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Whole Faculty Group Study

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Whole Faculty Group Study An Overview of WFGS Feb 5-12, 2006 Dr. Eric Jakubowski Mediocrity is so easily achievable, there s no need for planning at all! – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Whole Faculty Group Study


1
Whole Faculty Group Study
  • An Overview of WFGS
  • Feb 5-12, 2006
  • Dr. Eric Jakubowski

2
  • Mediocrity is so easily achievable, theres no
    need for planning at all!

Roger Kaufman, 1998
3
Topics
  • Paradigms of Change
  • Importance of Collaboration
  • Professional Learning Communities (PLC) Overview
    of WFSG
  • What it is and is not
  • Steps in WFSG
  • Nuts and Bolts
  • Does it work?
  • What it takes 2 make it work?

4
Traditional Teaching Paradigm
Teacher
Student
Student
Student
Student
5
Collaborative Paradigm
Teacher
Student
Student
Student
Student
6
Network Paradigm
Parents
Other Schools
Teacher
Student
Student
Student
Student
Internet
Other WWW Sources
7
Which is the Best Paradigm
  • It depends
  • school culture
  • what is being taught in the paradigm
  • outcomes of what education is about

8
Paradigm Thoughts . . .
Assumptions
Beliefs
Values
Judgments
Consistency
Stability
Tradition
9
Traditional Change Paradigm
Values
Tradition
Belief
Judgment
  • Means Change In

10
Rethinking Change Paradigm
Tradition
Assumptions
11
SCHOOL IMPROVEMENT IS NEVER QUICK AND EASY
  • Even the grandest design eventually degenerates
    into hard work.
  • Richard DuFour

12
Resistance
  • Change is difficult because
  • takes us out of tradition, stability
  • challenges our beliefs and assumptions
  • may show our vulnerabilities
  • learning curve
  • However, change is inevitable
  • We can choose to be the master of change or its
    constant victim

13
  • Meaningful change requires collaborative
    processes that are different from most we have
    attempted in the past.

Carlene Murphy
14
Need for a Collaborative Culture
  • Improving schools require collaborative cultures.
    . . Without collaborative skills and
    relationships, it is not possible to learn and to
    continue to learn as much as you need to know to
    improve.
  • Michael Fullan

15
What Educational Researchers Say
  • Throughout our ten-year study, whenever we
    found an effective school or an effective
    department within a school, without exception,
    that school or department has been a part of a
    collaborative professional learning community.
  • Milbrey McLaughlin,
  • Stanford University

16
Personal Learning Community
  • A Professional Learning Community has
  • shared mission, vision, and values
  • collective inquiry
  • collaborative teams
  • action orientation and experimentation
  • continuous improvement
  • results orientations

17
The WFSG System is .
  • A structure for implementing a School Improvement
    Plan
  • A vehicle for doing what teachers already have to
    do, i.e., design lessons for implementing new
    reading program
  • A place to work on the work with colleagues
    instead of working alone

18
What is WFSG?
  • Organizing teachers into small groups or study
    groups is not a new idea
  • Organizing the ENTIRE school faculty into study
    groups based on student need to bring about
    school wide improvement is a new idea in many
    districts

19
Attributes of WFSG
  • Research Based
  • Addresses student needs
  • Student needs are based on data
  • Respects, validates and uses teachers as
    professionals who have the capacity to do the
    work
  • Structured to provide accountability for
    implementation
  • Aligns with and supports SIP and the PLC model
  • Aligns with NSDC standards

20
What WGFS is Not
  • A quick fix solution
  • A technique or one-time workshop
  • Committee work
  • Another thing that we have to do
  • Busy work
  • Just another educational flash in the pan

21
PLC WFSG
Shared mission, vision, values, goals Students are first
High levels of trust Leadership is shared
Believe they have input and assume responsibility for decisions Responsibility is equal
Highly structured meetings Everyone participates
Ongoing assessment and sharing of results The work is public
22
Were off to see the Wizard?
  • If we do what we have always done, we will get
    what we have always gotten.
  • The Wizard of Oz

23
Points to Ponder
  • Think about your PD plan or model.
  • Are we learning what students need us to learn?
    How do we know?
  • Are students learning and achieving as a result
    of what we are learning and doing in our current
    professional development model? How do we know?

24
The Logic of WFSG
  • If schools are to improve, they must develop a
    collaborative culture
  • If schools are to develop a collaborative
    culture, they must overcome a tradition of
    teacher isolation
  • If schools are to overcome their tradition of
    teacher isolation, teachers must learn to work in
    effective, high performing teams
  • WFSG helps teachers learn to work in effective,
    high performing teams

25
A Proven Practice
  • The WFSG process began in 1986 as a strategy for
    providing pressure and support to teachers for
    implementing several models of teaching in
    Augusta, GA.
  • It has evolved into a nationally recognized,
    proven in practice professional development
    system.

26
WFSG Are Working In .
  • High schools with as many as 3000 students
  • Middle schools with different teaming patterns
  • Elementary schools of all sizes
  • Schools in large, urban cities
  • Schools in suburban and rural communities
  • Schools representing all demographics
  • Charter schools, boarding schools
  • Schools implementing different national
    comprehensive school reform designs

27
Why Use it?
  1. Has the greatest chance of changing the tradition
    and culture
  2. Focuses site and individual PD on school
    improvement related to student performance
  3. Provides a vehicle for proactively managing
    change, now and in the future!

28
Why Use It?
  • Change becomes manageable as collaborative teams
    become units of change
  • Can be accomplished with a limited budget
  • Avoids allowing resisters to stop necessary
    change
  • This process is NOT perfect, but it provides a
    proven method for real results!

29
Nuts Bolts of WFSG
  • Student needs are used as topics for study
    groups
  • Needs are generated by data (state, school)
  • Study groups are organized with 3-5 people per
    group
  • Needs are placed on sheets and narrowed down
    into clusters
  • group members select a study group topic

30
Nuts and Bolts
  • Each groups develops norms and a meeting schedule
  • Each group develops an action plan
  • Each group meets 2X per month, logs meetings,
    determines if action plan is working-makes
    adjustments
  • Results are shared
  • Progress is measured by student work and student
    data

31
To Be Successful
  • TIME
  • Recommendation A minimum of 1 hour every other
    week
  • EXPLICIT PURPOSE
  • Essential question and each groups action plan
  • An understanding of HOW TO COLLABORATE
  • Group norms, guidelines for meeting, and use of
    protocols
  • ACCEPT RESPONSIBILITY for working collaboratively
  • Agreement to begin and develop own action plans
  • FEEDBACK
  • Groups must have timely feedback on their action
    plans

32
I dont have time . . .
  • Must honor faculty meeting time weekly or monthly
  • Reorganize current PD contract time
  • Use collaborative planning time-- trade out
    contract time?

Others?
33
What Will Guide the Work?
  • Critical questions
  • What do students need for us to do?
  • What are students learning and achieving as a
    result of what we are learning and doing in study
    groups?

34
WFSGRoles Responsibilities
  • District Level Support
  • Focus Team
  • Principal
  • Study Group Leader
  • Individual Study Group Member
  • Instructional Council

35
Roles and Responsibilities
  • District Level Support
  • Collects and distributes relevant info to
    principals
  • Helps identify and makes available resources
  • Provides expertise to the study groups, as needed
  • Supports need for time for study groups to meet
  • Communicates with district level staff what
    groups are studying

36
Roles and Responsibilities
  • Principal
  • - Establishes the expectation.
  • - Is an active participant in the training and
    planning sessions.
  • - Receives action plans and responds to them.
  • - Receives the study group logs and responds to
    them.

37
Roles and Responsibilities
  • Focus Team
  • Composed of the principal and a representative
    group of teachers
  • Attends training on how to begin WFSG
  • Leads the whole faculty through the WFSG
    orientation
  • Leads the whole faculty through the
    Decision-Making-Cycle, resulting in the
    establishment of what study groups will do.
  • Is represented on the Instructional Council.

38
Roles and Responsibilities
  • The Study Group Leader
  • Rotates every meeting so that leadership is a
    shared responsibility among all study group
    members
  • Confirms logistics of meetings with study group
    members
  • Starts ends meeting on time
  • Reminds members that stray from the focus of the
    meeting to refocus
  • Sees that the study group log is completed and
    that the members and the principal receive a copy

39
Roles and Responsibilities
  • Individual Study Group Members
  • Respect norms established by the study group.
  • Take turns serving as leader, recognizing that
    leadership is a shared responsibility.
  • Participate in the development of the study group
    action plan and commits to its actions.
  • Take responsibility for his or her own learning
    and for seeking resources for the study group.
  • Take responsibility for regularly bringing
    student work to the study group meeting.
  • Bring back to the study group what he or she has
    done in the classroom as a result of the study
    group work.

40
Instructional Council
  • The IC provides the network for communication and
    includes
  • 1 representative from each SG
  • The principal
  • 2-3 Focus Team members
  • Meets 4-8 times per year
  • Information from the IC disseminated?
  • Minutes
  • Newsletters
  • Reps report/share at their next SG meetings.

41
Bottom Line
  • gt75 of your teacher dont buy in, go fishing!
  • Must have principal endorsement, support, and do
    whatever it takes to make it work
  • Time commitments MUST BE HONORED
  • Content of SG work must be embedded into teacher
    practices (GIGO principle)
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