One of the areas of best practices that the article explored, and one that certainly hits home with me, is that of job-embedded teacher professional development. It states five elements that are found in successful professional development programs:
Collaborative learning – If you follow our blog, you’ve undoubtedly read about the importance of collaboration in teacher professional development. Unfortunately today in many schools, collaboration is limited. In fact, the 2012 Met Life Teacher Survey
painted a grim picture on teacher collaboration with more than six in
ten teachers saying that time to collaborate with other teachers has
decreased or stayed the same in 2012 as compared to 2011. With pressure
on teachers and districts for education improvements mounting and
implementation of the Common Core State Standards looming the need for
teacher collaboration and professional development is imperative.
Links between curriculum, assessment, and professional-learning decisions in the context of teaching specific content
– What teachers teach in the classroom needs to be based almost solely
on the gap between what a student knows and their learning targets.
Formative assessment, when combined with sound interim and summative
assessment data, can arm teachers with the information they need to
reach all students.
Active learning – Formative assessment here also makes sense. The day-to-day, minute-by-minute kind
of assessment is needed to elicit evidence of student learning and move
the learner forward. Formative assessment strategies and tactics can
also help create classroom environments where students take control of
their own learning.
Deeper knowledge of content and how to teach it – Sound professional development has to go beyond techniques, where teachers become subject matter experts.
Sustained learning, over multiple days and weeks – Teacher professional development needs to be ongoing, teacher-led, and collaborative for true success.
Five elements for successful embedded teacher professional development dovetail nicely into the above five key elements:
1. Choice – Teachers are
like students; they need and appreciate choice. Choice within a given
framework or focus allows teachers to determine their personal
priorities.
2. Flexibility – In
addition to choice, teachers need to be allowed to make modifications to
make the new learning work best in their own classroom environments.
3. Small Steps – Learning
is incremental. It takes time to change practice and to be lasting it
must become a part of the teacher’s routine. Professional development
for teachers that allows them to practice, in small steps, supports this
idea. As Carol Dweck
often states, by applying yourself to the task of becoming a little
better each and every day over a period of time, you will get a lot
better.
4. Support
5. Accountability – Change
in teaching practice is challenging and requires both support and
accountability. Teacher Learning Communities provide teachers the
opportunity to develop personal action plans, report back to the group
what happened as a result of implementing those plans, and reflect and
receive feedback (support) from colleagues who are working on the same
changes in practice.
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