Title: Michael Copland, Associate Professor
1Assessing Instructional Leadership
ExpertiseICSEI Conference 2009 Concurent
Session
- Michael Copland, Associate Professor
- Educational Leadership Policy Studies
- College of Education
- University of Washington
Dina Blum, Project Director Center for
Educational Leadership College of
Education University of Washington www.k-12leaders
hip.org
2Improving Instruction Expert vs. Hierarchical
Authority
- Traditional paths to leadership roles rooted in
established education hierarchy - Two decade shift to instructional leadership
requires expert basis for instructional
improvement work - We asked What is the nature of expert practice
in observing instruction and planning feedback to
teachers?
3Mission
- The Center for Educational Leadership (CEL)
is dedicated to eliminating the achievement gap
that continues to divide our nations children
along the lines of race, class and language. CEL
believes the nexus for eliminating the gap lies
in the development of leadership
capacity?specifically nurturing the will to act
on behalf of the most underserved students while
increasing leadership knowledge and skill to
dramatically improve the quality of instruction.
4Big ideas behind our theory of action
- If kids are not learning, they are not being
afforded powerful - learning opportunities
- If teachers are not affording students powerful
learning opportunities, - principals and district leaders are not doing
what they need to in order to - equip and support teachers with the requisite
knowledge and skills
- Teaching is a very sophisticated process, and
teachers are capable of - making important instructional decisions with
effective professional - development
- In order to facilitate powerful instruction,
teaching practice must move - from private to public
- Reciprocal accountability must be in place to
ensure high learning at - all levels
- You cannot lead what you dont know
5CELs District Partnerships
CEL partnerships are built on the belief that
instruction will improve when leaders
- Recognize and understand powerful instruction
- Guide and lead professional development around
powerful instruction - Target and align resources to support
instructional improvement - Engage in ongoing problem solving and long range
capacity building
65D Instructional Leadership Assessment
- UW-Center for Ed Leadership
7CEL Lesson Analysis Rubric
- Empirical and experiential research effort led to
development of rubric framework - Rubric captures 13 dimensions of what expert
observers of teaching and learning pay attention
to - Rubric differentiates novice from expert practice
along each of the 13 dimensions
85 Dimensions of Teaching Learning
9Purpose
An instructional leader considers How lesson
connects to grade-level standards (e.g. GLE, ELD,
NCTM, NCTE) whether stated or not stated, to
ensure equity of outcomes for all students How
purpose of lesson connects to transferable
knowledge/skill How teaching decisions align with
purpose Whether lesson purpose is appropriate for
students based on evidence of student
learning How lesson links to broader purpose
(social justice, problem-solving, citizenship,
independence, quality of life) How the purpose of
this lesson connected to other lessons (previous
and future)
10Student Engagement
- An instructional leader considers
- Who is doing the work (reading, thinking,
writing, meaning making) and what is the
intellectual substance of that work - Strategies that facilitate participation and
meaning making by all students (e.g., small group
work, partner talk, writing, questioning, etc.) - Level of student talk in light of understanding
the role of talk in meaning making, language
development and as a tool for assessment
111 A novice instructional leader
Levels of Expertise
- does not notice or think about key concepts when
observing classroom practice - conveys obvious misconceptions about or misuses
key concepts - makes gross judgments without any supporting
evidence whatsoever
122 An emerging instructional leader
Levels of Expertise
- recounts what transpired in the lesson
- identifies, mentions, or names something related
to key concepts without any elaboration - uses relevant and appropriate terminology without
clear evidence of understanding - may ask questions without elaboration as to why
(mimicking questions, perhaps, memorized from
previous professional development) - may offer directives for improvement without
justification or elaboration
133 A developing instructional leader
Levels of Expertise
- discusses and/or considers key concepts with
enough specificity to demonstrate basic
understanding - elaborates responses with specific
examples/evidence from the observed lesson - expresses wonder or questions about observations
(e.g., what is behind teaching decisions) - offers alternatives to teaching decisions or
suggests ways to improve with some specificity
and/or elaboration - demonstrates basic understanding that teaching
decisions impact student learning and how this
occurs
144 An expert instructional leader
Levels of Expertise
- demonstrates all the markers of category 3 plus
- identifies and critically analyzes more layers of
complexity in the observed lesson - conveys clear ideas/vision for powerful and
equitable teaching and learning - communicates and supports ideas with richer
detail to illustrate evidence/examples from the
observed lesson - demonstrates pedagogical content knowledge
relevant to the specific content area of lesson - models an inquiry stance
- analytically unpacks teaching decisions and
offers possible theories - links questions and analysis directly to evidence
of student learning
15Lesson Analysis Study
- Assessing growth in leaders ability to observe
for powerful teaching and learning and plan
feedback to teachers - Three data collection points baseline, Year 1,
Year 2. - Study design Watch lesson video, script
responses to three questions, narrative analysis
using lesson observation rubric
16Developing leaders ability to analyze
instruction and plan feedback
- What do you notice about teaching and learning in
this classroom? - Based on your response to the first question,
describe the follow-up conversation you would
have with this teacher. - Imagine that the teacher you just observed is a
member of your current school staff. What
implications for professional development, if
any, does this observation suggest?
17 Dimensions of Instruction
Norwalk Means Time 1 2
18Dimensions of Instruction
19Dimensions of Instruction
20Dimensions of Instruction
21(No Transcript)
22What we are learning
- The purpose of leadership is the improvement of
instruction, regardless of role - Leadership for instructional improvement cannot
be outsourced solely to principals and/or
teachers - You cannot lead what you dont know
- The improvement of instructional leadership rests
on deepening ones content knowledge. Leaders
deepened content knowledge is the foundation from
which they support teachers with more powerful
professional development
23Thanks for coming!
Dina Blum, Project Director Center for
Educational Leadership College of
Education University of Washington www.k-12leaders
hip.org
Michael Copland, Associate Professor Educational
Leadership Policy Studies College of
Education University of Washington mcopland_at_u.wash
ington.edu