Reflective, Data-Driven Strategy for Continuous School Improvement • Shared understanding and commitment to high goals • Open communication and collaborative problem-solving • Continuous assessment for teaching and learning • Personal and professional learning • Curriculum and instruction

  12. On Common Ground: The Power of Professional Learning Communities (Solution Tree, 2005) • Roland Barth • Rebecca DuFour • Richard DuFour • Robert Eaker • Barbara Eason-Watkins • Michael Fullan • Lawrence Lezotte • Douglas Reeves • Mike Schmoker • Dennis Sparks • Rick Stiggins

  13. 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

  14. What is a Professional Learning Community? PLC Defined: Educators committed to working collaboratively in ongoing processes of collective inquiry and action research in order to achieve better results for the students they serve. PLC’s operate under the assumption that the key to improved learning for students is continuous, job-embedded learning for educators. - DuFour, DuFour, Eaker, 2006

  15. We do PLC’s! The term, “Professional Learning Community” has become so common place and has been used so ambiguously to describe any loose coupling of individuals who share a common interest in education that it is in danger of losing all meaning. DuFour, DuFour, Eaker,many, 2006

  16. Death of a PLC in the Making They opt out for “sorta PLC’s” and the concept begins a slow but inevitable death from constant compromise of its core principles. DuFour, DuFour, Eaker, 2008 One of the most damaging myths about school leadership is that the change process, if managed well, will proceed smoothly. DuFour, DuFour, Eaker, 2008

  17. Common Understanding “Clarity precedes competence” Schmoker 2004 It is difficult enough to bring these concepts to life in a school or district where there is shared understanding of their meaning. It is impossible when there is no common understanding and the terms mean very different things to different people within the same organization.DuFour, DuFour, Eaker, Many, 2006

  18. Characteristics of a Professional Learning Community • Shared Mission (Purpose), Vision (Clear Direction), Values (Collective Commitments), Goals (Targets) • Collaborative teams Focused on Learning • Collective inquiry into “best practice” and “current reality” • Action orientation/experimentation: Learning by Doing • Commitment to continuous improvement • Results orientation

  19. Focus on Learning First Big Idea of PLCs: • We embrace high levels of learning for all students as the reason the organization exists and fundamental responsibility of those who work within it and therefore are willing to examine all practices in light of their impact on learning.

  20. Taught vs. Learn Whereas many schools operate as if their primary purpose is to ensure that all children are taught, PLC’s are dedicated to the idea that their organization exists to ensure that all children learn. DuFour, DuFour, Eaker, Many, 2006

  21. Focus on Learning • Members of a PLC: • Are guided by a clear and compelling vision of what their district/school must become to help all students learn • Make collective commitments that clarify what each member • Use results-oriented goals to mark their progress

  22. If the purpose of school is truly to ensure high levels of learning for all students, then schools will: • Clarify what each student is expected to learn • Monitor each student’s learning on a timely basis • Create systems to ensure students receive additional time and support if they are not learning

  23. What Happens When Kids Don’t Learn? • High expectations for success will be judged not only by the initial staff beliefs and behaviors, but also by the organization’s response when some students do not learn. - Larry Lezotte, 1991

  24. Whatever It Takes: How PLCs Respond When Kids Don’t Learn • In the four schools studied there was no ambiguity and no hedging regarding each school’s fundamental purpose. Staff members embraced the premise that the very reason their school existed was to help all of their students – the flawed, imperfect, boys and girls who come to them each day – acquire knowledge and skills given the current resources available to them. Period! – DuFour, DuFour, Eaker, Karhnek, Solution Tree, 2004

  25. PLCs Create systems to ensure students receive additional time andsupport that are: • Directive • Timely • Systematic

  26. Assess Your School’s Response When Kids Don’t Learn • Are our students assured EXTRA TIME AND SUPPORT for learning? • Is our response TIMELY? How quickly are we able to identify the kids who need extra time and support? • Is our response DIRECTIVE rather than invitational? Are kids invited to put in extra time or does our system ensure they put in the extra time? • Is our response SYSTEMATIC? Do kids receive this intervention according to a school-wide plan rather than at the direction of individual teachers?

  27. A Collaborative Culture With a Focus on Learning for ALL Second Big Idea of PLCs: We can achieve our fundamental purpose of high levels of learning for all students only if we work together. We cultivate a collaborative culture through the development of high performing teams.

  28. Need for a Collaborative Culture Throughout our ten-year study, whenever we found an effective school or an effective department within a school, without exception that school or department has been a part of a collaborative professional learning community. - Milbrey McLaughlin

  29. Need for a Collaborative Culture Improving schools require collaborative cultures… Without collaborative skills and relationships, it is not possible to learn and to continue to learn as much as you need to know to improve. - Michael Fullan

  30. Need for a Collaborative Culture Creating a collaborative culture is the single most important factor for successful school improvement initiatives and the first order of business for those seeking to enhance the effectiveness of their schools. - Eastwood and Lewis

  31. Need for a Collaborative Culture • If schools want to enhance their capacity to boost student learning, they should work on building a collaborative culture…When groups, rather than individuals, are seen as the main units for implementing curriculum, instruction, and assessment, they facilitate development of shared purposes for student learning and collective responsibility to achieve it. - Fred Newmann

  32. Means vs. End Collaboration is a means to an end, not the end itself. DuFour, Dufour, Eaker, Many, 2006 A collaborative culture can be powerful, but unless people are focusing on the right things they may end up being powerfully wrong. Fullan, 2001

  33. Advantages of Teachers Working in Collaborative Teams • Gains in Student Achievement • Higher Quality Solutions to Problems • Increased Confidence Among All Staff • Teachers Able to Support One Another’s Strengths and Accommodate Weaknesses • Ability to Test New Ideas • More Support for New Teachers • Expanded Pool of Ideas, Material, Methods Judith Warren Little

  34. Group IQ • There is such a thing as a group IQ. While a group can be no smarter than the sum total of the knowledge and skills of its members, it can be much “dumber” if its internal workings don’t allow people to share their talents. - Robert Sternberg

  35. 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. • A PLC is composed of collaborative teams whose members work interdependently to achieve common goals- goals linked to the purpose of learning for all- for which members are held mutually accountable. - DuFour, DuFour, Eaker, 2006

  36. 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?

  37. Keys to Effective Teams • Collaboration, with a FOCUS ON LEARNING, is embedded in routine practices • Time for collaboration built in school day and school calendar • Teams focus on key questions • Products of collaboration are made explicit • Team norms guide collaboration

  38. Hand in Hand, We All Learn • Ultimately there are two kinds of schools: learning enriched schools and learning impoverished schools. I have yet to see a school where the learning curves…of the adults were steep upward and those of the students were not. Teachers and students go hand in hand as learners.. or they don’t go at all. -Roland Barth

  39. Third Big Idea of PLCs: Collective Inquiry Into Best Practice and Current Reality • Members of a PLC engage in Collective Inquiry: • Into best practices about teaching and learning • For candid clarification of their current practices • To gain an honest assessment of their students’ current • levels of learning • To build shared knowledge • To make better, more informed decisions • To increase likelihood they will arrive at consensus

  40. Fourth Big Idea of PLCs: Action Orientation: Learning by Doing • Members of PLC’s are action oriented • Value engagement and experience as the most effective teachers • Recognize that learning by doing develops a deeper, and more profound knowledge as well as a greater commitment • Engage in collective inquiry and action research

  41. Learning by Doing Professional Learning Communities recognize that until members of the organization “do” differently, there is no reason to anticipate different results. DuFour, DuFour, Eaker, Many 2006

  42. Change or Comfort? Traditional schools have developed a variety of strategies to resist meaningful action, preferring the comfort of the familiar. DuFour, DuFour, Eaker, Many, 2006

  43. Fifth Big Idea of PLCs: A Commitment to Continuous Improvement PLC’s display a persistent disquiet with the status quo and a constant search for a better way to achieve goals and accomplish the purpose of the organization which is high levels of learning for all students.

  44. Commitment to Continuous Improvement Systematic processes engage members of a PLC in an ongoing cycle of: • Gathering evidence of student learning • Developing strategies and ideas that build on strengths and address weaknesses in learning • Implementing those strategies and ideas • Analyzing the impact of the changes • Applying new knowledge in the next cycle of continuous improvement

  45. Commitment to Continuous Improvement Action Research – where innovation and experimentation are viewed not as tasks to be accomplished but as a way of conducting day-to-day business, forever.

  46. Sixth Big Idea of PLCs: Results Orientation: Focus on Results • We assess our effectiveness on the basis of results rather than intentions. • Individual, teams and schools seek relevant data and information and use that information to promote continuous improvement. • Unless initiatives are subjected to ongoing assessment on the basis of tangible results, they represent random groping in the dark. DuFour, DuFour, Eaker, 2008

  47. Focus on Results Rather Than Activity • Unless you can subject your decision-making to a ruthless and continuous judgment by results, all your zigs and zags will be random lunges in the dark. - James Champy • Without data you are just another person with an opinion.

  48. Focus on Results • Today’s school leaders shift both their own focus and that of the school community from inputs to outcomes and from intentions to results. - Rick DuFour • By the end of the 2008-09 school year all teachers will be trained in and incorporate cooperative learning strategies into their instructional day.

  49. Keys to Effective Teams • Collaboration embedded in routine practices • Time for collaboration built in school day and school calendar • Teams focus on key questions • Products of collaboration are made explicit • Team norms guide collaboration • Teams pursue specific & measurable performance goals

  50. SMART Goals Contribute to a Results-Orientation • Strategic and Specific • Measurable • Attainable • Results-Oriented • Time-Bound - Conzemius & O’Neil

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