DuFour emphasizes that for PLCs to
work teachers must 'buy into' the concept.
They must be given opportunities to
do their own exploration and discovery
on issues related to student learning.
This involves not only putting teachers
together in teams, but also supporting
teams by providing initial training,
follow-up, and opportunities to observe
successful PLCs in action. "It's
a process that is designed to change
the culture of your school. It's not
an easy process; it's hard to change
old patterns and assumptions."
The 'big ideas' or questions at the
core of PLCs are:
• What do we want each student
to learn? How will we know when each
student has learned it?
• How will we respond when a student
experiences difficulty in learning?
• For many of us, frameworks and
content standards guide our curriculum.
The process involves breaking down
exactly what it is we want students
to learn. Team members decide on assessments
that identify what skills and knowledge
students will acquire. When students
have difficulty learning, the response
is timely, based on intervention rather
than remediation, and directive rather
than inviting.
Anne Jolly, director of Professional
Learning Teams at the Southeastern Education
Research and Development Laboratory
suggests that PLCs should meet weekly.
She suggests guidelines to facilitate
the process:
- Get a firm handle on your team's
purpose and revisit it frequently.
- Build in opportunities for success
with short-term "doable"
benchmarks.
- Keep negative energy at bay.
- Relax and experiment - "Give
yourselves permission to try new teaching
strategies and be unsuccessful."
- Develop a concrete product that
demonstrates what your team is accomplishing
– including a rubric, matrix,
lesson plan, etc. – and share
it school-wide.
- Take time to reflect.
- Always make a decision as a team
before leaving the meeting.
- Rotate responsibilities to avoid
member burnout.
Successful Professional Learning
Communities can eventually become part
of the school culture. Conditions needed
include time for teachers to meet and
talk, policies that support site-based
decision-making, and self-directed professional
development planning. Physical Educators,
willing to work together and hold themselves
accountable for meeting the needs of
students by focusing on learning rather
than teaching, will see positive change.
some resources:
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