Title: Lead Literacy Teacher Professional Development
1Lead Literacy TeacherProfessional Development
- September 13, 14, 15, 20, 21
Chicago Public Schools Office of Literacy 9 - 12
2LLT PD AgendaDay 1 September 13, 2004
- What is literacy coaching?
- and
- How do I incorporate it into my practice?
3(No Transcript)
4PD Designs
- Action Research
- Case Studies
- Curriculum Development
- Examining Student Work
- Listening to Students/Teachers
- Networks
- Shadowing Students
- Training of Teachers
- Cadres
- Coaching
- Immersion
- Journaling
- Mentoring
- Portfolios
- Study Groups
- Workshops
- Modeling
Task 1 What are your experiences with these
designs? Think-Pair-Share.
- Bertani, A. CRI Literacy Team Workshop, Summer
2002.
5Levels of Impact by Components of Training
Adoped from the research of Bruce Joyce.
6PD AlternativesFive for improving your school.
- Coaching
- Shadowing
- Action Research
- Examining Student Work
- Study Groups
7Becoming an Effective Literacy Coach What Does
It Take?
- The Research by others
- Competent teacher key to improved student
learning - Coaching and collective problem-solving around
specific practice to increase teachers knowledge
and improve practice - Coaching sustained and embedded in the real
practice for students achievement
Lyons, C. A. (2002). Becoming an effective
literacy coach What does it take? In E. Rodgers,
S. Pinnell, Learning from teaching in literacy
education. Portsmouth, NH Heinemann, 93-118.
8Becoming an Effective Literacy Coach What Does
It Take?
- The Research by Lyons et al.
- Learned
- Develop teachers conceptual understandings
- One-to-one coaching, informed and based on
students behaviors, for teacher improvement
(knowledge, analysis, expertise) - Teacher reflection on experiences, teacher and
student, to develop theoretical frame and change
practice - Teacher engagement in reflective process with a
more knowledgeable and experienced coach for
greater shifts in understanding and practice
Lyons, C. A. (2002). Becoming an effective
literacy coach What does it take? In E. Rodgers,
S. Pinnell, Learning from teaching in literacy
education. Portsmouth, NH Heinemann, 93-118.
9Becoming an Effective Literacy Coach What Does
It Take?
- The Research studying literacy coaches
- Coaching of teachers by those having developed
interrelated coaching skills results in student
gains on informal and formal assessments - Learn to collaborate for real, fundamental change
to instruction - Results in collegial inquiry-oriented,
problem-solving collaboration - Effective in various classrooms
- Reflect, analyze, interpret together ? personal
and collective theories of literacy learning ?
student competency in literacy
Lyons, C. A. (2002). Becoming an effective
literacy coach What does it take? In E. Rodgers,
S. Pinnell, Learning from teaching in literacy
education. Portsmouth, NH Heinemann, 93-118.
10Becoming an Effective Literacy Coach What Does
It Take?
- What We Have Learned About Effective Literacy
Coaches (Figure 7-1) - On a half-sheet of paper, write any of the
characteristics that we have not already
mentioned in our LLT training. (one
characteristic per half-sheet) - Using masking tape, place the half-sheet(s) on
the wall.
11Becoming an Effective Literacy Coach What Does
It Take?
- An Analytical Model of Coaching
- Preparing to Coach
- Observing a Lesson
- Reflecting After the Observation
- Coaching for Shifts in Teaching
- Reflecting After Coaching
- Coaching for Self-Analysis and Reflection
12Becoming an Effective Literacy Coach What Does
It Take?
- Task 2 Investigating the Analytical Model for
Coaching - Group yourself based on the number and color of
the dots on your pockets. - Each group will investigate one of the six steps
in the Analytical Model. - 1 red dot Preparing to Coach
- 1 green dot Observing a Lesson
- 1 blue dot Reflecting After the Observation
- 1 yellow dot Coaching for Shifts in Teaching
- 2 red dots Reflecting After Coaching
- 2 green dots Coaching for Self-Analysis and
Reflection
13Becoming an Effective Literacy Coach What Does
It Take?
- Task 2 (cont.)
- As you investigate your step, decide
- What can be applied to our situation in the high
schools as it is described in the chapter? - What could be adapted to high school? How would
you adapt it? - What wont work at the high school level? Why
not? - Determine how you will divide the work among
yourselves. - As a group, prepare a visual representation of
findings in Step 3. - Prepare, as a group, to act as an expert panel on
your step.
14Our Analytical Model for Coaching
- Task 3 How shall we adapt the model for our use?
- As a whole group, we will write our own model.
15Our Analytical Model for Coaching
- Preparing to Coach
- Observing a Lesson
- Reflecting After the Observation
- Coaching for Shifts in Teaching
- Reflecting After Coaching
- Coaching for Self-Analysis and Reflection
16Bibliography
- Cox, K. (2004). Literacy coach roles and goals.
Georgia Department of Education.
http//www.glc.k12.ga.us/pandp/readingfirst/litcoa
ch.htm. - Spotlight on reading coaches. Reading Today,
June/July 2004. Vol 21. Iss. 6. Newark IRA. pg.
1, 2 pgs. - Coaches, controversy, consensus. Reading Today,
Apr/May 2004. Vol 21. Iss. 5. Newark IRA. pg. 1,
2 pgs. - Neufeld, B., Roper, D. (2003). Coaching A
strategy for developing instructional capacity.
Washington, DC Aspen Institute. - The role and qualifications of the reading coach
in the United States A position statement of the
International Reading Association. (2004).
http//www.reading.org/positions/1065.html - Sturtevant, E. The literacy coach a key to
improving teaching and learning in secondary
school. Alliance for Excellent Education.
http//web.all4ed.org/publications/LiteracyCoach.p
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