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SREB Training: Creating a High Performance Learning Community

 


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On January 12, 2005, from 4-8 pm, and January 13, 2005, all day, leadership teams from 4J elementary, middle, and high schools participated in the "Creating a High Performance Learning Community" training workshop put on by the Southern Region Education Board. The purpose of this training is to develop knowledge, skills, and commitment among participating school leaders that will make it possible to create and sustain high-performance leaning cultures in our schools. After this portion of intensive training, participants were given follow-up action plans to do, which they will re-visit and refine in the next training session in April. Below is a pictoral overview of the January process.



Presenter David Hill explalins the objectives of the training, the use of the participant's guide, and the group agreements (norms).

 

In addition to short lectures, the workshop included time to read short articles.


 

Several surveys were included in the work sheets, which participants filled out regarding their individual perceptions and beliefs.

 

Then participants discussed the surveys with another participant not in their school team.

 

As a way to look at culture, groups were asked to brainstorm how a school was like...a web.

 

 

How is a school like glue?

 

How is a school like a garden?

How is a school like a complex pattern?

 

So many people chose the school as a web that they had to break into two groups, reported in two columns here.

 

 

In reporting, the glue simile took two pages, much to the group's surprise.

Then school teams brainstormed how top-notch culture attibutes might look in their school, recording them on sticky notes on a sheet of paper.

 

Top Notch Culture Attributes - click to see each of the brainstorm lists of what it might look like in our schools:

Caring & supportive of others
Cohesive
Collaborative
Diverse
Efficacious; "can-do"
Energetic
Democratic; egalitarian
Focuses on student & adult learning
Focuses on excellence; high expectations
Hopeful; optimistic
Innovative
Interdependent
Respectful
Trusting

All partipants then got to look at the lists, which provided a starting point for discussion (and some laughter).

 

Readings in the participants guide pointed out the connection between culture and student achievement.

 

 

The "Final Word" exercise had a facilitator, a timekeeper, and a volunteer to "lead off" with 3 minutes to present an idea.

 

Moving in clockwise fashion, every other group member had one minute to respond to the idea presented.

 

Then the opening speaker had one minute to make final comments.

 

 

Next, the process was repeated for the next person in the group to share an idea and get short responses, until all had had a chance to present.

 

The skill exercises in the workshop were designed to help people back in their school to involve others in positive change.

 

After having completed the Cultural Beliefs Questionnaire, participants were seated in groups of 10, 5 across from each other.

 

 

Each person interviewed the person across them them and recorded their responses to the questionnaire items without commenting.

 

One side of the interview line would then rotate, and they would ask the next person the questions and record them.

 

Participants were divided into five groups, and recorded the responses they had gotten to a specified Cultural Belief questiojn.

Cultural Beliefs Questionnaire:

A. What are some ways you believe unhealthy school cultures contribute to "at risk" students?

B. What factors cause well-intentioned educators to make excuses for low-performing students?

C. In what ways does distributed leadership contribute to the performance (student achievement) of schools? 

D. Give 4-6 examples of "structures for organizational action" that you think influence a school's culture.

E. What are fhe 4-5 most important things the leadership of a school can do to develop "academic press"?

 

Duplicate responses were also included.

 

Then a person from each group reported on the responses to their question. (Here, responses to Cultural Belief question A is reported.)

 

 

Responses to question B took two pages to report - isn't that interesting?

 

Question D report included many specific idea.

 

Next, school teams (here an elementary team) brainstormed how they might challenge the status quo in their building.

 

 

Roosevelt Middle School team discusses where they stand as a school in reaching all students.

 

Then the school teams (Churchill High School here) record their ideas.

 

In the "Critical Friends" activity, one school team listens & makes notes while the other school team presents & discusses change ideas.

 

Then the presenting team gets up while the listening team sits down and gives uninterrupted feedback to the first group in the form of: praise, questions, polish (suggestions & ideas for consideration).

 

The workshop leader reviews the "tools" people have learned in the workshop, and encourages them to try some of them out with their staff to begin the dialogue.



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