Title: David Jackson
1David Jackson
- Head of ResearchNational College for School
Leadership
2Networked Learning Communities
Learning from each otherLearning with each
other
3What Characterises a Professional Learning
Community?
-
- As early as 1992 Judith Little argued that
professional learning communities are built when
teachers - Engage in concrete talk about teaching with one
another - Observe one another and provide feedback
about teaching - Collaborate around planning for instruction
- Teach each other the art and craft of teaching
4What Characterises a Professional Learning
Community? (continued)
She concluded that joint work (e.g. team
teaching, collaborative planning, peer
observation, action research, sustained peer
coaching and mentoring) led to the most sustained
changes in teaching and learning practices in
schools
5Developing a school as a Professional Learning
Community is a complex and subtle leadership
challenge
NCSL Networked Learning Communities, 2001
6Leaders in Professional Learning Communities
- Develop expanded repertoires generate
leadership density - Create collaborative environments
- Foster continuous teacher development -
takeadult learning seriously - Assist staff to work smarter together and not
harder alone
7Networked Learning Communities are about schools
working smarter together not harder alone
8Professional Learning Communities
Culture of Collaborative Practice
The school as a learning community,
collaborating to reinvent practice within the
school and also reinterpreting practice from
outside
Internally collaborative community re-cycling
traditional or low level practice
9If we want to develop young people who are
participating members of society, we must model
that by being collaborating members of the
educational community
The Durham Board, Canada A Networked Learning
Community
10The third reason is a practical one
11 12Networked Learning Communities
are purposefully led groups of schools,
characterised by a commitment to quality, rigour,
and a focus on outcomes
13Networked Learning Communities
- Promote the dissemination of good practice,
- Enhance the professional development of teachers
- Support capacity building in schools
- They are also a powerful means of
- Supporting innovation in times of change
- Capitalising upon the reform environment
- Fostering creativity
14There is a synergy between Networked Learning
Communities and schools that aspire to be
Professional Learning Communities
15Schools and School Networks as Learning
Communities
- The NetworkedLearning Community
- Symbolises learning values
- Facilitates networking
- Responds to need
- Interprets the reform environment
- Creates coherence
16david.jackson_at_ncsl.org.uk