t eacher l eadership from the c lassroom session 4 thursday, october 17, 2013

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TEACHER LEADERSHIP FROM THE CLASSROOM Session 4 Thursday, October 17, 2013

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Page 1: T EACHER L EADERSHIP FROM THE C LASSROOM Session 4 Thursday, October 17, 2013

TEACHER LEADERSHIP FROM THE CLASSROOM

Session 4

Thursday, October 17, 2013

Page 2: T EACHER L EADERSHIP FROM THE C LASSROOM Session 4 Thursday, October 17, 2013

PURPOSE Learn about the Teacher Leader Model

Standards Learn about activities designed to

improve effectiveness in the implementation of standards

Learn about and apply principles of adult learning that will lead to more effective leadership.

Ultimately – greater capacity for leadership within your roles.

Page 3: T EACHER L EADERSHIP FROM THE C LASSROOM Session 4 Thursday, October 17, 2013

STRUCTURE Based on Teacher Leader Model Standards

Consider Learning

What Do We Already Know?

Determine an Action Step• Measurable and Attainable

Implement Action Step

Reflect and Refine

Page 4: T EACHER L EADERSHIP FROM THE C LASSROOM Session 4 Thursday, October 17, 2013

HOUSEKEEPING Taking Care of Business Follow-Up Dates – all 4:30 – 6:30 p.m.

August 15 August 22 September 19 October 17 October 24 November 7 November 21 December 12 Focus Group Scheduled between November 21

and December 12

Page 5: T EACHER L EADERSHIP FROM THE C LASSROOM Session 4 Thursday, October 17, 2013

FOCUS GROUP SIGN UP

Thursday, November 22 Monday, December 2 Tuesday, December 3 Thursday, December 5 Monday, December 9 Tuesday, December 10

Page 6: T EACHER L EADERSHIP FROM THE C LASSROOM Session 4 Thursday, October 17, 2013

REFLECTIONS ON OUR ACTION STEP

Page 7: T EACHER L EADERSHIP FROM THE C LASSROOM Session 4 Thursday, October 17, 2013

REVIEWING THE TEACHER LEADER MODEL STANDARDS

Domain I: Fostering a Collaborative Culture to Support Educator Development and Student Learning Functions within this domain include

understanding and application of : adult learning theory, collective responsibility, and group facilitation.

Page 8: T EACHER L EADERSHIP FROM THE C LASSROOM Session 4 Thursday, October 17, 2013

TEACHER LEADER MODEL STANDARDS

Domain II: Accessing and Using Research to Improve Practice and Student Learning Functions within this domain include

understanding and application of : Research of teacher effectiveness and student

learning, Analysis and interpretation of student data, to improve

student learning, Collaboration with higher education, and collecting and analyzing data to improve teaching

and learning within the classroom.

Page 9: T EACHER L EADERSHIP FROM THE C LASSROOM Session 4 Thursday, October 17, 2013

TEACHER LEADER MODEL STANDARDS

Domain III: Promoting Professional Learning for Continuous Improvement Functions within this domain include :

Collaborating with administrators and colleagues to plan professional learning;

Facilitating professional learning among colleagues; Using technologies to promote collaborative and

differentiated professional learning; Working with colleagues to collect data related to

professional learning; Providing constructive feedback to strengthen teaching

practice and improve student learning; Using information about emerging trends in education

to plan professional learning.

Page 10: T EACHER L EADERSHIP FROM THE C LASSROOM Session 4 Thursday, October 17, 2013

TEACHER LEADER MODEL STANDARDS

Domain IV: Facilitating Improvements in Instruction and Student Learning Functions within this domain include :

Facilitating the collection, analysis and use of classroom and school-based data to identify opportunities to improve curriculum, assessment, school organization and school culture.

Engaging in reflective dialogue with colleagues based on observation of instruction, student work, and assessment data

Supporting colleagues individual and collective reflection and professional growth serving as a mentor, coach, and content facilitator

Serving as a team leader Using knowledge of emerging and existing technologies

to guide colleagues Promoting instructional strategies that address issues of

diversity and equity

Page 11: T EACHER L EADERSHIP FROM THE C LASSROOM Session 4 Thursday, October 17, 2013

TEACHER LEADER MODEL STANDARDS

Facilitating the collection, analysis and use of classroom and school-based data to identify opportunities to improve curriculum, assessment, school organization and school culture.

Engaging in reflective dialogue with colleagues based on observation of instruction, student work, and assessment data

Supporting colleagues individual and collective reflection and professional growth serving as a mentor, coach, and content facilitator

Page 12: T EACHER L EADERSHIP FROM THE C LASSROOM Session 4 Thursday, October 17, 2013

TEACHER LEADER MODEL STANDARDS

Facilitating the collection, analysis and use of classroom and school-based data to identify opportunities to improve curriculum, assessment, school organization and school culture.

Engaging in reflective dialogue with colleagues based on observation of instruction, student work, and assessment data

Supporting colleagues individual and collective reflection and professional growth serving as a mentor, coach, and content facilitator

Page 13: T EACHER L EADERSHIP FROM THE C LASSROOM Session 4 Thursday, October 17, 2013

REFLECTIVE PRACTICE

Why Reflective Practice? “For growth and improvement of any educational

institution, teacher professional development becomes a milestone in teachers’ continuum of life-long learning and career progression” (Hien, 2008).

However, as courses and development are mandated, the focus turns to fulfilling credits rather than learning.

Professional development based on teacher enhancement can have a positive impact on teachers’ skills and attitudes in the classroom.

Page 14: T EACHER L EADERSHIP FROM THE C LASSROOM Session 4 Thursday, October 17, 2013

REFLECTIVE PRACTICE

Why Reflective Practice? “For growth and improvement of any educational

institution, teacher professional development becomes a milestone in teachers’ continuum of life-long learning and career progression” (Hien, 2008).

However, as courses and development are mandated, the focus turns to fulfilling credits rather than learning.

Professional development based on teacher enhancement can have a positive impact on teachers’ skills and attitudes in the classroom.

Page 15: T EACHER L EADERSHIP FROM THE C LASSROOM Session 4 Thursday, October 17, 2013

ADULT LEARNERS

Adults learn differently from children. Adults come with a variety of experiences

that are crucial to their learning and through those experiences have predefined ideas for what they need to learn (Merriam & Brockett, 2007).

Page 16: T EACHER L EADERSHIP FROM THE C LASSROOM Session 4 Thursday, October 17, 2013

BEST PRACTICES FOR ADULT LEARNERS

Experiences within the classroom must be respected and utilized

Teachers want to problem solve with their colleagues and learn things that are applicable to practices in their classroom

“The most successful adult learning takes place in a collaborative setting” (Brockett, 2008).

“Adult learners tent to resist learning that is in conflict with the direction they believe their learning should go” (Brookfield, 1990).

Page 17: T EACHER L EADERSHIP FROM THE C LASSROOM Session 4 Thursday, October 17, 2013

REFLECTIVE PRACTICE

“Reflective Practice can enable practitioners to learn from experience about themselves, their work, and the way they relate to home and work, significant others and wide society and culture” (Bolton, 2009).

“Reflective practice leading to change and development only happens in learning organisations (Gould 2004), with supportive mechanisms of coach, mentor or facilitator (Gray 2007), and not when top-down organisational visions are imposed leading to compliance (Senge 1992).”

Page 18: T EACHER L EADERSHIP FROM THE C LASSROOM Session 4 Thursday, October 17, 2013

RESULT OF REFLECTIVE PRACTICE

“Organisations gain from workpalce reflection because critically reflective practitioners have increased morale, commitment to clients, openness to multiple perspectives and creative innovative non-dichotomous solutions…(Fook, 2002)”.

“Employees required to write in journals and accounts of practice without being inducted and facilitated well are likely to experience feelings of helplessness, frustration and eventual burnout (Gray 2007), be resistant (Bulpitt and Martin 2005), negative (Hobbs 2007), or even ‘angry, challenged, threatened, demoralized, shocked and put off…” (Bolton, 2009).

Page 19: T EACHER L EADERSHIP FROM THE C LASSROOM Session 4 Thursday, October 17, 2013

BUILDING A FOUNDATION THAT SUPPORTS REFLECTION

Connected to adult learning Facilitation required Lead a horse to water… Make it applicable Environment of trust and confidence Willingness to ask hard questions Bandura (1977) says that environments that

promote interpersonal interaction may result in greater reflection.

“Trust builds whenever people are vulnerable.”

Page 20: T EACHER L EADERSHIP FROM THE C LASSROOM Session 4 Thursday, October 17, 2013

STRONG FACILITATION

Don’t let one person dominate the conversation. Use activities that required everyone’s participation –

have question-storming completed individually before sharing, then whiparound to get everyone’s voice in the room.

Effective for when some people refuse to talk or participate

Group loses focus Appoint a timekeeper/agenda master. Don’t be afraid

to get the group back on topic. Complaining occurs – states that change can’t

happen. Acknowledge the feeling, and turn the topic toward

what the group CAN control rather than what they can’t.

Page 21: T EACHER L EADERSHIP FROM THE C LASSROOM Session 4 Thursday, October 17, 2013

CRITICAL REFLECTION

“Critical reflection is the process of analyzing, reconsidering, and questioning experiences within a broad context of issues” (Murray, Kujundzic, 2005).

Think about your own practice and how you might go through a critical reflection process – what would you do? What resources would you need?

It is more than constructive self-criticism, but includes four possible activities:

Page 22: T EACHER L EADERSHIP FROM THE C LASSROOM Session 4 Thursday, October 17, 2013

ACTIVITIES FOR CRITICAL REFLECTION

Assumption Analysis – think about your own beliefs, values, cultural practices. How does this impact our reality?

Contextual Awareness – our assumptions are based on a specific historical and cultural context.

Imaginative Speculation – Imagine alternative ways of thinking about phenomena in ordert to provide an opportunity to challenge our thinking.

Reflective Skepticism – Questioning of universal truth.

Page 23: T EACHER L EADERSHIP FROM THE C LASSROOM Session 4 Thursday, October 17, 2013

FACILITATING CRITICAL REFLECTION

Asking Tough Questions Using Protocols for Progress

Page 24: T EACHER L EADERSHIP FROM THE C LASSROOM Session 4 Thursday, October 17, 2013

ASKING TOUGH QUESTIONS

Open-ended questions geared toward promoting divergent thinking – What are the implications of _________________? Why is ______________ important? What is another way to look at ________________? Why could you not -___________________? What proof do you have for _________________?

Questions that require analysis of your own thinking processes- Why do you think that is the best approach and

why? What could make it better? How will all students be impacted by this?

Page 25: T EACHER L EADERSHIP FROM THE C LASSROOM Session 4 Thursday, October 17, 2013

PROTOCOLS FOR REFLECTION Postcards – everyone writes on a postcard and shares

their thinking. Clearing – provide two minutes to clear any thoughts on

people’s minds. No dialogue. Peeling the Onion – attacking a complex problem

Share the problem Clarifying Questions Active listening Peeling/Probing Responses

What Comes Up – focus on teaching/learning Presentation of student work Questions posed while examining the work Round of responses – everyoneone responds Conversation Repeat

Page 26: T EACHER L EADERSHIP FROM THE C LASSROOM Session 4 Thursday, October 17, 2013

TAKEAWAYS FOR REFLECTION

Environment is key for quality critical reflection to occur

Protocols are necessary to ensure quality reflection

A strong facilitator is necessary Questions must be asked that challenge

beliefs, cultural context, and assumptions Build on wants and desires of participants

Page 27: T EACHER L EADERSHIP FROM THE C LASSROOM Session 4 Thursday, October 17, 2013

DOMAIN IV: FACILITATING IMPROVEMENTS IN INSTRUCTION AND STUDENT LEARNING

What is your action step?