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Schools as Professional Learning Communities
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Schools as Professional Learning Communities
Collaborative Activities and Strategies for Professional Development

Second Edition
Edited by:

Foreword by Susan Sullivan



October 2008 | 272 pages | Corwin
This resource for leaders of professional learning communities examines the knowledge, skills, and dispositions needed to work effectively with teachers, parents, administrators, students, and their school community members at large.

Schools as Professional Learning Communities, Second Edition, a one-stop sourcebook for building a learning community, presents research-based activities and strategies that offer ongoing support for teachers. All activities are appropriate for use with study groups or school leadership teams as they seek to build their learning communities. Leaders will be able to offer teachers meaningful opportunities to meet, discuss, and work together to build and strengthen their understandings about teaching and learning and improve learning experiences for all students.

In this new edition, the authors have added:

- A Making it Work! activities section within each chapter to help teachers reexamine their educational beliefs and assumptions that guide their behaviour

- The School Improvement Framework for Learning Community Schools - a discussion of new strategies for classroom observation

- New information on e-portfolios, coaching, the importance of emotional intelligence, and the impact of No Child Left Behind

 
Foreword by Susan Sullivan
 
Preface
 
About the Authors
 
1. The Professional Learning Community: An Overview
Preview of the Chapter

 
What is a learning community?

 
What are the characteristics of a learning community?

 
What is the role of the learning community in an age of accountability?

 
What are the key elements of the school improvement framework for learning community schools?

 
How is student achievement affected by the learning community model?

 
How are teachers affected by the learning community?

 
How do refelection and reflective practice contribute to the building of learning communities?

 
Conclusion

 
Making It Work

 
Activities

 
 
2. Learning Through Shared Leadership
What are the roles of educational leaders in a learning community?

 
What steps must a principal take to develop a shared mission and vision?

 
What strategies can educational leaders use to communicate and sustain the vision?

 
What about emotional intelligence and leadership?

 
How do principals build the trust that contributes to improved student achievement?

 
What communication skills do leaders need to successfully lead learning communities?

 
What do leaders need to know about the change process?

 
How do you begin the process of building a learning community?

 
Conclusion

 
Making It Work

 
Activities

 
 
3. Learning Through Ongoing Professional Development
What are the guiding principles for professional development in learning communities?

 
What strategies meet the needs of adults as learners?

 
How can we find enough time for professional development?

 
How do we assess the effectiveness of professional development?

 
How do we get started with professional development?

 
Conclusion

 
Making It Work

 
Activities

 
 
4. Learning Through Teamwork
How can we overcome barriers to effective teamwork?

 
What behaviors promote effective teamwork?

 
What are the stages of group development?

 
How may conflict among team members be effectively managed?

 
What are effective ways for teams to make decisions?

 
How should meetings be conducted to promote team development in learning communities?

 
Conclusion

 
Making It Work

 
Activities

 
 
5. Learning Through Study Groups
What is a study group?

 
What are the purposes and benefits of study groups for a community of learners?

 
How do you initiate a study group?

 
How can teacher book study groups be planned and conducted?

 
Conclusion

 
Making it Work

 
 
6. Learning Through Classroom Observation
What is the purpose of classroom observation?

 
How does the standards-based walk-through for teachers contribute to a culture of collaborative instruction?

 
How does conferencing with teachers set the stage for the calssroom observation process?

 
How does clinical supervision improve learning and foster collaboration?

 
What about the observation of the differentiated classroom?

 
Conclusion

 
Making it Work

 
Activities

 
 
7. Learning Through Collaborative Approaches
How may issues of equity and diversity be addressed in a collaborative learning community?

 
What is the role of collaboration in the learning community?

 
How do mentoring and coaching enhance the learning community?

 
How does collaborative assessment of student work build learning communities?

 
How may we collaborate with parents in the learning community?

 
Conclusion

 
Making It Work

 
Activities

 
 
8. Learning Through Professional Portfolios
What is the role of professional portfolios in the learning community?

 
What goes into a professional portfolio?

 
How do you get started developing the portfolio?

 
How should the portfolio be organized?

 
What about electronic portfolios?

 
How may the portfolio be evaluated?

 
What strategies support the development and use of portfolios in the learning community?

 
Conclusion

 
Making it Work

 
Activities

 
 
9. Sustaining the Professional Learning Community
How do we sustain a culture that supports a collaborative approach to improving instructional practice and student outcomes?

 
How do we sustain the structures that support learning community schools?

 
What must we do to maintain the focus on continuous student learning that characterizes learning communities?

 
How do we maintain a focus on the school's mission and shared vision statements that stress student achievement?

 
What steps must be taken to ensure that shared leadership is sustained in learning community schools?

 
Conclusion

 
Making It Work

 
Activities

 
 
References
 
Index

"Brings a completely different philosophy of schools to the forefront and provides specific strategies and activities that promote the school as a learning community with student learning as a focus."

Sharon Neff, Technology and Literacy Specialist
Orchard Park Elementary School, Fort Mill, SC

"An excellent resource for teacher leaders, administrators, or mentors as a tool for establishing useful collaboration. There are specific examples and tips that can be applied to collaborative groups."

Kandace Klenz, Literacy Teacher
Peninsula Elementary School, Moses Lake, WA

"Roberts and Pruitt offer practical advice to educators who seek to address one of the greatest obstacles to creating effective schools: how to get school staff to collaborate and learn from each other. Their insights and suggestions are smart, useful, and demonstrate a genuine understanding of how schools work."

Pedro A. Noguera, Executive Director
Metropolitan Center for Urban Education, New York University

"The wealth of ideas and information leads readers to make their own deductions and formulate their own vision and mission. This is an important step toward school improvement. The book is also very practical and has excellent examples."

Lyndon Oswald, Principal
Sandcreek Middle School, Idaho Falls, ID

"The case studies, examples, and references to additional sources of information such as Web sites make this an excellent study guide and reference work for leaders who are engaged in the difficult task of building learning communities."

Max Skidmore, Academic Professional
Department of Lifelong Education, Administration, and Policy, The University of Georgia

"Provides aspiring educational leaders with the tools they need to build learning communities among school teachers. The activities are not only creative but allow for the development of complex skills critical to leading and transforming contemporary schools. This is a must-read book for those looking for school-based professional development activities and for those preparing leaders to be change agents in the 21st century."

Hazel M. Carter, Assistant Professor of Educational Leadership
The City College/CUNY

"Roberts and Pruitt have created a guidebook that those in leadership positions can use to successfully implement the learning community model. The activities included skillfully address the issues that teachers and leaders face as they strive to transform their schools into places where learning opportunities for all can be maximized. This book is a storehouse of information with many practical applications and ideas that can be used by those who are engaged in the school improvement process."

Linnea Weiland, Department Chair and Associate Professor
William Patterson University

Well designed and aligned with the goals of the course. Students found this book applicable outside of class.

Dr Amy Burkman
School Of Education, University of Texas - Permian Basin
September 8, 2011

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