building teachers’ capacity for success

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Building Teachers’ Capacity for Success Pete Hall Cell: 208-755-3139 Email: [email protected] Twitter: @EducationHall

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Pete Hall Cell: 208-755-3139 Email: [email protected] Twitter: @ EducationHall. Building Teachers’ Capacity for Success. Today’s learning targets:. We can embrace the need to differentiate our coaching and supervision practices among staff members; - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Building Teachers’ Capacity for Success

Building Teachers’ Capacity for Success

Pete HallCell: 208-755-3139Email: [email protected]: @EducationHall

Page 2: Building Teachers’ Capacity for Success

We can embrace the need to differentiate our coaching and supervision practices among staff members;

We can identify the strengths, skills, potential, and reflective “state of mind” of each individual on staff;

We can create an intentional plan to deliver focused feedback and to refine our approach to Instructional Leadership.

Today’s learning targets:

Page 3: Building Teachers’ Capacity for Success

National SAM Innovation Project:

SAM is a professional development process using a unique set of tools to change a principal’s focus from school management tasks to instructional leadership—activities directly connected to improving teaching and learning.

Page 4: Building Teachers’ Capacity for Success

Where should a school invest its resources to receive the biggest and longest-lastingRETURN ON INVESTMENTin student achievement?

Page 5: Building Teachers’ Capacity for Success

Mortimore and Sammons (1987) found…

“Teaching had 6 to 10 times as much impact on achievement as all other factors combined.”

From Schmoker (2006)

Page 6: Building Teachers’ Capacity for Success

National Commission on Teaching and America's Future (1996)“The one factor that can make

the most difference in improving student

achievement is a ‘knowledgeable, skillful

teacher’ in front of the classroom.”

Page 7: Building Teachers’ Capacity for Success

Sanders & Rivers (1996)“The single most important factor

affecting student achievement is teachers…

Students who are assigned to several ineffective teachers in a row have

significantly lower achievement and gains in achievement than those who

are assigned to several highly effective teachers in sequence.”

Page 8: Building Teachers’ Capacity for Success

Thomas Guskey (1999)

“Success [in education] hinges on what happens at the classroom level.”

Page 9: Building Teachers’ Capacity for Success

Kati Haycock (1998)

“If education leaders want to close the achievement gap, they must focus, first and foremost, on developing qualified teachers.”

Page 10: Building Teachers’ Capacity for Success

After 8 more years of research,Kati Haycock (2006)

“Teacher quality turns out to matter a lot.”

Page 11: Building Teachers’ Capacity for Success

Odden & Wallace (2003)

“Improved classroom instruction is the prime

factor to produce student achievement

gains.”

Page 12: Building Teachers’ Capacity for Success

Mike Schmoker, in Results Now (2006)

“We need to realize that it’s about teaching, stupid.”

Page 13: Building Teachers’ Capacity for Success

Bob Marzano, The Art and Science of Teaching (2007)

“One can conclude that the question as to whether effective teachers make a

significant difference in student achievement has been answered.

They do!”

Page 14: Building Teachers’ Capacity for Success

Richard Elmore (2009)

“Teaching determines learning.”

Page 15: Building Teachers’ Capacity for Success

Rick DuFour & Bob Marzano (2011)

“Schools must utilize strategies that result in more good teaching in more classrooms more of the time.”

Page 16: Building Teachers’ Capacity for Success

Bryan Goodwin (2013)

“Decades of research suggest that effective teachers can have a tremendous, positive effect on student success.”

Page 17: Building Teachers’ Capacity for Success

This is not new.

“Those who educate children well are more to be honored than they who produce them; for these only gave them life, those the art of living well.”

Aristotle (circa 325 B.C.)

Page 18: Building Teachers’ Capacity for Success

Simple, yet profound equation.

High Quality Teachers = Increased Student Achievement

Page 19: Building Teachers’ Capacity for Success

Improving classroom instruction

HIGH EXPECTATIONS HIGH SUPPORTDEMAND DEVELOP

Page 20: Building Teachers’ Capacity for Success

PLC

Instructional Coach

Teacher

Administrator

Grade Level Teams Achievement TeamsDepartment Teams Faculty Council Principals’ MeetingsAcademic Council

SpecialistsDepartment Chairs Supervisors

Principals Asst. Principals Central Office

Relationship Triangulation

Page 21: Building Teachers’ Capacity for Success

Marcus Buckingham:“First, Break All the Rules” (1999)

“Great managers…break all the rules of conventional wisdom. They consistently disregard the Golden Rule.”

(Pg. 11)

Page 22: Building Teachers’ Capacity for Success

Changin’ ain’t easy

“…because so many teachers feel called to their profession, asking for

change is like asking them to change religions.”

(Differentiated Coaching, Jane Kise p.70)

Page 23: Building Teachers’ Capacity for Success

“Every unique and special carbon-based life form in your school

appreciates and deserves unique and special treatment, but what’s

more, each one needs individualized handling. It is the equivalent of

educational malpractice for us to usher all our teachers into neat rows, robotically interacting with them and

leading them with nary a thought to the gifts they

bring to their classrooms.”

Hall & Simeral. (2008). Building Teachers’ Capacity for Success: A collaborative approach for coaches and

school leaders

Page 24: Building Teachers’ Capacity for Success

Here’s a shocker:

Principals are dealing with “competing pressures that may make the job untenable.”

Center for the Future of Teaching and Learning (at West Ed), 2012

Page 25: Building Teachers’ Capacity for Success

Answer the Bus Question:

Page 26: Building Teachers’ Capacity for Success

“It’s not the doing that matters;

it’s the thinking about the doing.”

~ John Dewey (1859-1952)

Page 27: Building Teachers’ Capacity for Success
Page 28: Building Teachers’ Capacity for Success

Continuum of Self-Reflection

Unaware Conscious Action Refineme

nt

Page 29: Building Teachers’ Capacity for Success

Self-Reflection

Page 30: Building Teachers’ Capacity for Success

CONTINUUM OF SELF-REFLECTION: pg. 172-173

Page 31: Building Teachers’ Capacity for Success

CONTINUUM OF SELF-REFLECTION

Page 32: Building Teachers’ Capacity for Success

CONTINUUM OF SELF-REFLECTION

Page 33: Building Teachers’ Capacity for Success

CONTINUUM OF SELF-REFLECTION

Page 34: Building Teachers’ Capacity for Success

CONTINUUM OF SELF-REFLECTION

Page 35: Building Teachers’ Capacity for Success

CONTINUUM OF SELF-REFLECTION

Page 36: Building Teachers’ Capacity for Success

Unaware StageFocused on the ACT of teaching

Goal: To increase awareness of the need for change and foster a desire to learn.

Need: A partner to help them look beyond the routine of what they do each day.

Page 37: Building Teachers’ Capacity for Success

Conscious Stage

Focused first on SELFA knowing-doing gap exists

Goal: To motivate and show how to apply pedagogical knowledge more consistently.

Need: Requires explicit guidance and coaching.

Page 38: Building Teachers’ Capacity for Success

Action Stage

Focused on the SCIENCE of teaching“In it to win it”

Goal: To build on experience and help strengthen expertise.

Need: To build an awareness of multiple “right” approaches to a problem.

Page 39: Building Teachers’ Capacity for Success

Refinement Stage

Focused on the ART of teaching

Goal: To encourage long-term growth and continued reflection.

Need: Opportunities for reflection and analysis.

Page 40: Building Teachers’ Capacity for Success

Examining the Continuum The mission, if you choose to accept

it: Find the scenario page in your handouts In a group, read the four teacher profiles Identify the stage at which each teacher

is Scribble some notes about the

administrator’s role (and the coach’s role)

Brainstorm some ideas about how to best support and build this teacher’s capacity

Page 41: Building Teachers’ Capacity for Success

PLC

Instructional Coach

Teacher

Administrator

Grade Level Teams Achievement Teams Department TeamsFaculty Council Principals’ MeetingsAcademic Council

SpecialistsDepartment Chairs Supervisors

Principals Asst. Principals Central Office

Relationship Triangulation

Page 42: Building Teachers’ Capacity for Success

PLC

Instructional Coach

Administrator

Mrs. C Conscious

NavigatorMotivator/ Strategist

Page 43: Building Teachers’ Capacity for Success

PLC

Instructional Coach

Administrator

Mr. D Unaware

DirectorUnconditional Partner

Page 44: Building Teachers’ Capacity for Success

PLC

Instructional Coach

Administrator

Mrs. W Action

PrompterTeacher/ Mentor

Page 45: Building Teachers’ Capacity for Success

PLC

Instructional Coach

Administrator

Mr. M Refinement

ChallengerCollaborator

Page 46: Building Teachers’ Capacity for Success

“Reflection is the beginning of reform.”

~ Mark Twain

Page 47: Building Teachers’ Capacity for Success

Back to the Question du Jour:

Where should a school invest its resources to receive the biggest and

longest-lasting RETURN ON INVESTMENT in student achievement?

Page 48: Building Teachers’ Capacity for Success

Hattie (1992), quoted in Marzano’s “School Leadership that Works”

“The most powerful single modification that enhances achievement is feedback.”

Page 49: Building Teachers’ Capacity for Success

Types of Feedback by Continuum StageContinuum Stage Feedback Type

Unaware Positive praise and specific suggestions

Conscious Specific observations and leading prompts

Action Specific observations and open prompts

Refinement Specific observations and challenging prompts

Page 50: Building Teachers’ Capacity for Success

Making it happen1) Review the Continuum2) Consider your teachers3) Select one teacher4) Create a plan for moving this

teacher forward5) Identify the teacher’s stage on the

Continuum6) Brainstorm some reflective

questions that match the teacher & the stage

7) Role-play a growth-oriented feedback conversation with that teacher

Page 51: Building Teachers’ Capacity for Success

Why differentiate?

“To you, Mrs. Walstad may be just one of the 32 teachers you have to evaluate this year; but to Mrs. Walstad, she is one of one.”

THE Pete Hall (2004) The first-year principal

Page 52: Building Teachers’ Capacity for Success

You’ve heard of the saying, “Give a man a fish, feed him for a day, teach a man to fish, feed him for a lifetime.” How does the model described here embody that statement?

Page 53: Building Teachers’ Capacity for Success

We can embrace the need to differentiate our coaching and supervision practices among staff members;

We can identify the strengths, skills, potential, and reflective “state of mind” of each individual on staff;

We can create an intentional plan to deliver focused feedback and to refine our approach to Instructional Leadership.

Today’s learning targets:

Page 54: Building Teachers’ Capacity for Success

NOW WHAT?

Page 55: Building Teachers’ Capacity for Success

Thank you!

Pete HallCell: 208-755-3139Email: [email protected]: @EducationHall