Download presentation
1
Professional Learning Communities
An Educational Model Built on Collaboration
2
What is a Team? Activity 1:
On the next slide, you will see a series of 21 letters. You will have 30 seconds to memorize as many of them as possible. When the 30 seconds is up, the diagram will disappear and you must write as many letters as you can in their proper location on your paper.
3
J D X B M T R V C N Z A L Y Q H S E K U F 10 9 11 13 14 8 12 7 2 1 3 4 6 5 15 16 26 25 27 28 30 29 24 23 19 18 20 21 22 17
4
What is a Team? Activity 2-
Now get together with 2 other people and compile all of the letters that you got correct. See how many letters you placed correctly collectively.
5
What is a Team? Activity 3-
Now, between 3 or 4 of you, take 2 minutes to make a plan how you would approach this task together. Come up with a plan how the 3 members could memorize the 21 letters given another 30 seconds. You will now have 30 seconds to look at a new diagram and together, record as many letters as possible.
6
M G X B J V L T A N Y C R Z F H K D S U Q 11 9 10 14 8 13 12 5 2 1 3 4 6 15 7 19 26 25 27 28 30 29 24 23 18 17 20 21 22 16
7
What is a Team? Discuss with your partners under which circumstances you were acting as a(n): Individual Team Group Which method was most effective?
8
Whose methods were the best?
How did they do it? Could someone else’s strategy be combined with it to make it even better?
9
What is a Team Community?
Sharing strategies school-wide and working together to use each other’s strengths to create a product that is better than any team could have created alone now makes you a . . . COMMUNITY!
10
The Power of Collaboration
Step 1- Take 1 minute to write on each card a classroom-level barrier that keeps students from achieving their potential. Don’t list outside influences that we have no control over like “Class size is too big” or “Not enough money.” Step 2- In a group of 3 or 4, combine your items into one stack, eliminating repeats and similar items. Step 3- Separate the stack into two piles: 1) Issues that collaboration can solve 2) Issues that collaboration cannot solve Bring them to the front and stick them on the two tables.
11
PLC Characteristics Shared mission, vision, values, and goals
Collective inquiry Collaborative teams centered around data Action orientation and focus on learning Continuous improvement Results orientation
12
PLC Characteristics Shared mission, vision, values, and goals Collective inquiry Collaborative teams centered around data Action orientation and focus on learning Continuous improvement Results orientation Break up into 6 groups and on a chart paper, describe what your assigned characteristic would look like in a PLC school that had mastered this characteristic. Be prepared to share with the rest of the group.
13
PLC Characteristics Shared mission, vision, values, and goals
Collective inquiry Collaborative teams centered around data Action orientation and focus on learning Continuous improvement Results orientation Group 1 share out
14
The Four Pillars of a PLC
- Mission - Vision - Values - Goals collective commitment to guiding principles that articulate what the people in the school believe and what they seek to create embedded in the hearts and minds of the people throughout the school
15
The Four Pillars of a PLC
- Mission - Vision - Values - Goals collective commitment to guiding principles that articulate what the people in the school believe and what they seek to create embedded in the hearts and minds of the people throughout the school
16
Pillar # 1: MISSION “The fundamental purpose of an organization.”
mis sion [mish-uhn] – noun “The fundamental purpose of an organization.”
17
“Why do we exist?” MISSION The mission of an organization is
found by answering the question: “Why do we exist?”
18
“Our mission … [because] we choose to accept it …” Learning!
19
Fundamental Questions to Answer
MISSION Fundamental Questions to Answer 1. What is it we expect all students to learn? 2. How will we know when they have learned it? 3. How will we respond when they don’t learn? 4. How will we respond when they already know it?
20
Clarifies Priorities Sharpens Focus
Pillar # 1: MISSION Clarifies Priorities and Sharpens Focus
21
Real Mission Statements
Through the cooperative effort of parents, community, and staff, ___ School is committed to challenging students to strive for continued personal growth and academic achievement in a caring supportive environment where cultural and intellectual diversities are enhanced and independent thinking is emphasized through a quality academic and vocational program.
22
Weak Words and Loophole Words
Through the cooperative effort of parents, community, and staff, ___ School is committed to challenging students to strive for continued personal growth and academic achievement in a caring supportive environment where cultural and intellectual diversities are enhanced and independent thinking is emphasized through a quality academic and vocational program.
23
Real Mission Statement 2
The mission of the ____ School community is to ensure that students attain academic excellence, lead productive lives and value diversity. We will set measurable goals, provide the means to reach the goals, monitor progress and design interventions to meet the changing needs of students. We will instill in our students pride in our school community while encouraging growth through enriching educational and cultural experiences. Analyze the Mission Statement
24
The Four Pillars of a PLC
- Mission - Vision - Values - Goals collective commitment to guiding principles that articulate what the people in the school believe and what they seek to create embedded in the hearts and minds of the people throughout the school
25
Pillar # 2: VISION future “A realistic, credible, attractive
vi sion [vizh-uhn] – noun “A realistic, credible, attractive future for an organization.”
26
“What do we hope to become at some point in the future?”
VISION The vision of an organization is found by answering the question: “What do we hope to become at some point in the future?”
27
Fundamental Questions to Answer
VISION Fundamental Questions to Answer 1. “What are the essentials for our students?” 2. “If we did an excellent job with the essentials, what would that look like?”
28
Pillar #2: VISION Establishes Direction
29
The Four Pillars of a PLC
- Mission - Vision - Values - Goals collective commitment to guiding principles that articulate what the people in the school believe and what they seek to create embedded in the hearts and minds of the people throughout the school
30
Pillar # 3: VALUES attitudes, behaviors, and commitments “The specific
val ues [val-yoos] – noun “The specific attitudes, behaviors, and commitments that must be demonstrated in order to advance the organization’s vision.”
31
VALUES The values of an organization are found by answering the question: “How must we behave to create the school that will achieve our purpose?”
32
Professional Learning Community VALUE Statements
Represent a Fundamental Shift - from belief to behavior - from thinking to doing - from “we believe” to “we will”
33
Pillar #3: VALUES Guide Behavior
34
The Four Pillars of a PLC
- Mission - Vision - Values - Goals collective commitment to guiding principles that articulate what the people in the school believe and what they seek to create embedded in the hearts and minds of the people throughout the school
35
Pillar # 4: GOALS milestones “Measurable
goals [gols] – noun “Measurable milestones that can be used to assess progress in advancing toward a vision.”
36
“What results do we seek and how will we know we are making progress?”
GOALS The goals of an organization are found by answering the question: “What results do we seek and how will we know we are making progress?”
37
Professional Learning Community GOALS
Provide short-term priorities and steps to take to achieve the “benchmarks” of student achievement Foster both the results orientation of the PLC and the individual and collective accountability for achieving the results Are essential to the collaborative team process
38
Meeting Short-Term GOALS
Helps sustain momentum toward the Mission Allows for celebration of small Successes Creates an atmosphere of Teamwork
39
Pillar #4: GOALS Establish Priorities
40
Which Goal(s) Focus on Learning?
We will use 3 SDAIE strategies before our next meeting. We will reteach standard 2 Thursday and Friday after school in room 201. We will do a “balancing equations” intervention and retest, shooting for 80% proficiency.
41
The Four Pillars of a PLC - Review -
Mission: Clarifies Priorities/Sharpens Focus Vision: Gives Direction Values: Guide Behavior Goals: Establish Priorities
42
PLC Characteristics Collective inquiry
Shared mission, vision, values, and goals Collective inquiry Collaborative teams centered around data Action orientation and focus on learning Continuous improvement Results orientation Group 2 share out
43
PLC’s Require COLLECTIVE INQUIRY
When engaged in a process of collective inquiry we are asked to: - question the status quo - seek new methods - test those methods - reflect on the results
44
When engaged in PLC COLLECTIVE INQUIRY
“The process of searching for the answers is more important than having an answer.”
45
PLC Characteristics Collaborative teams centered around data
Shared mission, vision, values, and goals Collective inquiry Collaborative teams centered around data Action orientation and experimentation Continuous improvement Results orientation Group 3 share out
46
PLC’s Require COLLABORATIVE TEAMS
col lab o ra tion [kuh-lab-uh-rey-shuh n] – noun “A systematic process in which we work together interdependently to analyze and impact professional practice in order to improve our individual and collective results.”
47
Four PLC Assumptions about Collaboration
1. If schools are to improve, staff must develop the capacity to function as professional learning communities. 2. If schools are to function as professional learning communities, they must develop a collaborative culture focused on data related to student learning.
48
Four PLC Assumptions about Collaboration
3. If schools are to develop a collaborative culture, they must overcome traditional teacher isolation. 4. If schools are to overcome their tradition of teacher isolation, teachers must learn to work in effective, high performing teams.
49
Brainstorming It has been said by a wise man that “The hardest part about PLCs are the people.” (Horton, 2010) What is your school presently doing to help teachers to function in high-performing teams?
50
Brainstorming
51
In a PLC school with high performing teams …
Collaboration is embedded into every aspect of the school culture Time for collaboration is built into the school calendar Products of collaboration are made explicit
52
In a PLC school with high performing teams …
Facilitation skills, protocols, and student work guide collaboration Interventions are automatic, mandatory, and within the school day (afternoon discussion)
53
In a PLC school with high performing teams …
Are guided by . . .
54
In a PLC school with high performing teams …
Are guided by . . .
55
In a PLC school with high performing teams …
Are guided by . . . Norms !-) Norman Schwarzkopf, Norman Rockwell, Norm from Cheers
56
In a PLC school with high performing teams …
Teams pursue specific and measurable performance goals: Strategic & Specific Measurable Attainable Results-oriented Time bound
57
In a PLC school with high performing teams …
Teams have access to relevant information However, they must be careful of the DRIP syndrome … Data Rich, Information Poor
58
The Heart of the Professional Learning Community
The TEAM LEARNING PROCESS Clarify 8 – 10 essential outcomes per semester by course or grade level Develop at least 4 Common Assessments Establish specific targets/benchmarks
59
The Heart of the Professional Learning Community
The TEAM LEARNING PROCESS 4. Administer assessments at common times 5. Analyze results from assessments 6. Identify and implement improvement strategies
60
Professional Learning Community Characteristics
Shared mission, vision, values, and goals Collective inquiry Collaborative teams Action orientation and experimentation Continuous improvement Results orientation Group 4 share out
61
PLC’s Require ACTION ORIENTATION & EXPERIMENTATION
“Research based DOING” Developing and testing hypotheses Developing, testing, evaluating theories
62
PLC’s Require ACTION ORIENTATION & EXPERIMENTATION
Having tolerance for results that aren’t anticipated Seeing “failed experiments” as an opportunity to learn more and begin again
63
Professional Learning Community Characteristics
Shared mission, vision, values, and goals Collective inquiry Collaborative teams Action orientation and experimentation Continuous improvement Results orientation Group 5 share out
64
PLC’s are Focused on CONTINUOUS IMPROVEMENT
Each member of the organization (school) is engaged in considering key questions: What is our fundamental purpose? What do we hope to achieve? What are our strategies for becoming better? What criteria will we use to assess our improvement efforts?
65
In a PLC school aimed at CONTINUOUS IMPROVEMENT
All members of the Professional Learning Community know and understand that the Mission and Vision are ideals to be worked toward in the long run.
66
Professional Learning Community Characteristics
Shared mission, vision, values, and goals Collective inquiry Collaborative teams Action orientation and experimentation Continuous improvement Results orientation Group 6 share out
67
PLC’s Have a RESULTS ORIENTATION
Outcomes (not intentions) are the measure of success. “Hope” is not a strategy.
68
Professional Learning Community Characteristics
Shared mission, vision, values, and goals Collective inquiry Collaborative teams Action orientation and experimentation Continuous improvement Results orientation
69
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
70
Student-Based Protocol Video
As you watch this video, consider the following: Did this protocol help the meeting flow? Did the protocol have any negative consequences? Did the group norms affect how they interact with each other?
Similar presentations
© 2025 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.