Friday, May 29, 2015

Preparing Leaders for Deeper Learning

Just as we expect our students to engage in deeper levels of learning, we are asking the same from our teachers and administrators. Deeper learning means students are developing and using their knowledge and skills in a way that prepares them for real life. In order to achieve this, leadership at all levels has never been more critical.

Leading toward deeper learning means sharing and distributing leadership roles and responsibilities across our system. It means moving beyond positional authority as the leader to creating a system of leadership that acknowledges leadership at the classroom, grade, and school level.

Looking at a competency-based system not just for our student learners but for our adult learners is just another way to emphasize the level of learning-applying-results continuum that we expect as a system. This is hard work, no question, but we all know it is the right work to increase our capacity to serve all students equitably and successfully.

A sincere thank you to every leader in this district. If you know me by now, you know I believe you are all leaders. Thank you for your commitment to deeper learning as we strive for a coordinated system driven by an urgency to increase student achievement.



Friday, May 22, 2015

Learning and Leadership Prep for Summer Institute

We are excited to preview our focus for Disciplinary Literacy this summer. This year, our theory of action for the district was...

IF... administrators, coaches, and teachers are knowledgeable about intentional instructional practices that lead to high levels of literacy (SLO), and they design/participate in ongoing professional development (PD), and regularly collect, analyze and act on data, and if teachers receive timely and effective coaching/feedback (EE);

THEN... our system will have stronger sources of data, teachers will increase their levels of self-efficacy and performance, and students will demonstrate higher levels of achievement in literacy.  

How have we done as a system in meeting our theory of action?

Our Essential Questions for the July Institute:
  • How will an inquiry-based approach be a means to achieving our goal of preparing each of our Waukesha students to be college and career ready in reading?
  • How will intentional planning impact our classroom practice and student learning?

Day One-
Essential Question:
How is an inquiry-based approach to instruction beneficial to student learning?
Take-Aways from Keynote:  
  • Literacy and Inquiry are connected
  • Reading comprehension strategies are the tools to get kids to inquiry; the means to achieving deeper understanding
Day Two and Three-
Essential Question: 
How will we build reading comprehension and collaboration strategies in our content areas to foster inquiry?

It is sure to be an exciting three days of learning and growing together!




Thursday, May 14, 2015

ACTIVATE

This book is a leader's guide to people, practices, and processes, and is one of the anchor texts that will guide the District SAIL teams and their work in our four core areas;
Literacy, Math, Waukesha for Learning and Waukesha One. 

Peter Drucker says, "people determine the capacity of an organization." That is why it is so important for all of us to look at ourselves as lead learners. As leaders, all of us are keepers of the vision. We must be steadfast in our constant and effective communication of the School District of Waukesha's overall purpose to increase student growth and achievement. 

How many times have we heard and the research has shown, the number one factor, the single most influential component of an effective school, is the individual teachers within that school. Teachers, do you believe this? 

Success in any organization starts with a focus on self. Change will not occur unless people see the need to change. Does our student achievement data scream a sense of urgency to you?  Are you serious about success more than you are comfortable with a lack of it?  Do you take personal responsibility for student achievement? Engaged employees want their organization to succeed because they feel connected emotionally and socially to the mission, vision and purpose. Are you connected? 

The tradition of our learning organizations are as deeply entrenched as you will find. Elmore says, "the existing institutional structure of public education does one thing very well: it creates a normative environment that values idiosyncratic, isolated, and individualistic learning at the expense of collective learning. The existing system does not value continuous learning as a collective good and does not make this learning the individual and social responsibility of every member of the system. Privacy of practices produces isolation; isolation is the enemy of improvement."

I have seen us rise above this individual isolation in the last few years. This week, I was involved in a disciplinary literacy learning day at West High School that involved a cross-section of teachers from all of our high schools. The growth mindset and leadership that was displayed among all of these teachers was simply amazing to be a part of. Lets build upon this positive momentum in our last few weeks of school and use each other, collectively, fight the enemy! 

Friday, May 8, 2015

Innovation and the Honeycomb

It is really refreshing to see so many of you embracing the personalized learning elements of the honeycomb.  With The Institute at CESA 1 in our own backyard, we are primed to continue our growth of learner-centered innovation.  Real change starts with each of you, but you have to start! Our learners are screaming for us to make their learning relevant, relatable and fun!

As our learning spaces become more student-friendly, engaging places to learn, it becomes critical that we match our teaching and instruction to these dynamic environments. That is why it becomes so important to truly dig deeply into the core components of the honeycomb and then network to find out how you can implement this core so that our classrooms are truly transformed.

Learner Profiles- do each one of your students have an individual portfolio where they control and manage uploading artifacts to show their evidence of learning? If not, why not?

Customized Learning Paths- are you seizing an opportunity to adjust instruction that is unique to each individual need or are you still operating from the platform of what is best for most students?

Proficiency-based Progress- are proficiency-based pathways part of your classroom conversations and planning?

These core components of the honeycomb are hard work, no question! The good news is there are tons of professional educators in each of our schools that are digging deeply into this work. Connect, engage, look at the faces of those kids and then ask yourself....what am I waiting for?



                                                                                 












Thursday, April 16, 2015

Changing Minds, Changing Schools, Changing Systems

This comprehensive book about literacy design for school improvement was one of the first of many literacy-laced books I am reading in order to help build my self-efficacy to become a better literacy learner and leader.

As we have developed our own literacy theory of action as a district, this book has a stand alone theory of literacy learning that was very impactful for me to read.
"IF...teachers embrace literacy as access to power and reading as emancipatory,
THEN...they possess the dispositional stances that will enable their students to become culturally competent and personally confident."

Literacy must be the very foundation for our continuous learning as as system. Literacy teaching and learning should drive our continuous improvement efforts. We can all read countless examples of schools and districts that have increased student achievement and have the data to prove it.
Significant improvement in student achievement can occur in a short time when a system focuses on a manageable combination of priorities. Fullan says, "Precision strategies focusing on collective capacity dramatically accelerates the pace and effectiveness of change."

As we have made the commitment to focusing our professional learning on literacy, what do you truly believe about literacy and literacy instruction? What actions have you taken this year that are in line with your beliefs? There is no better time than now to re-commit to this moral imperative.

Thursday, March 26, 2015

LV HOOPS

Love hoops!

This blog post is also my license plate and you might be asking, what does hoops have to do with leadership and learning? Celebrating the Badgers victory and their advancement to the Elite Eight, I found myself reminiscing as to why I loved this sport so much! Basketball was my LIFE from third grade through college and although I couldn't even run up and down the court right now without pulling a hamstring, I realize that the daily commitment to a sport I loved continues to drive my passion today.

Learning to trust your teammates, working hard when no one is watching, leading with optimism in times of complexity, loving what you do....these are values that I held true. They are the same values upon which I navigate working with a new team at Lindholm and the same values that drive my passion to help all of our schools reach championship status in the School District of Waukesha.

As you head into Spring Break next week, take time to cultivate your personal and professional well-being. In the moments when no one is watching, ask yourself....have I given my best, have I pushed myself unselfishly to help my teammates and have I committed to being a leader on a championship team?


Thursday, March 19, 2015

Ideas for Innovation



During my visits to sites this week, I heard many teachers talk to me about their ideas to innovate. Each conversation was driven by a passionate energy to maximize student-centered learning. Everyone buys in to continuous improvement. We all want to get a little bit better than we were the day before. But...true innovation, engaging in something completely different to help move achievement, move engagement, move the entire system forward, isn't always welcomed with open arms.
So what is the culture of your school? What is your assumed way of doing things and why?

Each of our students deserves innovative teaching and learning. Each student deserves to have choice and voice. Each teacher should feel empowered to design a learning platform that at the core drives personalized learning. As we begin to build our district data dashboard and become more comfortable with using data to drive our decisions, it is the reality that our achievement and growth data for all students is not where they need to be performing. Our achievement gaps will remain permanent until we individualize the learning experience for students.


To the innovators who come forward with ideas about how to "do school differently"... I would ask you, what are you waiting for?