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Using Professional Learning Communities to Address the AdvancED Standards Presenters: Jeanne Cowan Janet Hensley

Using Professional Learning Communities to Address the AdvancED Standards

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Using Professional Learning Communities to Address the AdvancED Standards . Presenters: Jeanne Cowan Janet Hensley. Outcomes. To become familiar with the Professional Learning Communities (PLC) model - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Using Professional Learning Communities to Address the  AdvancED Standards

Using Professional Learning Communities to Address the

AdvancED Standards

Presenters:Jeanne CowanJanet Hensley

Page 2: Using Professional Learning Communities to Address the  AdvancED Standards

Outcomes

• To become familiar with the Professional Learning Communities (PLC) model

• To enhance your understanding of how a PLC provides the structure for a “systems approach” to school improvement by concentrating on interdependent relationships

• To learn how collaborative teams can help us focus on the continuous improvement of the entire organization while addressing the AdvancED Standards and Indicators.

Page 3: Using Professional Learning Communities to Address the  AdvancED Standards

Professional Learning Communities & AdvancED

• The Professional Learning Communities (PLC) model is designed to improve teaching and learning.

• A PLC provides the structure for a “systems approach” to school improvement by concentrating on interdependent relationships.

• Collaborative teams focus on the continuous improvement of the entire organization while addressing each of the AdvancED Standards and many of the Indicators.

Page 4: Using Professional Learning Communities to Address the  AdvancED Standards

6 Characteristics of PLCs

1) Shared Mission, Vision, Values and Goals—All Focused on Student Learning

2) A Collaborative Culture With a Focus on Learning

3) Collective Inquiry Into Best Practice 4) Action Orientation: Learning by Doing5) A Commitment to Continuous Improvement6) Results Orientation

Page 5: Using Professional Learning Communities to Address the  AdvancED Standards

5 AdvancED Standards

1) Purpose and Direction2) Governance and Leadership3) Teaching and Assessing for Learning4) Resources and Support Systems5) Using Results for Continuous

Improvement

Page 6: Using Professional Learning Communities to Address the  AdvancED Standards
Page 7: Using Professional Learning Communities to Address the  AdvancED Standards

Shared Mission, Vision, Values and Goals—All Focused on Student Learning

The very essence of a learning community is a focus on and a commitment to the learning of each student.

• What AdvancED Standard(s) does this align with?• What indicators seem to correlate with this PLC characteristic?

Page 8: Using Professional Learning Communities to Address the  AdvancED Standards

A Collaborative Culture With a Focus on Learning

A PLC is composed of collaborative teams whose members work interdependently to achieve common goals linked to the purpose of learning for all.

• What AdvancED Standard(s) does this align with?• What indicators seem to correlate with this PLC characteristic?

Page 9: Using Professional Learning Communities to Address the  AdvancED Standards

Collective Inquiry Into Best Practice

The teams in a PLC engage in collective inquiry into both best practices in teaching and best practices in learning.

• What AdvancED Standard(s) does this align with?• What indicators seem to correlate with this PLC characteristic?

Page 10: Using Professional Learning Communities to Address the  AdvancED Standards

Action Orientation: Learning by Doing

Members of PLCs are action oriented: They move quickly to turn aspirations into action and visions into reality.

• What AdvancED Standard(s) does this align with?• What indicators seem to correlate with this PLC characteristic?

Page 11: Using Professional Learning Communities to Address the  AdvancED Standards

A Commitment to Continuous Improvement

Inherent to a PLC are a persistent disquiet with the status quo and a constant search for a better way to achieve goals and accomplish the purpose of the organization.

• What AdvancED Standard(s) does this align with?• What indicators seem to correlate with this PLC characteristic?

Page 12: Using Professional Learning Communities to Address the  AdvancED Standards

Results Orientation

Members of a PLC realize that all of their efforts must be assessed on the basis of measureable results rather than intentions.

• What AdvancED Standard(s) does this align with?• What indicators seem to correlate with this PLC characteristic?

Page 13: Using Professional Learning Communities to Address the  AdvancED Standards

PLC OVERVIEW

Page 14: Using Professional Learning Communities to Address the  AdvancED Standards

Professional Learning Communities

• What is a professional learning community?

• What are the implications for AdvancED schools?

Page 15: Using Professional Learning Communities to Address the  AdvancED Standards

PLC Defined

A Professional Learning Community (PLC) is an ongoing process in which educators work collaboratively in recurring cycles of collective inquiry and action research to achieve better results for the students they serve.

Learning By Doing, 2010

Page 16: Using Professional Learning Communities to Address the  AdvancED Standards

The Big Arrow

DistrictGoals & Measures

Aim of theDistrict

Random Acts of Improvement

Page 17: Using Professional Learning Communities to Address the  AdvancED Standards

The Better Big Arrow

DistrictGoals & Measures

Aim of theDistrict

Aligned Acts of Improvement

Page 18: Using Professional Learning Communities to Address the  AdvancED Standards

A PLC is NOT…

• A program• Something you can purchase• A meeting on Tuesdays

• A PLC is not a meeting; it is a way being.• A school does not do PLCs; they become a

PLC.

Page 19: Using Professional Learning Communities to Address the  AdvancED Standards

“Big Ideas” of a PLC

• Focus on student learning rather than teaching.

• Work collaboratively on matters related to learning.

• Hold everyone accountable for the results that fuel continual improvement.

Page 20: Using Professional Learning Communities to Address the  AdvancED Standards

Four Key Questions

1. What is it we expect our students to learn? (standards)

2. How will we know when they have learned it? (evidence, assessments)

3. How will we respond when they don’t learn? (interventions—time and support)

4. How will we respond when they already know it? (differentiation)

Page 21: Using Professional Learning Communities to Address the  AdvancED Standards

Advantages of Teachers Working in Teams

Develop more creative solutions to complex problems Reduce isolation among teachers Build commitment and support for new ideas Foster collective responsibility for students’ success Successfully implement complex plans Allow those closest to the work to collectively improve

teaching and learning Provide possibilities for empowerment that are not available

for individuals

Page 22: Using Professional Learning Communities to Address the  AdvancED Standards

One model of the BLT Team ProcessThis could be the same group as your AdvancED Leadership Team.

1. The BLT (Building Leadership Team) meets regularly and also prior to each scheduled in-service.

2. At each BLT meeting, discussion is held regarding strategies to meet district-wide goals or to plan in-service sessions.

3. The BLT Team takes the information identified at its meeting and plans the best way to introduce and share the information with their whole instuctional staff (may be building specific).

Page 23: Using Professional Learning Communities to Address the  AdvancED Standards

Structures for TeamsHorizontal groups by grade levelVertical teams by subject area Interdisciplinary groupsGroups with common planning timesGroups formed around AdvancED goals, standards

and/or indicatorsPersonal interest in working on a particular goal or topic Others

Page 24: Using Professional Learning Communities to Address the  AdvancED Standards

Collaborative Teams

Page 25: Using Professional Learning Communities to Address the  AdvancED Standards

“Hardware” and “Software”

Hardware:• Form a leadership team • Organize instructional

staff into collaborative teams

• Arrange regular meeting times with agendas and shared minutes

• Focus on goals with results for improving student achievement

Software:• Create norms• Develop collaboration skills• Learn to deal with

“resistors”• Celebrate learning with one

another!

Page 26: Using Professional Learning Communities to Address the  AdvancED Standards

The PLC Journey Begins…

What is it that we must do as a “systems team” in order to work collaboratively and

efficiently as a Professional Learning Community?

P (Professional)L (Learning)C (Community)

Page 27: Using Professional Learning Communities to Address the  AdvancED Standards

Ideas for Setting Up Your PLC

• What—share PLC concept with staff • How—presentation, e-mail from principal

and leadership team • Who—all instructional staff are on a team• When—this semester, next semester;

meeting times • Where--staff meeting, in-service day

Page 28: Using Professional Learning Communities to Address the  AdvancED Standards

Getting Started…Helpful Resources:

• Revisiting Professional Learning Communities at Work (DuFour)• Learning by Doing (DuFour)• Raising the Bar and Closing the Gap, Whatever it Takes (DuFour)• Aligning School Districts as PLCs (Mark Van Clay, Soldwedel, Many)• Building a Professional Learning Community at Work (Graham and

Ferriter)

This website has practical ideas and reproducibles:www.allthingsplc.com

http://pirll.tie.wikispaces.net/AdvancED+handouts

Page 29: Using Professional Learning Communities to Address the  AdvancED Standards

Getting Started…Self-Assessment

Page 30: Using Professional Learning Communities to Address the  AdvancED Standards

Where do we go from here?

• What are some first step(s) that your school can take to implement a PLC?

Page 31: Using Professional Learning Communities to Address the  AdvancED Standards

Getting Started…Where Do We Go From Here?

Page 32: Using Professional Learning Communities to Address the  AdvancED Standards

Where do we go from here?

• What are the first step(s) that we must take to structure or school as a PLC?

• Who will be responsible for initiating this?• What is a realistic timeline for this?

Page 33: Using Professional Learning Communities to Address the  AdvancED Standards

Professional Learning Community Taking ACTION

“Perhaps the greatest insight we have gained in our work with school districts across the continent is that schools that take the plunge and actually begin doing the work of a PLC develop their capacity to help students learn at high levels far more effectively than schools that spend years preparing to become PLCs through reading or even training.”

Richard DuFour, et. al.

Learning by Doing

Page 34: Using Professional Learning Communities to Address the  AdvancED Standards

Thanks for coming today!

Good luck on your PLC Journey!

http://pirll.tie.wikispaces.net/AdvancED+handouts