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The Professional Learning Community Presented by Tom Jennings

The Professional Learning Community Presented by Tom Jennings

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Page 1: The Professional Learning Community Presented by Tom Jennings

The Professional Learning Community

Presented by Tom Jennings

Page 2: The Professional Learning Community Presented by Tom Jennings
Page 3: The Professional Learning Community Presented by Tom Jennings

Guiding questions for this presentation What is a Professional Learning Community? What are the critical questions of a PLC? Why should Schenevus Central School become

a PLC? What is the role of the Principal in a PLC? How does a school change as it becomes a

PLC? How do we become a PLC?

Page 4: The Professional Learning Community Presented by Tom Jennings

What is a Professional Learning Community? A focus on learning A collaborative culture with a focus on learning

for all Collective inquiry into best practice and current

reality Action orientation: learning by doing A commitment to continuous improvement Results orientation Administrator assurances and teacher

commitments(DuFour, 2006)

Page 5: The Professional Learning Community Presented by Tom Jennings

What are the Critical Questions of a PLC? What is it we want our students to learn? How will we know if each student has learned it? How will we respond when some students do not

learn it? How can we extend and enrich the learning for

students who have demonstrated proficiency?

(DuFour, 2006)

Page 6: The Professional Learning Community Presented by Tom Jennings

Why should Schenevus Central School become a PLC?

“Good is the enemy of great.” (Collins, 2001)

Page 7: The Professional Learning Community Presented by Tom Jennings

Richard DuFour Robert Eaker Jonathon Saphier Philip Schlechty Thomas Sergiovanni Mike Schmoker Michael Fullan Richard Marzano Larry Lezotte Roland Barth Rick Stiggins Dennis Sparks Barbara Eason-Watkins Douglas Reeves

Some of the researchers who endorse the PLC concept.

Page 8: The Professional Learning Community Presented by Tom Jennings

American Federation of Teachers Mid-Continent Regional Educational Laboratory National Association of Elementary School Principals National Association of Secondary School Principals National Board of Professional Teaching Standards National Council for Accreditation of Teacher Education National Council of Teachers of English National Council of Teachers of Mathematics National Education Association National Science Teachers Association National Staff Development Council North Central Regional Educational Laboratory Southwest Educational Development Laboratory

Some of the organizations that endorse the PLC concept.

Page 9: The Professional Learning Community Presented by Tom Jennings

Why should Schenevus Central School become a PLC?

(continued)

AllThingsPLC.orgPLC Blog and DiscussionsEvidence of EffectivenessTools and Resources

Page 10: The Professional Learning Community Presented by Tom Jennings

What is the role of the Principal in a PLC?

“One of the great ironies in education is that it takes strong and effective educational leaders to create truly empowered people who are capable of sustaining improvement after the leader has gone”. DuFour (2006)

Page 11: The Professional Learning Community Presented by Tom Jennings

What is the role of the Principal in a PLC? (continued)

Link the change initiative to current practices and assumptions when possible

Focus first on the “why” of change, then focus on the “how”

Align actions with words Be flexible on implementation but firm on the

essence of the initiative Build a guiding coalition and move forward

without unanimity Expect to make mistakes and learn from them Learn by doing Supervision

(DuFour, 2006)

Page 12: The Professional Learning Community Presented by Tom Jennings

The Essentials of Systemic ChangeA challenging

VisionSkills to reach the

vision

Incentives to motivate staff

toward the vision

Resources to support

implementation

Plan

yields Change

Skills to reach the

vision

Incentives to motivate staff

toward the vision

Resources to support

implementation

Plan

yields Confusion

A challenging Vision

Incentives to motivate staff

toward the vision

Resources to support

implementation

Plan

yields Anxiety

A challenging Vision

Skills to reach the

vision

Resources to support

implementation

Plan

yieldsGradual

Antagonistic Change

A challenging Vision

Skills to reach the

vision

Incentives to motivate staff

toward the vision

Plan

yields Frustration

A challenging Vision

Skills to reach the

vision

Incentives to motivate staff

toward the vision

Resources to support

implementationyields

False Starts and Constant

Reorganization

Page 13: The Professional Learning Community Presented by Tom Jennings

Race Car: Professional Learning Community

Status Quo

Teacher and Student

Empowerment

Continuous Improvement

Tires: Educational Leaders

Drivers: Students

Gas: Data

Engine: Collaborative Teams

Page 14: The Professional Learning Community Presented by Tom Jennings

How does a school change as it becomes a PLC?

A shift in fundamental purpose A shift in the use of assessments A shift in the response when students don’t learn A shift in the work of teachers A shift in professional development A shift in school culture

Page 15: The Professional Learning Community Presented by Tom Jennings

A shift in fundamental purpose

From a focus on teaching … to a focus on learning

From coverage of content … to demonstration of proficiency

From providing individual teachers with curriculum documents … to engaging collaborative teams in building shared knowledge regarding essential curriculum

Page 16: The Professional Learning Community Presented by Tom Jennings

A shift in the use of assessments

From infrequent summative assessments… to frequent common formative assessments

From individual teacher assessments … to assessments developed jointly by collaborative teams

Page 17: The Professional Learning Community Presented by Tom Jennings

A shift in the response when students don’t learn From remediation … to intervention From individual teachers determining the

appropriate response … to a systematic response that ensures support for every student

From one opportunity to demonstrate learning … to multiple opportunities to demonstrate learning

Page 18: The Professional Learning Community Presented by Tom Jennings

A shift in the work of teachers

From isolation … to collaboration From each teacher clarifying what students must

learn … to collaborative teams clarifying essential learning

From individual teachers attempting to discover ways to improve results … to collaborative teams of teachers helping each other improve

From decisions made on the basis of individual preferences … to decisions made collectively by building shared knowledge of best practice

Page 19: The Professional Learning Community Presented by Tom Jennings

A shift in professional development

From workshops and individual courses … to job-embedded learning in collaborative teams

From presentations to entire faculties … to team-based action research

From short-term exposure to multiple concepts and practices … to sustained commitment to limited, focused initiatives

Page 20: The Professional Learning Community Presented by Tom Jennings

A shift in school culture

From independence … to interdependence From a language of complaint … to a language

of commitment From infrequent generic recognition … to

frequent specific recognition and a culture of celebration that creates many winners

Page 21: The Professional Learning Community Presented by Tom Jennings

How do we become a PLC? Answering the Critical Questions of a PLC. What is it we want our students to learn? How will we know if each student has learned it? How will we respond when some students do not

learn it? How can we extend and enrich the learning for

students who have demonstrated proficiency?

Page 22: The Professional Learning Community Presented by Tom Jennings

References All Things PLC. Retrieved November 12, 2007, Website:

http://www.allthingsplc.org Asking the Right Questions: A Leader’s Guide to Systems Thinking

about School Improvement. (2000). McRel. Balanced Leadership: What 30 years of research tells us about the

effect of leadership on student achievement. (2003). McRel. Collins, Jim. (2001). Good to Great. New York. Harper Collins. DuFour, Richard. (May, 2004) What is a “Professional Learning

Community”? Educational Leadership. V.61 No. 8: pgs 6-11. Dufour, Richard. (2006). Learning by Doing: A Handbook for

Professional Learning Communities at Work. Solution Tree. Guide to Using Data in School Improvement Efforts. (2004).

Learning Point Associates. Marzano, R.J., Waters, T., & McNulty, B.A. (2005). School

Leadership that Works: From Research to Results. Alexandria, Va. Association for Supervision and Curriculum Development.

Schmoker, Mike. (February, 2004). Tipping Point: From Feckless Reform to Substantive Instructional Improvement. Phi Delta Kappan. V.85 No.6: pgs 424-432.