Tuesday, April 2, 2013

Instructional Rounds in Education

I finally finished this book that Jason Smith gave me several months ago, called Instructional Rounds-A Network Approach to Improving Teaching and Learning. I am excited by this collaborative approach to system success because it leads to student success. I am encouraged by the feedback I have received from several North teachers who have taken advantage of visiting their colleagues' classrooms, thanks to the prompting of our Instructional Coach, Amie Farley.

Waukesha North, I believe, has finally reached that "aha" moment, that closed classroom doors will not help us educate all students to high levels. What goes on in classrooms is at the heart of instructional improvement, and a key part of our continued growth is growing our collective efficacy when we visit each others classrooms and then reflect upon what we have observed.

This process had been slow to start, but if the invitation to visit classrooms did not result in awkwardness and disequilibrium, it would not effect any significant cultural transformation.

As Principal, it is my responsibility to foster a culture that creates a safe space for individual and organizational learning. During visits, the goal is to learn about teaching, not to focus on teachers. A key part of this work is building trust and collective efficacy. This opportunity has enormous power to unlock peer learning, to support improvement in our instructional core, and support one another in improving instruction for all of our students.

Instruction is at the core of our school improvement efforts. Even if we start with three simple questions:
1. What are teachers doing and saying?
2. What are students doing and saying?
3. What is the task?


If people associate their learning not only with their own growth and development, but also with those of their colleagues and the entire organization; and if trust and collective efficacy are at the center of our culture, then the conditions are conducive to adult learning, which is a prerequisite for instructional improvement.

A sincere thank you from myself...and from our students...for embracing a collaborative learning culture that will ultimately lead to improved teaching and learning and collective success for not only all of us, but most importantly for all our students.

1 comment:

  1. Thanks for the post Jody - just ran into this via Brian Yearling on Plus. Picked up Instructional Rounds a few weeks ago. Motivation to put it next on my "To Read" list. Best of luck with your work at North building a more collaborative culture. One of the things I want to figure out before I kick the bucket is how to create independent learning cultures in schools - specifically in our large public schools. It takes a lot of work to build structures (especially at the HS where common planning time is nearly impossible to schedule) and get staff to feel comfortable and empowered to take the lead. There's a lot of unlearning that has to happen. Thanks!

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