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The Need for Professional Learning Communities | Print |  E-mail
 
Written by Stevan J. Kukic, Ph.D., VP of Strategic Education Initiatives, Sopris West Educational Initiatives, on October 15, 2008
Ensuring that your Professional Learning Community (PLC) actually is professional, focused on learning, and really is a community!

It is very cool today to say that you work in a Professional Learning Community (PLC).  The DuFours and their colleagues have energized the nation with their principles and stories of schools that have developed stretch cultures that ensure that all students will learn to high levels.

The DuFours have proven that it can happen.  We can be successful with virtually all students.  So, why aren't we?  I think the answer is in the words Professional…Learning…Community.

Is your PLC actually Professional?  If your school/district buys programs primarily based on which company gives you the most free stuff, then your PLC is not professional.  If your school/district allows its educators to use research-based core curricula and interventions in ways that do not ensure fidelity of implementation, then your PLC is not professional.  If your school/district allows its educators to continue to use instructional strategies that have a proven track record of not working, then your PLC is not professional.

But, if your school/district buys programs based on the intersection of standards to be met and student needs to be addressed, then your PLC is professional. If your school/district demands that program investments are treated with care and efficacy, then your PLC is professional.  If your school/district uses the effective schools literature as a basis of instructional strategies, staff evaluation, and professional development, then your PLC is professional.

Here’s the bottom line.  Numerous studies have proven that what we do in schools has 6-10 times more influence on learning than all the demographic issues students bring to schools COMBINED!  We can be professional, if we choose to be.

Is your PLC focused on learning?  If your school/district makes educational decisions based on tradition, then your PLC is not focused on learning.  If your school/district makes educational decisions based on the ideology of who is in power in your system, then your PLC is not focused on learning.

But, if your school/district makes educational decisions based on whether or not the strategy used has significantly increased achievement, then your PLC is focused on learning.

Here’s the bottom line.  The great Anita Archer says it best: "If there is not learning, there has not been teaching!"  Our focus can be: If it works, keep doing it, if it doesn’t, stop using it!  We can focus on learning, if we choose to do so.

Is your PLC really a community?  If your school/district is a hierarchical, top down organization, then your PLC is not a community.  If your school/district views collaboration as an end rather than a means, then your PLC is not a community.

But, if your school/district views the one purpose of collaboration to be to improve achievement, then your PLC is a community.

Here is the bottom bottom line.  We actually can develop PLCs that match best practice.  Ron Edmonds said it best in 1982:

"We can, whenever we choose, successfully teach all children whose schooling is of interest to us. We already know more than we need to do that. Whether or not we do it must finally depend on how we feel about the fact that we haven’t so far."



Readers' Comments (13)

Posted by Michael McNurten, on October 17, 2008
Well said! Successful Professional Learning Communities can truly be the glue that ties a school together and provides staff with the information and resources they need to go forward with good teaching. What I wonder, however, is where you fit in the time to create successful PLC's? In other words, how does a school invest the time needed to create a successful PLC without cutting out other important and necessary things?
 

Posted by Stevan Kukic, on October 23, 2008
i think building and maintaining a PLC is the foundational work of the school. A coolaborative culture that is based on the premise that all children WILL learn is at the heart of success.
 

Posted by Michael Moyle, on November 19, 2008
I feel that we are our most valuable asset in education. PLCs are not only a great way to collaborate, but the best way for educators to learn. Professional development as it has been done in the past is ineffectual. It simply doesn't improve achievement by inviting some expert from out-of-state to tell us how we should teach our own kids. These experts are helpful for the motivated autodidact, but most people will say in their heart, "I'm going to continue doing what I'm doing." I believe that the PLC is so effective because teachers trust their colleagues much more than experts.
 

Posted by Stevan Kukic, on November 19, 2008
Michael, 
 
Well said! I know the power of teacher to teacher contact. Combining that with a dedication to implementing effective practice with fidelity provides the school with a combination that will result in higher achievement.
 

Posted by Howard, on February 14, 2009
Professional Learning Teams are at the heart of our transformational efforts at our Rolling Meadows High School(IL). We create course-based teams empowered with internal performance data reports that explain how students are performaing std. by std. in their course. The PLT manages the Tier One process to insure that their program insures 80% of their students reach mastery. This makes Tier Two managable. See: empoweredhighschools.com
 

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