Title: Supported Collaborative Teacher Inquiry
1Supported Collaborative Teacher Inquiry
- David Slavit
- Tamara Holmlund Nelson
- Washington State University
- dslavit_at_wsu.edu
Support for this work has been provided by a
Mathematics Science Partnership grant from the US
Department of Education and by the National
Science Foundation Grant ESI-0554579. The
opinions expressed are solely those of the
authors.
2Defining the Crisis
- Large percentages of Washington students in Grade
4, 7, and 10 do not score a 3 or more on the
WASL. - More than half do.
Washington State Report Card, WA OSPI, 2006
3Defining the Crisis
- NAEP shows Washington is doing favorably vs. rest
of U.S. - It is not true that most U.S. students lack a
basic knowledge of math
The Nations Report Card, National Center for
Education Statistics, 2005
4Defining the Crisis
- TIMMS shows Washington is on par with the rest of
world
Linking The National Assessment of Educational
Progress (NAEP) and The Third International Math
and Science Study (TIMSS) Eighth-Grade Results,
National Center for Education Statistics, 1998
5Defining the Crisis
- Qualities of PD that intensify the effects on
teacher instruction - 1) Ongoing teacher networks or study groups
rather than workshops or conferences - 2) Consistency with teachers goals, other
activities, and materials and policies - 3) Same-subject, grade, or school group
participation
The PD math and science teachers normally
receive 1) Average time span of activity is
less than one week 2) Median number of contact
hours per PD activity is 15 3) Most activities
had no theme or coherence, focus on content, or
active learning opportunities 4) Most activities
had no group participation
Garet , M., Porter , A., Desimone , L., Birman ,
B., Yoon, K.S. (2001). What makes professional
developmentt effective? Results from a national
sample of teachers. American Education Research
Journal , 38(4), 915-945.
6Characteristics of Effective PD
- Have established norms and dispositions that
allow for trust building and risk-taking - Grounded in the work teachers do in support of
student learning goals - Engage teachers in inquiry and reflection
- Are collaborative, supported, and ongoing
- Are meaningfully connected to other school and
district initiatives - Darling-Hammond and McLaughlin (1999), Hawley and
Valli (1999), Little et al. (2003)
7Defining the Crisis
- The majority of teacher PD is curriculum
alignment activity, training on a specific
curriculum or instructional technique, and
content knowledge development - Teachers have little time to inquire about and
reflect on their own instructional practice, or
on their students work -
- The simple fact is that the structures for
ongoing community do not exist in the American
High School (Grossman et al., p. 947).
8Defining the Crisis
- Using TIMMS data, Jim Stigler and Jim Hiebert
argued that there exists a teaching gap between
the U.S. and some other nations - Could it be that there is actually a professional
development gap?
9Some models of PD based on collaborative teacher
inquiry
- Communities of practice
- Professional learning communities (PLCs)
- Teacher teams (vertical teams, horizontal teams)
- Coaching (of groups)
- Lesson study
- Peer observation
- Book study
- Collaborative action research
10PRiSSM - Partnership for Reform in Secondary
Science and Mathematics
- Partnership WSUV, 22 schools in 6 districts, ESD
112, support from ESD 114 - Funding US DOE Title IIB through Washington
State OSPI - Goals 1. Establish a vision of HQLT
- 2. Improve student learning
- 3. Development of PLCs
- 4. Plan for continuous improvement
11PRiSSM Year 1 (June, 2004 August, 2005)
- 45 Teacher Leaders from 6 districts
- Summer academy, August, 2004
- Academy focus on collaborative inquiry
- protocols for LASW
- exploring high quality learning and teaching
- identifying an inquiry focus based on existing
data - learning to be a PLC to facilitate a group
- Cross-disciplinary, cross-grade level PLCs
- Facilitation throughout year
- Further information on year 1 Slavit, David
Nelson, Tamara (2006). Dialogic teacher change
Two cases of supported collaborative inquiry.
Working Papers on Culture, Education and Human
Development, 2(2). http//www.uam.es/otros/ptcedh/
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13PRiSSM Years 23 (Aug, 2005 June, 07)
- 45 original LTs form 35 new PLCs with 100
colleagues - Summer academy for LTs
- LTs lead introductory sessions (2-8 hrs) for
colleagues in each district - PLCs determine when they meet, how often, and
their inquiry focus - Project facilitators continue to work with PLCs
14PRiSSM
- Professional Learning Communities
- Characterized by trust, sharing, participation,
fellowship, reflection, and continuous learning
and improvement - Teacher-initiated questions for inquiry across
math/science and middle/high school - Teachers in the PLC define the scope and focus of
their PD, which emerge from and in support of
their collaborative inquiry - Support of teacher inquiry provided by
facilitators and other PRiSSM staff (including
time) - Support to engage teachers and their inquiry work
in broader educational contexts (e.g., go
school-wide with PLCs, vision up the teachers
ideas)
15PRiSSM Findings General
- Teachers need dedicated time to conduct
collaborative inquiry on teaching and learning - Teachers need technical support for doing inquiry
work - Teacher buy-in requires specific approaches and
techniques teacher-driven inquiry is a key to
buy-in - Teacher collaboration can be enjoyable
- Collaborative teacher inquiry is mentally,
physically, and emotionally taxing - Difficulties and assumptions about measuring
impact on student learning emphasis on
large-scale achievement data - Teacher work does not always immediately mesh
with larger initiatives and contexts but some
schools and districts also adapt to and embrace
the inquiry work of teachers
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17North Evergreen Question Dichotomy
Student Question
Question is Off Topic
Question is On Topic
LEVEL 1 Question
LEVEL 2 Question
Question Does Not Make Sense
Question Makes Sense
Question Has Already Been Covered in Class
LEVEL 3 Question
Question Expands Students Current Knowledge
Makes Connections With Former Concepts
Makes a Bridge to Future Concepts
LEVEL 4 Question
18The Power of Teachers Working With Teachers
(March 2005)
- Erica I think its getting teachers together to
be open enough to discuss their practice and try
to improve their teaching. I think validating how
important it is by creating such great
opportunities to do it rather than just saying
we really think you guys should get together and
have conversations. Like, its important enough
to their goals that they are creating lots of
opportunities for us to do that. - Sam In a very specific way.
- Erica Uh hum.
- Karen Well, it just seems that teachers have
taught in isolation for so long, and just the
whole professional development piece. You know,
we go to workshops or we go to classes but, um,
fortunately I work in a building where we do take
data from our students and, even though our staff
meetings I sometimes dread. But because, we work,
and it is professional development and its based
on student data and its real and its meaningful
to us, its not somebody elses stuff, and yeah
yeah yeah, you know, its our own students that
we work with day in and day out. And we get to
see the growth. I mean, its exciting, that piece
of it, and its very focused.
19The Need for Support
- Teacher collaborative inquiry is possible without
support that is external to the teacher team. - A dedicated, knowledgeable, passionate, and
focused group of teachers can unite through a
common line of inquiry to address important
instructional and curricular concerns. - Teachers can meet outside of the school day in
support of this process. - Teachers can collectively facilitate the
logistics of regular meeting times and the
maintaining of quality, inquiry-focused
interactions. - Teachers can provide each other with a critical
lens necessary to move the inquiry forward. - But these are extremely difficult and demanding
challenges to face, particularly in our current
era of high-stakes teacher accountability.
20Defining Support - Two Key Areas
- Support for the teacher collaborative inquiry
process - Enhancing the interface between the teacher
inquiry and broader educational contexts
21SCI Enhances Teachers PD Time
- First, support can increase the amount of time
available to teachers to enact inquiry. This can
be done in direct ways through the provision of
specific time in the school day and year for
collaborative inquiry, or it can occur with the
presence of a dedicated facilitator responsible
for supporting the logistics and facilitation of
meeting times and schedules, freeing teachers up
for responsibilities closer to the inquiry focus.
22SCI Enhances Teachers PD The Inquiry Process
- Second, individuals who provide intellectual
support can draw on resources to increase teacher
awareness of existing research, suggest and
oversee specific types of data collection and
inquiry approaches, and provide a critical lens
to the work of the teacher team designed to
ensure reflection and critical analysis in the
collaborative inquiry process.
23SCI Enhances Teachers PD Enhanced Vision
- Third, supported collaborative inquiry can
influence teachers abilities to vision,
challenge beliefs, and broaden the critical lens
framing the work.
24SCI Enhances Teachers PD Teacher Community
- Fourth, support can help to establish a
productive set of collaborative norms and inquiry
goals as well as assist in the actual logistics
of the inquiry process.
25SCI Enhances Teachers PD Interface With Larger
Contexts
- Fifth, support can allow teachers to couch their
inquiry in larger initiatives (School Improvement
Plans, District Initiatives, Large-Scale
Assessments), but also construct conduits for
positioning the teachers and teacher inquiry to
impact larger educational contexts.
26Often Overlooked Factors
- Support is needed for the support providers
- Teachers need support for the public-valuing of
their work - Teachers can hold naïve views of data
- Supported collaborative teacher inquiry requires
enormous amounts of time
27WA House Bill 2327, Senate Bill 6023
- Current discussion in Washington to replace WASL
with skills-based, objective test. - Educational problems will not go away until the
way state and federal governments pay for
education is changed. - The real work is not about testing, its about
teaching and its about funding our education
system. If we do not change the focus of our
funding I fear we will be in the same situation
in five years. - WA State Rep. Ross Hunter, Medina
- March 13, 2007, The Columbian, p. A4
28- It is difficult to take the notion of teacher
professionalism seriously when teachers lack the
time and support necessary to act professional.
29- Thank
- You!
- David Slavit
- dslavit_at_wsu.edu