Title: The Professional Learning Communities Journey: from Beginning to'''
1The Professional Learning Communities Journey
from Beginning to...
- Green River Regional Educational Cooperative
- Coaching Academy
- Session One
- January 20 - 21, 2009
- Tim Brown
- Solution Tree Associate
- browncharl2_at_gmail.com
2Coaches Academy
- Purpose
- To support the implementation of Professional
Learning Communities by providing educational
leaders with the knowledge, tools, and skills to
effectively coach others in their schools
throughout the change process.
3TODAYS AGENDA
- Introductions
- Understanding the intent of the coaching academy
- Identification of the role of the coach
- Developing an understanding of the Professional
Learning Community model - Reflections and Planning
-
4Guiding Questions
- Why are we here?
- What resources are available?
- What is my role in this process?
- What is a Professional Learning Community?
- What have we learned and what are we going to do
about it?
5Who Am I???
- Tim Brown
- Retired from public education after 28 years
- Director for the Professional Learning
Communities Project at the Heart of Missouri
Regional Professional Development Center in
Columbia, Missouri - Solution Tree Associate
- Favorite quote Be the change you want to see in
the world. Mahatma Ghandi
6Focus on What We Can Change
- LOOK AT MOMENT TO MOMENT OPPORTUNITIES
- MOTIVATE
- INSPIRE
- CHALLENGE
- PROVIDE MODELS
- ENCOURAGE
- CELEBRATE ACCOMPLISHMENTS
- HAVE HIGH EXPECTATIONS BACKED BY ACTIONS
7Norms
- Solo Learning
- Small Group Learning
- Large Group Learning
What do you need from others in the room to
enhance your learning?
Handout page 3
8- What are my learning goals for my participation
in PLC Coaching? - Read the quotes on page 4
- Select the quote that most appeals to you
- Share your thoughts about the quote with your
teammates - Reflect on your learning goals for this academy
9A Learning Community is Characterized by
- Shared Mission, Vision, Values and Goals
- Collaborative teams
- Collective inquiry
- Action orientation / experimentation
- Commitment to continuous improvement
- Results orientation
DuFour and Eaker, Professional Learning
Communities at Work, 1998
Handout
10PLC Attributes Jigsaw
- Read your assigned attribute(s)
- Share your attribute with your table group.
- In what ways are the essential attributes of a
PLC evident in your school/district? - What are examples of the attributes you can share
and celebrate?
Handout Page 5
11 The most promising strategy for sustained,
substantive school improvement is building the
capacity of school personnel to function as a
professional learning community. Milbrey
McLaughlin
12Creating a Collaborative Culture is a journey...
13It begins with a shared understanding of where
you want to go, together,
14and is fueled by a continuous process of
building the skill and the will to share
responsibility for the success of all learners.
15Why would we want to create a professional
learning community?
16- About 30 percent of high school students drop out
before graduation - 1 million students fail to graduate from high
school every year. - One high school student drops out every nine
seconds - (Lehr, Johnson, Bremer, Cosio, Thompson,
2004)
17- High School drop outs are 72 more likely to be
unemployed and they will earn 27 less than high
school graduates. - Dropouts make up nearly half the heads of
households on welfare. - Male and female students with low academic
achievement are twice as likely to become parents
by their senior year of high school compared to
students with high academic achievement.
18- Studies show that each class of high school
dropouts costs the nation more than 200 billion
in lost wages and tax revenues, as well as
spending for social support programs. - The U.S. death rate for those with fewer than 12
years of education is 2.5 times higher than the
rate of those with 13 or more years of education.
- Dropouts make up nearly half the prison
population. - (Alliance for Excellent Education, 2003b)
19What can we do?
- A study in Philadelphia found that a sixth-grade
student having one of the following risk factors
has a 10 chance of graduating from high school
on time, and a 20 chance of graduating one year
late. - Attendance below 80
- Poor behavior
- Failing math grade
- Failing English grade
- (Philadelphia Education Fund, 2005)
20What can we do?
- A 2006 study by Civic Enterprises dropouts shared
their insights on why they left school before
graduation. They cited a number of factors that
would have kept them in school - enhancing the connection between school and work
- providing real-world learning experiences
- making school more relevant and engaging
- providing more help to struggling students.
21What can we do?
- We must help youth to overcome their sense of
disconnectedness. We have a responsibility to
step in and end the "slow disengagement" that
leads 16-year-olds to opt out of their basic
right to a great public school. - Reg Weaver
- NEAtoday, November 2006
22Why would we want to create a professional
learning community?
23Why would we want to create a professional
learning community?
24The rules changed. Where once we were asked to
sort and select, now we are asked to guarantee
all.
Todays Expectations
- Rick Stiggins, Assessment Trainers Institute
25We must change from a model that picks winners
to one that will create winners.Harold
Hodgkinson, 1987Michigan The State and Its
Educational System
26The Normal Distribution
Standard Deviations
27Yesterdays Desired Growth
28Todays Desired Growth
29Why would we want to create a professional
learning community?
30 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
31Twelve Norms of a Healthy School Culture
- Collegiality
- Experimentation
- High Expectations
- Trust and Confidence
- Tangible Support
- Teaching to the Knowledge Base
- Appreciation and Recognition
- Caring, Celebration and Humor
- Involvement in Decision-making
- Protection of Whats Important
- Traditions
- Honest and Open Communication
32Random Acts of Improvement
33PLC Framework
Aligned Acts of Improvement
34Is a Professional Learning Community...
A prescription or a recipe?
NO !
A new program?
NO !
35Why would we want to create a professional
learning community?
36Fact
- Teachers Matter
- Regardless of the research basis, it is clear
that effective teachers have a profound impact on
student achievement and ineffective teachers do
not. In fact, ineffective teachers might actually
impede the learning of their students.
37Fundamental Assumptions
- We can make a difference Our schools can be
more effective - People improvement is the key to school
improvement - Significant school improvement will impact
teaching and learning
DuFour DuFour Eaker, 2003
38Is Your School Ready for Professional Learning
Communities? Are you ready to lead?What will
it mean for you?
39The Four Hats of School Leadership
Presenting
Coaching
Consulting
Facilitating
Handout
40Handout
- Read the handout on the Four Hats of Leadership
- With your team discuss how these hats relate to
your role as a member of the leadership team - For each Hat identify some of the actions you
would take as a coach - Identify some venues or opportunities where you
see these actions can happen - Be prepared to share you thoughts and suggestions
with others in the room
41(No Transcript)
42With your colleagues
Handout
43 Check out the tools of your trade!
44What is a Professional Learning Community?
- TERMS travel easily,
- but the meaning of the underlying concepts
- do not.
- Michael Fullan, 2005
?
45What is a Professional Learning Community?
- Define each term
- Share your understanding of the three terms with
a partner - Write your definition of a Professional Learning
Community - Be prepared to share with the rest of the group
- Therefore, a professional learning community is
handout
46Making the Complex, Simple
- The professional learning community model
requires the school staff to focus on learning
rather than teaching, work collaboratively on
matters related to learning, and hold itself
accountable for the kind of results that fuel
continual improvement.
47Three Big Ideas
- Set Priorities
- Focus on learning rather than teaching
- Best Practices
- Work collaboratively
- People, Process, Tasks
- Hold ourselves accountable for results
- Data Driven
- SMART Goals
- Pyramid of Interventions
48Considering Culture as you begin
- Assumptions
- Beliefs
- Expectations
- Habits
- The norms or the way we think and act.
49CHARACTERISTIC 1 Shared Mission, Vision,
Values and Goals
- At the heart of a schools culture are its
mission and purpose the focus of what people
do. Although not easy to define, mission and
purpose instill the intangible forces that
motivate teachers to teach, school leaders to
lead, children to learn, and parents to have
confidence in their school. Terry Deal and
Kent Peterson
50Learning By Doing - Case Study
- Individually read the case study of principal
Cynthia Dions efforts to create a new mission
for her new school. - Choose a recorder for your group.
- At your tables discuss the reflection question
that is offered at the end of the case study. - Be ready to share with others in the room
- Consider
- Processes for sharing knowledge
- Moving the dialogue to action
- Checking current reality
- Posing the right questions
- Emotions of the leader
51Biggest Process Struggle
- Failure to build shared knowledge
- Assess current reality
- Attend training and awareness institutes
- Listen to testimonials from teachers who are part
of a PLC - Go on a site visit
- Read articles and books
- Allthingsplc.info
-
52Confused writing a mission with living a mission
- Describe in vivid detail the school they hoped to
create. - Effective Schools correlates
- Describe specific practices
- Discuss specific commitments they would make
- Shared her commitments with the staff.
- Identify indicators to monitor to assess
progress. - Establish team goals
- Celebrate team goals
53Clarity of Purpose
- Mission asks Why? Why do we exist?
- Vision asks What? What do we want to become?
- Values and Collective Commitments asks How? How
must we behave to create the school that will
achieve our purpose? - Goals ask How? How will we know all of this is
making a difference?
54Shared Mission, Vision, Values,
GoalsCommunicating the Message
- We build significance through the use of many
expressive and symbolic forms rituals,
ceremonies, icons, music, and stories. Humans
have always created and used symbols as a
foundation for meaning. Organizations without a
rich symbolic life become empty and sterile. The
magic of special occasions is vital in building
significance into collective life. - (Bolman and Deal, 1995)
55CommunicatingBeliefs Expectations - Vision
- What do I want my classroom to look like for
students and for me? - To achieve this I will
- How do I want my students to interact with each
other and with me? - To achieve this I will
- How do I want my students to approach learning?
- To achieve this I will
56Mission Why do we exist?What is your BHAG for
your school?
- BIG HAIRY AUDACIOUS GOAL
-
- A huge and daunting goal like a big mountain
to climb. -
- It is clear, compelling, and people get it
right way. -
- It serves as a unifying focal point of effort,
galvanizing people and creating team spirit as
people strive toward a finish line. -
- Like the 1960s NASA moon mission, a BHAG
captures the imagination and grabs people in the
gut.
Jim Collins Good To Great
57To Be
- World Famous
- The Best School In Town
- An Accelerated Academy
- The Best Science Department in the State
- Dedicated to Student Success
58- We believe that all students can and must learn
at relatively high levels of achievement. - It is our job to create an environment in our
classrooms that results in this high level of
performance. - We are confident that with our support and help,
students can master challenging academic
material, and we expect them to do so. - We are prepared to work collaboratively with
colleagues, students, and parents to achieve this
growth. - DuFour,
DuFour, Eaker
59Collective Commitments
- Individually decide on a commitment you can make
for each strand of the vision statement that
would further this statement. - Write it down on a sticky note.
- Post your sticky notes on our school vision
statement. - Read the commitments of the staff.
- Make a master list of the collective commitments
of the staff. - Revisit it and celebrate it at the end of the
- school year.
60Perlatas Collective Commitments
- We will be optimistic and enthusiastic
- We will respect all staff, students and their
families - We will include the parents and the community in
the learning process - We will have high expectations for all students
and ourselves - We will accept responsibility for student
learning and developing each students potential - We will identify the essential outcomes, develop
a common pacing guide and teach the same
standards at our grade level at the same time
Handout
61Perlatas Collective Commitments
- We will work collaboratively in developing
instructional strategies and designing common
assessments - We will monitor the achievement of our individual
students and use the results to guide our
processes of continuous improvement - We will model everything we expect from our
students including life-long learning, behaviors
and respect
Handout
62The Art and Science of Teaching Robert J.
MarzanoWhat will we do to
- Establish and communicate learning goals, track
student progress, and celebrate success? - Help students effectively interact with new
knowledge? - Help students practice and deepen their
understanding of new knowledge - Help students generate and test hypothesis about
new knowledge?
Handout
63What will we do to
- Engage students?
- Recognize and acknowledge adherence and lack of
adherence to classroom rules and procedures? - Establish and maintain effective relationships
with students? - Communicate high expectations for all students?
- Develop effective lessons organized into a
cohesive unit?
64What Happens Next?
- The topic is back on the table
- Find examples of the vision in actionand tell
the stories - Listen
- Make it part of our conversation
65REMEMBER MISSION, VISION and VALUES and GOALS
ARE NOT ONE TIME THINGS
- Begins a necessary conversation
- Reinvigorates workers
- Inspires innovation and service
- Renews commitment
66You are not an accident!!!Communication Audit
- What do we plan for?
- What do we monitor?
- What do we model?
- What questions do we ask?
- How do we allocate time?
- What do we celebrate?
- What are we willing to confront?
67Focus on the LearningTeam Implications
68Mission, Vision, Values and Goals Rubric
- Read through each element on the rubric.
- Underline those things that are currently
happening in your school - Discuss to see where you would rank your school
on the rubric - What evidence do you have?
- Plan one thing to further your school on the
rubric?
handout
69Coachs Reflections
- What makes sense to you?
- What can you use back in your building?
- What do you need to make it work?
handout
70What is the business of our business? The answer
to this question is the first step in setting
priorities.
71What is the one thing?
- We make learning rather than teaching the
fundamental purpose - of our school.
72TYPES of SCHOOLS
- Learning is based upon the students ability.
- Learning takes place if the student takes
advantage of the opportunities to learn within
the school. - All students can learn something, and we will
create a warm pleasant environment for them to
learn. - All students can learn and we will do whatever
it takes to help students learn and achieve the
agreed upon curriculum/ standards.
Handout
73QUESTIONS to CONSIDER
- Which school did you attend?
- In which school do you currently work?
- In which school do you want to work?
- Which school do you want your kids to attend?
74Beginning the JourneyReflection on the first Big
IdeaWhat does it mean to have a focus on
learning rather than teaching?
handout
- What would be the evidence?
- What practices would we be doing?
75Focus on Learning Topics
- Grading practices
- Homework practices
- Intervention programs
- Tasks of teams
- Curriculum practices
- Assessment practices
- Instructional practices
76Curriculum Practices
- Essential learning outcomes and learning targets
for every course at every grade level - Develop pacing guides
- Teach at the same pace as much as possible
- Stop teaching non-curriculum units and materials
- Inform students
- Inform parents
- Inform each other
77Assessment Practices
- Formative and summative
- Clear expectations for students
- Frequent progress monitoring
- Use data to examine best practices and drive
instruction - Include variety and choice
- Project based
Oxford Academy and Central School
District Oxford, NY August, 2008
78Instructional Practices
- Varied approachesaddress a variety of learning
styles and abilities - Reflecting on and sharing best practices
- Academic choice
- Communicate with colleagues about student
learning - Cooperative learning
- Use of all levels of Blooms Taxonomy
- Self-directed learning
- Vocabulary development
- Student sharing
- Re-teaching
Oxford Academy and Central School
District Oxford, NY August, 2008
79Grading Practices
- Use of rubrics
- Instant results
- Portfolio assessment
- Clear constructive feedback for students
- Grading based on improvement/mastery
- Based on essential outcomes
Oxford Academy and Central School
District Oxford, NY August, 2008
80Homework Practices
- Supportive environment for student success
- Extension of time and support when needed
- Meaningful
- Relevant to class/extension of class
- Break work into manageable pieces
- Varied according to ability
- Relevant to learning target
- Opportunity to reflect on what has been learned
- Opportunity to apply learned skills
- Minimal weight in the overall averagehomework is
practice
Oxford Academy and Central School
District Oxford, NY August, 2008
81Intervention Programs
- Based on student needs
- Documented
- Use assessment data to drive and assess
intervention - Frequent
- Timely
- Flexible
- Effective use of referral system
Oxford Academy and Central School
District Oxford, NY August, 2008
82What makes sense and what are some questions?
QUESTIONS
QUESTIONS
QUESTIONS
MAKES SENSE
TURN AND TALK
Handout page 22
83Feedback
Plus
Delta
84The Professional Learning Communities Journey
from Beginning to...
- Green River Regional Educational Cooperative
- Coaching Academy
- Session One
- January 20 21, 2009
- Tim Brown
- Solution Tree Associate
- browncharl2_at_gmail.com
85What lies behind us and what lies ahead of us are
insignificant compared to what lies within
us. Oliver Wendell Holmes
86Goals for the Day
- Building the Collaborative Culture of a
Professional Learning Community - Defining a Collaborative Culture
- Understanding Collaborative Teams
- Defining Collective Responsibility
87Guiding Questions
- What has come clear since last we met?
- What is collaboration and what makes it different
from teams? - How should we organize teams?
- How do we find time for teams?
- How can we provide the parameters and framework
to ensure teams use their collaborative time in
ways that have a positive impact on student
learning? - What have we learned and what are we going to do
about it?
88What has become clear to you since last we met? -
Oliver Wendell Holmes
- I thought about
- I have some questions about.
- I want to expand and explore some ideas
89A Learning Community is Characterized by
- Shared Mission, Vision, Values and Goals
- Collaborative teams
- Collective inquiry
- Action orientation / experimentation
- Commitment to continuous improvement
- Results orientation
DuFour and Eaker, Professional Learning
Communities at Work, 1998
90PLC BIG Idea 2 Collaborative Culture
91Big Idea Number TwoCollaborative
Teams People.. Process Tasks
92Structures for Collaborative Teams
- People
- Know people
- Align people to tasks
- Process
- Efficient and Effective
- Tasks
- Centered on Learning
- Anne Conzemius and Jan
ONeill THE HANDBOOK FOR SMART SCHOOL TEAMS
93What 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. DuFour, Eaker,
DuFour
94Learning by Doing
Handout page 31-32
- Consider the scenario about collaboration
- Answer the reflection question at the end of the
scenario - Be prepared to share your thoughts with other in
the room. - Why did Principal McDonalds efforts to build a
collaborative culture in his school go awry? - What steps might he take to improve upon the
situations
95Simply being collaborative does not make change
- Members of a Learning Community must call on each
others knowledge, skills, and aspirations to
address their goal.
96Great Teams What have they got?
- Think about great teams you have been on.
- What were some of the attributes that created a
great team experience? - Discuss how those same attributes can be part of
what we do in our collaborative teams at school.
97Attributes of Effective Teams
- Trust
- Deal with conflict as a team
- Build shared knowledge and make commitments
- Members hold themselves accountable to each other
and the goals of the team - Support each other to reach team goals
98Think about it!
- Successful schools are places where teams of
teachers meet regularly to focus on student work
through assessment and change their instructional
practice accordingly to get better results. - Michael Fullan, 2000
99What does it mean to collaborate?
100Are we a group or a team?
101What made the difference?
102Collaborative Teams
- Meaningful experience
- A sense of being part of something larger than
the self - A sense of being connected
- A sense of being generative
Peter Senge, The Fifth Discipline (1990)
103Collaboration, Cooperation or Coordination
- With a small group . . .
- Review the explanations for collaboration,
cooperation and coordination - How do these terms apply to your everyday
professional interaction?
104Coachs Reflections
- What makes sense to you?
- What can you use back in your building?
- What do you need to make it work?
handout
105- The best place to succeed is where you are with
what youve got. - --Charles M. Schwab
106Five Dysfunctions of TeamsPatrick Lencioni
- Absence of Trust
- Fear of Conflict
- Lack of Commitment
- Avoidance of Accountability
- Inattention to Results
107Patrick Lencioni The Five Dysfunctions of a Team
INATTENTION TO RESULTS
AVOIDANCE OF ACCOUNTABILITY
LACK OF COMMITMENT
FEAR OF CONFLICT
ABSENCE OF TRUST
108Dysfunction Evidence
Absence of Trust Invulnerability Fear of
Conflict Artificial Harmony Lack of
Commitment Ambiguity Avoidance of
Accountability Low Standards Inattention to
Results Status and Ego
Handout pg 131
109Compass Points Activity
Handout
110- What are the strengths of your style? (4
adjectives) -
- What are the limitations of your style? (4
adjectives) -
- What style do you find the most difficult to work
with? -
- What do other people need to know about you so
that we can work together more effectively?
111Collaborative Culture
- Educators who are building a professional
learning community recognize that they must work
together to achieve their collective purpose of
learning for all. Therefore, they create
structures to promote a collaborative culture. - Richard DuFour
- ON COMMON GROUND
112 Norms help establish
TRUSTThe standards of behaviors by which we
agree to operate while we are in this group.
113Team Norms
- Creating Team Norms
- Give each team member 5-7 Post-It note.
- Give team members 5 minutes to identify norms and
write them on the Post-It notes. - Put all post it notes out in the middle of a
table. - Give the team 15 minutes to group the Post-Its in
silence. - Give the team 20 minutes to discuss groupings and
prioritize norms. - Write prioritized norms on chart paper to post
during team members. - These may be decorated and laminated.
114NORMS for LEARNING COLLABORATION
- 1. Listen through the filter of a question.
- 2. Set aside distractions.
- 3. Learn by doing and sharing.
- 4. Be open and honest.
- 5. Listen ACTIVELY.
- 6. Respect and value everyone
- in the group.
- 7. Focus and Reflect purposefully
- 8. Participate actively
115Meeting Agenda and Logs
Handout
116Patrick Lencioni The Five Dysfunctions of a Team
INATTENTION TO RESULTS
AVOIDANCE OF ACCOUNTABILITY
LACK OF COMMITMENT
FEAR OF CONFLICT
ABSENCE OF TRUST
117What Conflicts????
- What to teach
- How to teach
- When to teach
- Where to teach
- How to measure
- What to measure
- When to measure
- Resources
- Materials
- Technology
- Projects
- Homework
- Grades
- Expectations
- Guidelines
- Protocols
118Crucial Conversations
- Clarify what you want and what you do not want to
result from the conversation - Attempt to find mutual purpose
- Create a safe environment for honest dialogue
- Use facts because gathering facts is the
homework required for crucial conversation. - Share your thought process that has led to the
conversation - Encourage recipients to share their facts and
thought process
Handout page 43
119Crucial Conversation Practice
- Structured Inquiry
- In triads, identify person A, B, and C.
- 2 minutes
- A describes the situation and dilemma
- 7 minutes
- A role plays the challenging party in the dilemma
- B models a crucial conversation
- 2 minutes
- C describes what he/she observed giving
specific evidence - 3 minutes
- Open discussion
Handout page 44
120- Your meetings have become a Gripe session.
Christine dominates the conversation with her
criticism of the administration and the way
things are run around here. Its keeping the
team from getting work done.
121- Robert is a veteran member of the teaching staff
who regularly communicates low expectations about
.. Everything!!! Hes consistently bringing up
the way it used to be stories. This time hes
talking about special education. Hes referred
several kids that he knows belong in special
education and they just keep delaying placement
because they say he needs to try some different
strategies in his classroom.
122- In the last team meeting Sally Sue became
unglued. She yelled and screamed at Bob because
he just goes along with everything! She is fed
up with his happy-go-lucky approach to the
world and his whatever it takes attitude. Its
her opinion that he gives kids too many chances
to get their work done and too many opportunities
to earn a good grade in his class. Consequently,
his failure rate is much lower than her failure
rate . It was an awkward meeting to say the least.
123Patrick Lencioni The Five Dysfunctions of a Team
INATTENTION TO RESULTS
AVOIDANCE OF ACCOUNTABILITY
LACK OF COMMITMENT
FEAR OF CONFLICT
ABSENCE OF TRUST
124Team Protocol-Consensus
- Building consensus on the critical questions
that constitute the foundation of a learning
community is an important step in developing the
capacity to function as a professional learning
community. - But what is consensus?
125Common Mistakes in Building Consensus
- We try to get it alone, rather than building a
guiding coalition - We use a forum that is ill-suited to the dialogue
that is typically necessary for consensus - We pool opinions rather than build shared
knowledge - We feel we need consensus on each, specific
detail of implementation - We set an unrealistic standard for consensus and
invest too much energy in resisters
126Consensus
- We arrive at consensus when two criteria are met
- All possible points of view have been heard
- The will of the group becomes evident even to
those who most oppose the solution
DuFour, DuFour, Eaker
127Consensus
- According to Bob Chadwick, creator and designer
of the Consensus Institute, true consensus does
not reside in the words rather, it resides in
the visible behaviors.
(Consensus Institute, July 1997)
128Fist to Five
- 5 - Ill champion
- 4 - Strongly agree
- 3 - Agree
- 2 - Reservations
- 1 - Oppose
- Fist - veto
129Voices and Visual Cues
- Soundings
- Corners
- Pros and Cons
- Silent Post-its
- Thumbs
- Fist of Five
- Human Continuum
- Chart Continuum
130In Attempting to Build Consensus
- Did we build shared knowledge regarding best
practice? - Did we honestly assess our current reality?
- Did we ensure all points of view were heard?
- Was the will of the group evident even to those
who opposed it? - IF THE ANSWER TO EACH OF THE ABOVE IS YES, GO FOR
IT!!
131Patrick Lencioni The Five Dysfunctions of a Team
INATTENTION TO RESULTS
AVOIDANCE OF ACCOUNTABILITY
LACK OF COMMITMENT
FEAR OF CONFLICT
ABSENCE OF TRUST
132- Its not
- Who is the best teacher
- Its
- What are the best practices to get results
133Patrick Lencioni The Five Dysfunctions of a Team
INATTENTION TO RESULTS
AVOIDANCE OF ACCOUNTABILITY
LACK OF COMMITMENT
FEAR OF CONFLICT
ABSENCE OF TRUST
134Big Idea Number ThreeResults Oriented
- PLC Characteristics
- Collective Inquiry
- Action Orientation and Experimentation
- Commitment to Continuous Improvement
- Results Oriented
135 Focused Collaboration
Collaborative cultures, which by definition have
close relationships, are indeed powerful. BUT,
unless they are focusing on the right things they
may end up being powerfully wrong. Michael
Fullan
136Collaborate about what?
If we want our school improvement efforts to have
a significant impact on student learning, we
should focus those efforts on the factors that
significantly impact learning.
137Curriculum
The Learning Environment
Key Areas of Focus
Assessment
Instruction
138Four Corollary Questions
- What do we want students to learn?
- How will we know that they have learned it?
- What will we do if they dont?
- What will we do if they do?
139REFLECTIONS
- Using the Reflection on Big Idea NO. 1 sheet
- What are some things that reaffirmed your
thinking? - What are some new things you are considering?
- What are some things you will do differently this
year?
140Pages 49
141Time for Homework!
- Read Learning By Doing Chapters 1,3,7
- Conduct a Needs Assessment of Your School
Learning by Doing pages 60 64 and pages 156 -
157 - Begin the PLC journey! Try Some Activities