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Steve Zemelman, Director, Illinois Writing Project Harry Ross, Associate Professor, Department of Secondary Education National College of Education, National Louis University NCTE Webinar March 27, 2012

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Page 1: Steve Zemelman, Director, Illinois Writing Project Harry Ross, Associate Professor, Department of Secondary Education National College of Education, National

Steve Zemelman, Director, Illinois Writing Project

Harry Ross, Associate Professor, Department of Secondary Education

National College of Education, National Louis University

NCTE WebinarMarch 27, 2012

Page 2: Steve Zemelman, Director, Illinois Writing Project Harry Ross, Associate Professor, Department of Secondary Education National College of Education, National

Steve Zemelman Director of Illinois Writing ProjectCo- author of Best Practice and 13 Steps to Teach

Empowerment

Meet Our Presenters

Page 3: Steve Zemelman, Director, Illinois Writing Project Harry Ross, Associate Professor, Department of Secondary Education National College of Education, National

Harry RossA professor in the Secondary Education Department

at National Louis UniversityWorks with teachers in Chicago high schoolsCo-author of 13 Steps to Teacher Empowerment

Meet Our Presenters

Page 4: Steve Zemelman, Director, Illinois Writing Project Harry Ross, Associate Professor, Department of Secondary Education National College of Education, National

Widespread budget cuts and union-bustingUnsupported administrative mandatesPolicies by politicians and bureaucrats who don’t

understand teachers’ workTeacher job satisfaction has decreased by 15%

since 2009 and is the worst in 20 years.http://www.metlife.com/assets/cao/contributions/

foundation/american-teacher/MetLife-Teacher-Survey-2011.pdf

The Situation: Teachers Needto Speak Out – but Wisely

Page 5: Steve Zemelman, Director, Illinois Writing Project Harry Ross, Associate Professor, Department of Secondary Education National College of Education, National

We can’t sit back passively while our hard work is getting bashed.

Reponses need to be carefully crafted and echoed by many voices.

Susan Komen emails as an example of what’s possible: http://www.nytimes.com/2012/02/04/health/policy/komen-breast-cancer-group-reverses-decision-that-cut-off-planned-parenthood.html?pagewanted=all

The Situation: Teachers Needto Speak Out – but Wisely

Page 6: Steve Zemelman, Director, Illinois Writing Project Harry Ross, Associate Professor, Department of Secondary Education National College of Education, National

Knowing more about skills and strategies makes it easier to speak - and not lose our jobs in the process.

Levels of advocacy teachers can engage in:

Promote change in your own building Build understanding of your work among leaders in

your districtInform parents and community members about what it

takes to achieve deep learning in classroomsInfluence state and national policies

The Situation: Teachers Needto Speak Out – but Wisely

Page 7: Steve Zemelman, Director, Illinois Writing Project Harry Ross, Associate Professor, Department of Secondary Education National College of Education, National

A few stories to illustrate the sorts of teacher efforts we’re talking about.

Your thoughts on the educational issues in your school and community and how teachers address them (or not).

Concepts for re-thinking our roles, influencing policies in our schools, and effectively using our influence.

4 key strategies for using our voices wisely.

Agenda for this Session

Page 8: Steve Zemelman, Director, Illinois Writing Project Harry Ross, Associate Professor, Department of Secondary Education National College of Education, National

We are not telling you what issues to address or what stands to take. Those will be your decisions.

We’ll focus on the thinking, attitudes, and strategies that can help you to speak up and make change happen.

That’s what has been a missing link for so many teachers.

Overall Perspective

Page 9: Steve Zemelman, Director, Illinois Writing Project Harry Ross, Associate Professor, Department of Secondary Education National College of Education, National

Learning from Leadership: Investigating the Links to Improved Student Learning, by Karen Seashore Louis, et al., University of MN (2010)

Some conclusions from the study: When principals and teachers share leadership, student achievement is higher.

When teachers feel attached to a professional community, they use instructional practices linked to improved student learning.

Higher-performing schools provide more opportunities for influence by teacher teams, parents, and students.

What happens when the school improvement process is top-down, without significant teacher collaboration? See Charles Payne’s So Much Reform, So Little Change: The Persistence of Failure in Urban Schools (Harvard, 2008).

Page 10: Steve Zemelman, Director, Illinois Writing Project Harry Ross, Associate Professor, Department of Secondary Education National College of Education, National

A high school teacher collaborated with a fellow teacher to teach a previously out-of-control class.

An art teacher figured out how to win permission to have students paint murals in the hallways.

A teacher uses Facebook and Twitter to fight back against ignorant comments about teaching.

Some Teacher Stories

Page 11: Steve Zemelman, Director, Illinois Writing Project Harry Ross, Associate Professor, Department of Secondary Education National College of Education, National

Now we’d like to hear from you. We have two questions:

1) What are one or two issues you believe need to be addressed – in your school, district, community, or nationally?

2) How are teachers addressing these – or not?

Write a phrase about each question on the next slide –with your “A” tool – or in the chat space on the bottom left of your computer screen.

Raise your hand by clicking on the hand icon if you have a microphone and want to share.

Survey of the Audience

Page 12: Steve Zemelman, Director, Illinois Writing Project Harry Ross, Associate Professor, Department of Secondary Education National College of Education, National

Possible Issues to be addressed: Overload of Initiatives - Lack of Time for Collaboration - Administration Doesn’t Consult Teachers - Data Mandates – Other Issues

Write in the space below:

Survey of the Audience

Page 13: Steve Zemelman, Director, Illinois Writing Project Harry Ross, Associate Professor, Department of Secondary Education National College of Education, National

Now it’s your turn!

Page 14: Steve Zemelman, Director, Illinois Writing Project Harry Ross, Associate Professor, Department of Secondary Education National College of Education, National
Page 15: Steve Zemelman, Director, Illinois Writing Project Harry Ross, Associate Professor, Department of Secondary Education National College of Education, National

Organizers have a whole vocabulary and way of thinking that most of us as teachers have never been exposed to.

We acknowledge teachers have a lot on their plate, and that students in your classroom are your first priority.

It’s also important to think and act outside your classroom and your building as well.

Learning from Community Organizers

Page 16: Steve Zemelman, Director, Illinois Writing Project Harry Ross, Associate Professor, Department of Secondary Education National College of Education, National

Traditionally, many teachers focus just on their classrooms and don’t think too much about wider roles.

In a school community everybody leads and exerts an influence of some kind.

We can be intentional about the roles and actions we take and plan carefully to maximize our influence.

Leadership is not about who you are, but what you say and do.

Some Ideas for Rethinking Leadership

Page 17: Steve Zemelman, Director, Illinois Writing Project Harry Ross, Associate Professor, Department of Secondary Education National College of Education, National

Influencing other teachers and a school can take many forms besides leading professional development workshops.

Some community organizing strategies:

Build relationships – within your group & across groups

Find self-interests in common Don’t fight battles you can’t win Choose activities that appeal to multiple interests &

individuals – e.g., a book-reading group, action research together.

Some Ideas for Rethinking Leadership (cont.)

Page 18: Steve Zemelman, Director, Illinois Writing Project Harry Ross, Associate Professor, Department of Secondary Education National College of Education, National

Positional power – gained from an official position, like a principal. S/he evaluates subordinates, may be able to hire or fire people, and gives out rewards or punishments.

Relational power comes from how a person relates to other people, inspiring respect, or maybe fear.

Good principals exert relational power. Often it’s what enables them to get things done. Positional power is actually rather limited.

If we understand relational power, we can use it intentionally to influence actions and policies in our schools and communities – and build support for ourselves.

Positional vs. Relational Power

Page 19: Steve Zemelman, Director, Illinois Writing Project Harry Ross, Associate Professor, Department of Secondary Education National College of Education, National

Community organizers use “one-on-ones,” person-to-person sit downs with someone they need to work with. This may be an opponent or official who would rather not be bothered.

These meetings are not for gaining support for your ideas, but simply for the two of you to get to know each other better, and build trust.

Building Relationships

Page 20: Steve Zemelman, Director, Illinois Writing Project Harry Ross, Associate Professor, Department of Secondary Education National College of Education, National

Don’t go out on a limb alone. Get plenty of support – a “floor team” – 3 or 4 other people who will second your idea and back you up.

Meet with likely detractors and get their objections in advance so that they feel consulted.

Don’t take the principal by surprise.

These principles apply at your school and in larger contexts.

Act Strategically

Page 21: Steve Zemelman, Director, Illinois Writing Project Harry Ross, Associate Professor, Department of Secondary Education National College of Education, National

Carefully choose a focus for your advocacy and your arguments. Don’t try to fix everything at once.

Many schools have too many initiatives going at once. There is simply not enough time or energy to get tasks all done, so efforts get diluted and scattered.

If a group has a long list of priorities, it can be difficult for people to know which ones to respond to first.

Don’t get distracted by personal comments. Stay focused.

Choose a Focus

Page 22: Steve Zemelman, Director, Illinois Writing Project Harry Ross, Associate Professor, Department of Secondary Education National College of Education, National

Tell us your thoughts about these strategies – either on this slide or in the chat box – and raise your hand to make a comment.

Write in the space below:

Comment on these strategies

Page 23: Steve Zemelman, Director, Illinois Writing Project Harry Ross, Associate Professor, Department of Secondary Education National College of Education, National

Listening to Your Stories

Page 24: Steve Zemelman, Director, Illinois Writing Project Harry Ross, Associate Professor, Department of Secondary Education National College of Education, National

Build Bridges

Talk to “the Man”/ “Woman”

Look inside the black box

Speak Up

Page 25: Steve Zemelman, Director, Illinois Writing Project Harry Ross, Associate Professor, Department of Secondary Education National College of Education, National

Build Bridges(Especially with fellow teachers who see things differently than you do)

How it helps: builds a basis of trust and understanding so that more of the faculty can work together; relieves stressful situations; strengthens connections even with fellow professionals you think you already know well.

Page 26: Steve Zemelman, Director, Illinois Writing Project Harry Ross, Associate Professor, Department of Secondary Education National College of Education, National

Use short (half-hour) one-on-one meetings to get to know each other’s background and values.

Don’t try to press an agenda. Rather, learn about the person and share your own background as well.

Look for shared interests, focus on kids’ learning, and keep the conversation constructive, but don’t be afraid to ask hard questions. 

Big meetings aren’t usually the best place to tackle sensitive topics. It’s better to take these up one-on-one – though that’s a different situation from the more introductory discussions.

Page 27: Steve Zemelman, Director, Illinois Writing Project Harry Ross, Associate Professor, Department of Secondary Education National College of Education, National

Talk to “the Man”/ “Woman”(the Principal, that is)

How it helps: enables you to understand the principal’s thinking and to share your own; builds trust and the relationship so if needs or issues arise, you have a basis for approaching him or her.

Page 28: Steve Zemelman, Director, Illinois Writing Project Harry Ross, Associate Professor, Department of Secondary Education National College of Education, National

Start a practice of regular brief check-ins. Ask questions to learn the principal’s interests.

  Do a bit of research to learn more about the principal’s

background.  Examine your own attitude toward authority, to reduce anxiety

in approaching the principal.  If making a request, couch it in terms of the principal’s and the

school’s best interests.

If an issue is sensitive, don’t put the principal on the defensive, or go negative. Identify shared common interests.

Page 29: Steve Zemelman, Director, Illinois Writing Project Harry Ross, Associate Professor, Department of Secondary Education National College of Education, National

Look Inside the Black Box(Studying your students and their learning)

How it helps: adds to your understanding of your students; enables differentiation; provides information that can be shared and analyzed with fellow teachers; gives you fresh perspectives; provides data to justify your teaching strategies.

Page 30: Steve Zemelman, Director, Illinois Writing Project Harry Ross, Associate Professor, Department of Secondary Education National College of Education, National

Consider what kinds of information would help with your teaching.

Check out existing research on your question.

Plan a research strategy that is doable, and that will give you the sort of useful information that you need.

Document the evidence and observations you gather, and save evidence such as student papers.

Share results with other teachers. Do so in a way that elicits their ideas and sparks discussion.

Page 31: Steve Zemelman, Director, Illinois Writing Project Harry Ross, Associate Professor, Department of Secondary Education National College of Education, National

Speak up

How it helps: It enables you to get your needs met instead of just complaining; avoids having all decisions made by others; helps to make the school more of a professional community.

Page 32: Steve Zemelman, Director, Illinois Writing Project Harry Ross, Associate Professor, Department of Secondary Education National College of Education, National

Evaluate the risk involved in speaking up. Often it’s lower than you think.

Be clear about what you are aiming to accomplish when you make a proposal or state an opinion.

Talk with the principal first so he or she isn’t taken by surprise.

Talk with other key teachers – to get their support or learn their concerns.

Decide the best strategy to achieve your aim. Will speaking out in a big meeting help, or is there a more effective venue?

If debate develops, stay focused on your goal. Don’t get drawn into unproductive arguments.

Page 33: Steve Zemelman, Director, Illinois Writing Project Harry Ross, Associate Professor, Department of Secondary Education National College of Education, National

Carol Jago’s feature articles on teaching

Recent New York Times article – “Confessions of a Bad Teacher” http://www.nytimes.com/2012/03/04/opinion/sunday/confessions-of-a-bad-teacher.html?pagewanted=all

Page 34: Steve Zemelman, Director, Illinois Writing Project Harry Ross, Associate Professor, Department of Secondary Education National College of Education, National

You mentioned some issues earlier. With the four strategies in mind, how might you work on these issues?

Write in the space below:

Comments on these strategies

Page 35: Steve Zemelman, Director, Illinois Writing Project Harry Ross, Associate Professor, Department of Secondary Education National College of Education, National

Listening to Your Stories

Page 36: Steve Zemelman, Director, Illinois Writing Project Harry Ross, Associate Professor, Department of Secondary Education National College of Education, National

On the next screen are the four strategies we described.

If you’d like to follow up on one of these, write your name by one or more you’d like to continue to explore with other participants. We’ll get a listserv going for your group.

It will be up to you to keep the conversation going, but we can pitch in some ideas and resources.

Follow UpFollow Up

Page 37: Steve Zemelman, Director, Illinois Writing Project Harry Ross, Associate Professor, Department of Secondary Education National College of Education, National

Build Bridges Talk to the Man/ Woman

Look Inside the Black Box

Speak Up

Page 38: Steve Zemelman, Director, Illinois Writing Project Harry Ross, Associate Professor, Department of Secondary Education National College of Education, National

Next November in Las Vegas, we’ll conduct a featured session at the NCTE National Convention, on

“Using Teacher Voice to Inform Public Policy.”

Sonia Nieto will be the main speaker, and there will be discussion tables so teachers can actively learn and share their efforts to be heard.

We hope to see you there!

Follow Up

Page 39: Steve Zemelman, Director, Illinois Writing Project Harry Ross, Associate Professor, Department of Secondary Education National College of Education, National

Steve Zemelman

Illinois Writing Project

[email protected]

Harry Ross

National Louis University

[email protected]