Transcript Document

Professional Learning Communities in
Schools
Online Workshop
Who will find this workshop useful?
• Teachers / lead teachers / school leaders
• Syndicates / departments
• AtoL facilitators
How to use this workshop
•
To update, review and/or reflect on professional learning
communities.
•
As a focus for professional development in exploring formative
assessment.
•
To support AtoL in-depth programmes in schools.
What is a professional learning
community?
Can we come up with our own definition?
These words may help you :
– school goals
– improved student learning
– changing teacher practice
– continuous improvement
– whole school focus
Professional learning communities
Teacher professional development that improves the
learning of all students, organises adults into learning
communities whose goals are aligned with those of
the school and community.
A definition
“A professional learning community is one in which
teachers update their professional knowledge and
skills within the context of an organised, school-wide
system for improving teaching practices. In addition,
teachers' efforts, individually and collectively, are
focused on the goal of improving student learning and
achievement and making the school as a whole
become a high-performing organisation”.
Timperley, H. (2004)
Why professional learning communities?
“When teachers are part of a professional learning
community in which they are acknowledged,
supported and challenged, and feel that it is safe to
take risks and share information, they can review and
alter their teaching practice so that it makes a real
difference to their students’ learning.”
Ministry of Education Effective Literacy Strategies in Years 9 to 13, p.18
Collaboration
Staff development that improves the learning of all
students provides teachers with the knowledge and
skills to collaborate.
Discussion points:
• Do we agree with this statement?
• How do we ensure that this happens in our school?
We know it’s working because…
• What are the qualities of an effective learning
community?
– Think, pair, and share with your colleagues
Professional learning communities
• Share a mission, vision, goals and values
• Are collaborative teams working to improve student
learning
• Are result-oriented
• Are action-oriented
• Have a commitment to continuous improvement
Where do we find professional learning
communities?
• Classrooms and staffrooms
• Department and syndicate meetings
• Meetings where schools or teachers from different
schools get together
• At school board of trustees’ meetings
• Networks and clusters
• Other communities of practice such as professional
and subject associations
Successful professional learning
communities
“If we could truly establish high levels of learning for
all students as the guiding principle for 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.”
Rick DuFour, 2004
Purpose of professional learning
communities
To improve the success of all students by focusing
attention on the impact that decisions relating to
school organisation, teaching, assessment, and
curriculum have on student learning.
Structuring professional learning
communities
To achieve high levels of learning for ALL students
ALL adults will need to work together within a
collaborative culture that fosters high performance
and achievement.
Plan for success
• Meet during the school day
• Analyse student achievement data to identify areas of
need and priorities
• Create, implement, and evaluate interventions to
address learning gaps
• Organise in the most appropriate way to achieve your
goals (syndicate, department, whole school).
• Report results to the whole staff
Role of school leaders in supporting
professional learning communities
• Establish clear expectations, parameters, and
priorities
• Monitor progress and outcomes of professional
learning communities
• Meet with professional learning communities to review
their learning and demonstrate support
• Provide resources including time, materials, and
access to research
Teachers who are part of a professional
learning community
• Take part in quality conversations that include
discussing specific qualitative and quantitative data to
find out about their students’ literacy-related strengths
and needs
• Take responsibility for their own professional growth
and increase their knowledge of literacy learning
• Develop a shared language as they learn literacy
strategies and discover how to use and teach them
strategically
Ministry of Education Effective Literacy Strategies in Years 9 to 13, p.18
How can we use this presentation?
• Share it with other staff in your school
• Share some of Helen Timperley’s work as
professional reading
– Shifting the Focus: Achievement Information for Professional
Learning: A Summary of the Sustainability of Professional
Development in Literacy - Parts 1 and 2
• Form a professional learning community or quality
learning circle
– For more details on forming your own Quality Learning Circle
References
• Timperley, H. (2004). Shifting the focus: Achievement
information for professional learning: A summary of the
sustainability of professional development in literacy - parts 1
and 2. Retrieved 2005, August 17 from
www.minedu.govt.nz/goto/pdinliteracy
• Dufour, R. (May 2004).What is a “professional learning
community”? Educational Leadership Journal, 61(8).
• Ministry of Education. (2004). Effective literacy strategies in
years 9 to 13 : A guide for teachers. Wellington: Learning Media.