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AWCPA PLC Facilitator ’ s Training. AWCPA Leadership Team. Agenda. Introductions and structure “ Evolution of the Professional Learning Community ” Technical vs Cultural Change First and Second Order Change The Role of the PLC Leader and The Four PLC Questions Structure of the PLC NORMS
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AWCPA PLC Facilitator’s Training AWCPA Leadership Team
Agenda • Introductions and structure • “Evolution of the Professional Learning Community” • Technical vs Cultural Change • First and Second Order Change • The Role of the PLC Leader and The Four PLC Questions • Structure of the PLC • NORMS • Flow Chart • Agenda Templates • Data Templates • Next Steps: Duties, Assignments and Commitments
Professional Learning Communities • PLC’s operate under the assumption that the key to improved learning for students is continuous, job-embedded learning for educators. DuFour, et. al, 2006
What’s Different About a PLC? • Read, “How Do Principals Really Improve Schools.” • Briefly discuss the article in pairs, and share out key ideas.
PLCS are a Team Teams bring together complementary skills and experience that exceed those of any individual on the team.
Teams motivate and foster positive peer pressure and collective responsibility.
Scheduling • PLC’s will meet at AWCPA one week, and the district the following week. • This will be a fluid process and the meetings will be aligned, “Same Focus- enhance student learning and achievement”. • MS Staff will meet at the PLCC, and HS will be at various High Schools in the district. • See attached schedule.
The Four Questions • What is it we expect the students to learn? • How will we know when they have learned it? • How will we respond when they don’t learn? • How will we respond when they already know it? -DuFour, DuFour, Eaker 2008
Six Characteristics • Shared Mission, Vision, Values, and Goals • Collective Inquiry • Collaborative Culture • Action Orientation and Experimentation • Continuous Improvement • Focus on Results
Administration and PLC Leader’s Role • Initiate structures and systems • Pose the right questions • Model what is valued • Celebrate progress • Lead for change
In order to influence change… Change in values, beliefs, practice • Change in student achievement *In reality…. • Change in practice • Change in student achievement • Change in beliefs • Thomas Guskey
One who contributes structure and process to interactions so groups are able to function effectively. A helper and enabler whose goal is to support others as they achieve exceptional performance. Group Process Facilitation A way of providing leadership without taking the reins. A facilitator’s job is to get others to assume responsibility, to take the lead, and engage in meaningful collaboration. -Facilitation At A Glance Group Process Facilitator
Group Process Facilitators: • Do not have all the answers, are not always the content experts • Stay neutral, if you must move out of facilitator role and into role as participating member of group identify that move. • Are responsible for room set up that supports effective teams • Listen; demonstrate that you are listening by using verbal and non verbal cues. (Refer to norms when issues arise.) • Paraphrase or clarify for the benefit of all members of the group. • Watch the time (or appoint a timekeeper) • Build capacity and buy-in, redirect questions by sending to others rather than answering yourself • Use humor – appropriate humor! • Call and identify sidetracks, stay true to norms. • Encourage all group members to acknowledge dysfunctional behaviors as they occur. (Remember the focus and intended outcomes, improve instruction to increase achievement.) Facilitators At A Glance
Processes for Groups Set the stage Focus Attention: Norms always present at the beginning of each meeting. ONE THING: outcomes, make clear at the beginning of each meeting. Check in: Keep meetings positively focused, keep the meeting about the work, avoid negative conversations about kids. Check the group to see where you are: Reflection on group progress, responsibility checks. Check for agreement: Fist to Five, Thumbs Up. Build Consensus: Look for commonalities, agreement Identify polar points – What would it take for this to work for you? Take a break – get up and stretch Move on and come back to issue Check to see if it can hold until the next meeting. Perhaps the group needs more information.
Norms • Non-Negotiables • Define essential learning's (Power Standards) and use common assessments • Everyone participates and works toward the common goal – achievement for all students • Re-teach essential skills • Data posted in dropbox folder • Teams develop collective norms and honor their team norms -adapted from DuFour, et. al.
Team Agenda Template • Guides the meeting • Norms • SMART Goals • Identify area of work on flowchart • Topic covered on timeline, be specific • Reflection Form- end of each cycle • Provides information for next meetings • Duties, Assignments and Commitments, for all members.
Reflections • What was the focus of our discussion? • What did we learn about teaching our content and lesson plans that were developed? • What did we learn about our students; growth, enrichment?
Action Plan • Dropbox Usage • Data Forms • First Meeting: Norms need to be set and widentify essential standards. • Stay focused on ensuring student learning
Leadership and Facilitators • Example is not the main thing in influencing others, it’s the only thing. Albert Schweitzer