RSA1: Professional Learning Community in Relation to
Effectiveness
The focus of
module two is that in order for a professional learning community to be
successful, all schools need to have a common goal. The focus of a PLC is
student achievement, which results in students and teachers using common
curriculum and assessment to ensure growth and success.
Educators in a PLC work together
collaboratively in constant, deep collective inquiry into the questions, “What
is it our students must learn?” and “How will we know when they have learned
it?” The dialogue generated from these questions results in the academic focus,
collective commitments, and productive professional relationships that enhance
learning for teachers and students alike. (DuFour, DuFour, Eaker, & Many,
2010).
This passage
suggests that with focus on answering these two questions that revolve around
students learning, not only do students succeed, but it forces teachers to
teach more thoughtfully and with purpose. According to the reading these
questions are and ongoing responsibility of the staff to constantly assess and
reassess. When a staff keeps their focus on common curriculum and uses the
guiding questions they have a more authentic environment for students and
faculty. When that environment for student learning is driven by common
assessment and staff realizes using this data is an ongoing process, we see
students’ achievement increase.
Professional
Learning Community in Relation to Effectiveness was published in October 2010
in the Scandinavian Journal of Educational Research. This article follows a
study of nine schools in Iceland, all of different cultural backgrounds and
differing home lives. These nine schools have all implemented professional
learning communities regardless of resources and backgrounds. Within these
separate buildings there has been improved student success. An effective
professional learning community “has the capacity to promote and sustain the
learning of all professionals in the school community with the collective
purpose of enhancing pupil learning.” (Stoll, 2006). The article suggests that
the improvements in professional learning communities, improve the schools’
level of effectiveness. They found the basis of the professional learning
communities effectiveness to be the ongoing discussions that occur between
staff in a building and/or district and buildings that were not having these
ongoing effective conversations were not reaching high levels of student
achievement. With shared responsibility and ongoing discussions and learning
students and staff alike begin raising achievement and learning levels.
The findings in
the online article I read this week support the information in this week’s
required readings. Module two focused on creating a focus on student learning
and in order to do that, teachers must work collaboratively to create common
assessments. The online article and required readings further prove that a
common goal ensures the high achievement of all students in a building. Changes
are not the same as improvement and there is not improvement if the students
are not positively affected. (Sigurdardottir, 2010, p. 408). If staff keeps
this thought in mind while functioning as a professional learning community,
buildings and students alike will
reach the proven level of success that every building strives for.
DuFour, R., DuFour, R., Eaker, R.,
Many, T. (2010). Learning by doing: A handbook for
professional learning communities
at work (2nd ed.). Bloomington, IN: Solution Tree
Press.
Scandinavian Journal of Research.
(2010). Professional Learning Community in Relation to School Effectiveness,
vol. 54. Retrieved from
http://web.ebscohost.com.cucproxy.cuchicago.edu/ehost/pdfviewer/pdfviewer?sid=5c7c876d-704c-4f42-8886-4a26f388e158%40sessionmgr111&vid=6&hid=123
The article you read seems very interesting. I say this because it seems like no matter where a student comes from, or what they are exposed to, as long as teachers are working together towards a common goal, there can be student achievement.
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