Title: School Improvement and Professional Learning Communities
1- School Improvement and Professional Learning
Communities
March 30, 2007 Dennis King, Ed.
D. dking_at_bluevalleyk12.org
2- Creating a
- Professional Learning Community
- is a journey...
3It begins with a shared understanding of where
you want to go, together,
4and is fueled by a continuous process of
building the skill and the will to share
responsibility for the success of all learners.
5When I shoot a 65 or 68, as close to a perfect
score as I can, I still have missed 5 shots.
6What is the business of our business?
7What is the target?
PLC
Student Learning
8Professional Learning Communities
- 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
9Fundamental 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. - Re-culturing is the key to school improvement.
- Schools that function as a PLC is our best hope
in re-culturing schools.
10Structure v. Culture
- if you want to change and improve the climate
and outcomes of schooling - both for students and
teachers, there are features of the school
culture that have to be changed, and if they are
not changed, your well-intended efforts will be
defeated. - Seymore Sarason (1996)
11Need for a Professional Learning Community
- 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
12Big Ideas of a Professional Learning Community
- Foundation
- Shared mission, vision, values, goals
- Collaborative teams FOCUSED ON LEARNING
- Collective inquiry into best practice and
current reality - Action orientation/experimentation
- Commitment to continuous improvement
- Results orientation
13Barriers to Learning Community
- Inability to establish clear and focused
educational purpose and goals.
14MVVG - The Foundation
- If a school is to withstand inherent turmoil
involved in substantive change, the foundation
must be solid. - DuFour, Eaker, Dufour
15Foundation of PLCs
- Mission - Why do we exist?
- Vision - What do we want to become?
- Values/Collective Commitments - How must we
behave in order to create the kind of school we
want to become? - Goals - What steps are we going to take and when
will we take them?
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18Mission Statement - Why do we exist?
- What is our fundamental belief?
- Focused on Learning
19Traditional School v. Learning Community Mission
- Statements are generic
- Statements are brief such as We believe all
kids can learn or Success for every student.
- Statements clarify what students will learn
- Statements address the question, How will we
know what students are learning? - Statements clarify how the school will respond
when students do not learn.
20Critical Corollary Questions
- If we believe that 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 dont learn?
- What do we do when a student has learned?
21Variations on a ThemeAll Kids Can Learn!
- Based on ability
- If they take advantage of the opportunity
- Something, and we will create a warm, pleasant
environment for them - And we will do whatever it takes to ensure they
achieve the agreed-upon standards
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23Vision Defined
- Vision describes a realistic, credible,
attractive future, a condition that is better in
some important ways that what now exists. A
vision is a target that beckons. - Warren Bennis and Burt Nanus
24Traditional School vs.. Learning Community
Vision
- Averages opinions
- Is dictated
- Builds shared knowledge
- Is shared
25Begin Building Shared Vision by Building Shared
Knowledge
- What does the research advise us in terms of best
practices for improving schools? - What is the current structure and culture of our
school? - What data are available about our school? Can we
paint a picture of our school using nothing but
data?
26A Vision that Focuses on Results Not Good
Intentions
- What is our current (data-based) reality?
- What is our vision of what we hope to become as a
school? - If we achieve our vision, what impact will we see
on the data?
27Importance of Shared Vision
- You cannot have a learning community without
shared vision. - Building shared vision must be seen as a central
element in the daily work of leaders. It is
ongoing and never ending. - Peter Senge
28My Ideal School
- Imagine that you could single-handedly transform
your school into the organization of your dreams
in five years - What would the three BIG IDEAS be?
29Importance of Shared Vision
- You cannot have a learning community without
shared vision. - Building shared vision must be seen as a central
element in the daily work of leaders. It is
ongoing and never ending. - Peter Senge
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31Question Being Addressed
- How do we need to act in order to achieve our
vision?
32Traditional school vs.. Learning Community
Values
- Random
- Excessive
- Articulated as platitudes or beliefs
- Focus on Others
- Linked to vision
- Few in number
- Articulated as attitudes, behaviors, and
commitments necessary to advance the vision - Focus on self
33Focusing on Ourselves
- Conversations about empowerment always seem to
turn to a discussion of how we are going to
change other people. The focus outward, looking
for the difficulty in others is how we betray
ourselves. The revolution begins in our own
hearts. - Peter Block
34Example Vision Statement
- Our school will provide all students with a
common core curriculum. Student advancement
through the curriculum will be based on
demonstrated proficiency. There will be close
monitoring of each students proficiency, and
adjustments made to curriculum and instruction
based upon that monitoring.
35Our Collective CommitmentsValue statements
- Identify a series of value statements for the
school you hope to become in five years. - In order to achieve our vision we will..
- We will teach to the agreed-upon course outcomes
and provide evidence that each student has
achieved those outcomes.
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37Question Being Addressed
- What steps will we take and when will we take
them?
38Traditional School vs.. Learning Community Goals
- Random
- Excessive
- Focus on means rather than ends
- Impossible to measure
- Not monitored
- Linked to vision
- Few in number
- Focus on desired outcome
- Measurable performance standards
- Monitored
- Short-term and stretch
39Goals Should Address the Following Questions
- Which steps should we take first?
- What is our timeline?
- What evidence will we present to demonstrate our
progress?
40Identify a SMART goal for your school
- Strategic and Specific
- Measurable
- Attainable
- Results-oriented
- Time bound
41Are These SMART Goals?
- By the end of the 2004-2005 school year we will
- Implement three new reading strategies aligned
with the skills and concepts outlined in the
state standards. - Increase the use of cooperative learning
activities in our classrooms by 25. - At least 90 of second grade students will score
80 or higher on the district reading assessment.
42The Biggest BIG IDEA of a PLC
- The guiding principle of a PLC is that the
purpose of the school is to ensure high levels of
learning for all students. - Will focus the attention and energy of the entire
school on learning. - The frame of reference for all decisions will
become, what is the impact on learning?
43Reflective Questions
- Think of policies and practices in schools that
are inconsistent with the fundamental assumptions
all kids can learn and success for all students.
44A 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
45Making the Complex Simple
- If we could truly establish high levels of
learning for all students as the guiding
principle of the school, and if we were willing
to honestly confront the brutal facts of the
current reality in our school, the right
decisions about what to do and what to stop doing
often become evident.
46Addition by Subtraction
- The challenge of becoming a PLC demands more than
adopting new programs and practices. We must
also demonstrate the discipline to discontinue
much of what we have done traditionally.
47The Need to Stop Doing
- Most of us have an ever-expanding to do list,
trying to build momentum by doing, doing, doing -
and doing more. And it rarely works. Those who
built good-to-great organizations, however,
made as much use of stop doinglists as to do
lists. They had the discipline to stop doing all
the extraneous junk. Jim Collins
48Collaboration is one of the Big Ideas that
drive a PLC
- We can achieve our fundamental purpose of high
levels of learning for all students only if we
work together. We cultivate this collaborative
culture through the development of high
performing teams.
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50What makes an effective meeting?/Team Protocols
- Team norms
- Method of Consensus
- Vision
- Agenda with assigned minutes per topic
- Time keeper
- Critical Questions for Teams
- SMART Goal
- Interventions
- Product orientation
51To Do List Stop Doing List
- Create systems and procedures to develop the
collective capacity of staff to work together
interdependently as members of collaborative
teams.
- Stop allowing teachers to work in isolation.
- Stop settling for collaboration lite.
- Stop focusing on congeniality more than
collaboration
52What is congeniality? Avoiding the Mary Poppins
Principle.
- Congeniality has to do with the extent to which
teachers and principals share common work values,
engage in specific conversation about their work,
and help each other engage in the work of the
school. - The emphasis on human relations management has
resulted in the value of congeniality becoming
very strong in the way schools are managed and
led. Congeniality has to do with the climate of
interpersonal relationships within an enterprise.
When this climate is friendly, agreeable, and
sympathetic, congeniality is high. Though
congeniality is pleasant and often desirable, it
is not independently linked to better performance
and quality schooling. - Thomas Sergiovanni, 2004
53The Focus of 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
54Critical Corollary Questions
- If the mission is focused on learning,
- what is it we expect them to learn?
- how do we know they have learned it?
- how will we respond when they dont learn?
- how will we respond when they already know it?
55What 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, DuFour and Eaker
56Culture Need for a Collaborative
- 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
57Need for a Collaborative Culture
- If schools want to enhance their capacity to
boost student learning, they should work on
building a collaborative cultureWhen 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
58Interventions
- What do we do when students dont get it?
- Classroom Interventions
- Grade Level or Department Interventions
- School Interventions
59Pyramid of Intervention Strategies
60INTERVENTION PYRAMID
Special Education Placement
Screening and Evaluation for Special Education
Problem Solving Team
Systematic School Interventions How does the
school respond when students dont get it?
Grade Level / Department/Classroom Interventions
- SMART Goals Early Interventions What do we
need to know prior to the start of school?
61Results Orientation
62PLC - Results Focus
- We assess our effectiveness on the basis of
results rather than intentions. Individuals,
teams and schools seek relevant data and
information and use that information to promote
continuous improvement. - Becky DuFour
63Results Oriented Culture
- Shifting paradigms from
- We taught it, but they didnt learn it, to
- They didnt learn it. What do we need to do
differently?
64Culture
- What is culture?
- How do we define culture in a PLC?
- How is culture defined in your school?
65Change is Complex!
- Any significant innovation, if it is to result in
true change, requires individual implementers to
work out their own meaning. - Michael Fullan
66Myth vs. Realities of Change
- Myth Everyone wants to embrace change because
the organization wants to change - Realities
- Most people act first in their own self interest,
not in the interest of the organization - Most people do not want to understand the What
and Why of organizational change - Most people engage in organizational change
because of their own pain, not because of the
merits of change - Jerry Patterson, Coming Even Clearer About
Organizational Change
67From Theory to Action Closing The Knowing -
Doing Gap
- Ten Barriers to Action
- Substituting a decision for action
- Substituting mission for action
- Planning as a substitute for action
- Complexity as a barrier for action
- Mindless precedent as a barrier to action.
- Internal competition as a barrier to action
- Badly designed measurement systems as a barrier
to action - An external focus as a barrier to action.
- A focus on attitudes as a barrier to action.
- Training as a substitute for action
68From Good to Great
- When all these pieces come together, not only
does your work move toward greatness, but so does
your life. For, in the end, it is impossible to
have a great life unless it is a meaningful life.
And it is very difficult to have a meaningful
life without meaningful work. Perhaps, then, you
might gain that rare tranquility that comes from
knowing that youve had a hand in creating
something of intrinsic excellence that makes a
contribution. Indeed, you might even gain that
deepest of all satisfactions knowing that your
short time here on earth has been well spent, and
that it mattered. - Jim Collins
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70What we know today does not make yesterday
wrong, it makes tomorrow better.
Carol Commodore
71Professional Learning Community Schools
- Community begins with a shared vision. Its
sustained - by teachers who, as school leaders, bring
inspiration - and direction to the institution. Who, after
all, knows - more about the classroom? Who is better able to
- inspire children? Who can evaluate, more
sensitively, - the educational progress of each student? And
who - but teachers create a true community for
learning? - Teachers are, without question, the heartbeat of
a - successful school.
- Ernest Boyer
(1995, p. 31)