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1. PRACTICES OF LEARNINGPRACTICES OF LEADERSHIP Richard F. Elmore
Harvard University
School Leadership Academy
Williamsburg, VA
June 2008
2. I. CONTEXT
5. What Evidence Do You See of These Patterns in Your Schools?
7. TASK PREDICTS PERFORMANCE
8. LEVELS OF COGNITIVE COMPLEXITY Retrieval of fact from from text
Recall and accurate execution of procedure
Arraying and interpreting information from multiple sources
Choosing, applying, justifying known procedures to unfamiliar situations, problems; communicating results to technical, lay audiences
Designing new procedures to approach unfamiliar problems; communicating results to technical, lay audiences
Reflection, assessment, evaluation of self in problem-solving situations
9. PREDICTORS OF SELF-EFFICACY IN LEARNING EFFORT
PERSISTENCE
PERFORMANCE/ACHIEVEMENT
TASK DIFFICULTY OR CHALLENGE
SELF-EVALUATION, SELF-REGULATION
PROCESS GOALS
10. THE DEFAULT CULTURE ATOMIZED PRACTICE
FOCUS ON “ABILITY” RATHER THAN EFFORT
STATUS COMPETITION
LOW AGENCY/EFFICACY
FLAT CAREER STRUCTURE
WEAK KNOWLEDGE BASE
ADULT PRACTICE SETS EXPECTATIONS FOR STUDENT LEARNING
11. II. BUILDING A LEARNING CULTURE
17. Where Would You Place Your School(s) in this Framework?
18. IMPLICATIONS FOR INSTRUCTIONAL LEADERSHIP GUIDED PRACTICE AS THE DOMINANT FORM OF LEARNING FOR ADULTS AND STUDENTS
WORK ON GROUP SKILLS CONNECTED TO PROBLEMS OF INSTRUCTIONAL PRACTICE
ADULTS MAKE THEIR OWN LEARNING TRANSPARENT
TRANSPARENCY OF PRACTICE
MULTIPLE LEADERSHIP ROLES
LEADERSHIP DETERMINED BY EXPERTISE, RATHER THAN REPUTATION AND EXPERIENCE
EXPLICIT NORMS OF LATERAL ACCOUNTABILITY
19. CONDITIONS OF ROBUST LEARNING ASSESSMENT OF PRIOR KNOWLEDGE PRECEDES INSTRUCTION
REAL WORLD SITUATIONS; CONCRETE PRECEDES ABSTRACT
MULTIPLE OPPORTUNITIES FOR PRACTICE
WORK ACROSS MULTIPLE OF LEVELS OF COGNITIVE DEMAND, MULTIPLE DOMAINS
MULTIPLE OPPORTUNITIES TO DEMONSTRATE AND ASSESS PERFORMANCE/UNDERSTANDING
TRANSFER OF CONTROL OVER LEARNING FROM TEACHER TO STUDENT
TRANSFER Of KNOWLEDGE TO UNFAMILIAR SITUATIONS
20. What Proportion of Principals’ Time Do They Spend. . .? Observing Teachers
Working with Teachers in Groups on Instructional Issues
Interacting with Other Principals on Issues Related to Instructional Practice
Interacting with Supervisors on Issues Related to Instructional Practice
22. THE WORK OF IMPROVEMENT:FROM TECHNICAL TO CULTURAL Schedules
Structures
Roles
Professional, Development
Protocols, rubrics
Assessments
Accountability Systems Beliefs about student learning
Pedagogical content knowledge
Norms for group work
Discourse about practice
Mutual accountability
Distributed leadership