Thursday, June 27, 2013

collaboration opportunity


The theme of intentional, meaningful professional development and peer collaboration was strong throughout the OECD presentations on Singapore and Finland as it was in the Darling-Hammond book.  I was impressed with the opportunities that teachers had to reflect on teaching practice and collaborate with peers built right into their daily schedules. It seemed that the new teachers had a predictable process and routine to reflect on their teaching skills. It was apparent that the experienced teachers were learning along with the new teacher as they reviewed video clips of lessons together and discussed the interactions between the students, the learning targets, and the strategies of the teachers being viewed. The experienced teachers had to be reflective about what they were doing and why in order to have these collaborative discussions. Through this they demonstrate that learning is a continual process for everyone in the education field.

There will be at least one new teacher in our program, and possibly two, after 20 years of the same teachers and many of the same classroom aides. At this point we don’t know whether the new teacher(s) will be completely new to the profession or someone who has experience elsewhere. Either way, this may be the opportunity to break the present cycle of going to our rooms, shutting the door, and only sharing with one another in a more or less haphazard way. I have been assigned to be the mentor teacher. Though I don’t expect that my working schedule will change significantly, I do believe that I can work in some of the practices of intentional peer collaboration, though only to a small degree by comparison to the time in Finland or Singapore.  I already have the support of the director to set aside some dedicated time for the process, though we haven’t established what that process will look like. At the minimum I would like to have a time for some planning together and reflecting on the prior week. If sub pay is available then we could do some observations in person. If not, we could watch videos of lessons to guide discussions.

2 comments:

  1. I am so excited for the new school year to start! Our school district is setting aside some time every week for PLCs. We will have delayed start on Mondays. I feel that this is a great opportunity for us. I worry about how effective it will be and hope that its possible lack of immediate success will turn it into another flash in the pan initiative. Unsurprisingly, there are some teachers that are complaining and not open to learning about the value of this opportunity. There is also the issue of training. I don’t think a one day workshop will significantly prepare us to participate in PLC effectively. We will have the idea – but the scaffolding supports will need to be there as we learn. I am also concerned that just one hour a week really is not enough time to dig in deep. I appreciate the movement to PLCs, but hope it is supported enough to be successful.
    I am excited for what you will be doing also. Sounds like the timing is perfect to support some changes!

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  2. Lynette, I think the new teachers will be lucky to have you as a mentor. It's great that you are in the building with them. Our new teachers are assigned a mentor who is usually a retired teacher and not in the building for support. I'm not sure how effective that is.

    We are lucky in our district to have late start on Mondays which allows for collaboration and some professional development. At our school, our principal has been extremely supportive of teachers teaching each other because there's no money to bring in people or send people anywhere. I'm hoping this year our PD can be a little more focused.

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