Sunday, October 12, 2014

Professional Learning Community

High Trust Conversation Starters

 
The importance of having a network around you as a professional teacher cannot be understated.  All teachers need to be able to find others who are willing to invest their time, energy and wisdom into their colleagues.  This point was highlighted by Hargreaves and Fullan in Professional Capital...

"Individuals get confidence, learning, and feedback from having the right kind of people and the right kind of interactions and relationships around them." (2012, p. 4) 

John Hattie in his book Visible Learning For Teachers: Maximising Impact on Learning says...

"Teachers who do not acknowledge the importance of peer feedback can be the most handicapped in their effects on students.” p.147


The following questions are designed to create honest and open conversations between professionals.  They are simple questions that are not supposed to have “correct” answers – rather they are designed to spark deepen our understanding of each other’s practice. 
The purpose here is not to 'prove' anything to anyone.  Rather the purpose here is to 'improve'.  The people who you are working with have all decided that their lives to the education of young people.  

I have designed the following questions in an attempt start honest and open conversations between teachers.  They are simple questions that are not supposed to have “correct” answers – rather they are designed to spark deepen our understanding of each other’s practice. 

A good tip to keep the conversation moving is for there to be change of focus at regular intervals.  One person presenting honest discussion about their experiences/habits – the others listening (soak it in) and moving into constructive advice/questioning/empathy.  Five minutes and then try another conversation starter led by a different person. 

Remember – high trust + open to learning = respect. 
[These are not in any particular order – you may not get through them all].
  1.       Identify any administrative issue you feel is a challenge/confusing/wasteful.
  2.       Describe the things have changed about the classes you teach year.
  3.       Describe the extent of challenge you are having in regards to demand on your time.
  4.       Give a summary of your last period class yesterday. 
  5.       Tell about what is it about a student you find particularly challenging or hard to reach. 
  6.       Describe what areas of you teaching you’ve feel you’ve been neglecting recently.
  7.       Tell us about a lesson that you’ve had recently that didn’t go well. 
  8.       If you could be given some extra non-contact time how would you spend that time?

The end result of this activity is that collectively as a group you will have a greater understanding of each other.  That you will be conscious of the intentions, frustrations, positives and negative we all face here at school. 

I have saved this document in S:\Administration\Appraisal\High Trust Conversation Starters.docx

This post relates to RTC # 1. establish and maintain effective professional relationships focused on the learning and well-being of ākonga - engage in ethical, respectful, positive and collaborative professional relationships with teaching colleagues, support staff and other professionals
and RTC #8. demonstrate in practice their knowledge and understanding of how ākonga learn.

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