How Can We Support Overloaded Teachers to Keep Getting Better?

How Can We Support Overloaded Teachers to Keep Getting Better?

Rigorous, sustained and job-embedded professional learning for teachers is critical; the research is clear that a rise in student outcomes is not possible without an investment in our teachers. But on the ground, enhancing teacher practice is hard. School terms move at a frenetic pace, life at the chalk face can be unpredictable, and teachers often report feeling overloaded. In this context, it’s difficult for teachers to prioritise getting better at the job, when they’re so busy just trying to do the job.?

Over years of working with thousands of teachers and leaders, a few recurring questions began to consume our thinking: How can we support teachers to improve practice in a way that is both robust and rewarding over the long term? Rigorous and manageable? Meaningful for actual classroom practice and informed by the best educational research??

Designed hand-in-hand with teachers, Teaching Sprints is our collective answer to these questions. It’s an improvement process all schools can use to support teachers to routinely get better at what they do best.?


The power of a sprint?

The concept of a “sprint” originated in the technology sector and is used in a broad range of organisations around the world. Thankfully, running a “sprint” in this context involves no physical exercise. Rather we use the term to describe engagement in highly focused improvement work within a tightly framed period of time. While the idea of a “sprint” might be new in the context of teacher professional learning, we think it provides a helpful shared language for describing short, sharp bursts of practice improvement work.?


The collective impact of incremental gains?

Teaching Sprints embraces the notion of “massive incremental gains”, where seemingly modest improvement goals become the focus for growth. Applied to teacher learning, this way of working supports teachers to work on truly modest shifts to practice; when sequenced thoughtfully, little evidence-informed changes can add up to significant improvement over time.?


Drawing on the best evidence?

Because time for professional learning in schools is so limited, Teaching Sprints promotes a laser-like focus on only those practices that are supported by the best available evidence from the field. Over short stretches of intense improvement work (called “sprints”), evidence-based practices – the best bets for enhancing student learning – are prioritised.?


Teaching Sprints at a glance?

The Teaching Sprints process is easy to remember and simple to use. It involves teachers working in small teams, and comprises three discrete phases.?

Figure 1.The Teaching Sprints Process?

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Phase 1. PREPARE

In the Prepare Phase, your team determines which area of practice you want to improve. This involves engaging with the “best bets” from the evidence base and agreeing on intended practice improvements. The Prepare Phase ends when all members of the team commit to practising a specific evidence-based strategy in the Sprint Phase.?

Phase 2: SPRINT

The Sprint Phase is all about bridging theory to practice. Over 2 to 4 weeks, team members apply new learning in classrooms through intentional practice. Throughout the Sprint, the team monitors the impact of new approaches, and teachers adapt the strategies based on impact. Supported by a simple protocol, the group meets for a quick, focused Check-in to monitor progress and sustain momentum.?

Phase 3: REVIEW?

After 2 to 4 weeks in the Sprint Phase, your team gathers again to close out the Teaching Sprint. During the Review Phase, you reflect on learning as practitioners. The team discusses changes to practice, considers the impact evidence, and decides how new learning will be transferred into future practice.?


A focus on practice for the benefit of students?

Teaching Sprints is first and foremost about teachers and their learning – the deepening of their pedagogical knowledge, the expansion of their instructional repertoires, and the enhancement of their expertise. While the focus of the process is enhancing the quality of teaching, the ultimate aim is to sustainably lift student learning. As teams of teachers routinely engage in short cycles of practice improvement, they build capacity to tackle more complex instructional challenges and meet the needs of diverse learners.?


Adapting the process to your context?

People all over the world, in diverse educational settings, have used Teaching Sprints to drive practice improvements. Every term, teachers in these schools come together to learn from the evidence and apply their learning intentionally in classrooms. At the same time, these schools adapt the process in lots of different ways: they tweak, stretch, shrink and mold Teaching Sprints to fit their team, school or system. Teaching Sprints has been designed with enough built-in “wriggle room” for you to make it your own, and we encourage you to do just that.?


Learn more about Teaching Sprints

Visit our website and check out the Teaching Sprints book! Purchase online here.


This article was initially published for Corwin Connect. Read the original article here - https://corwin-connect.com/2021/02/how-can-we-support-overloaded-teachers-to-keep-getting-better/

Alex Delaforce

Teach | Develop | Support <> Teaching & Learning Approaches | Ed Tech Systems & Resources

3 年

Teaching is an intense activity and I’ve been thinking about how sprint-like approaches could support professional growth. This has potential as long as it is guided by a well conceived and understood learning/teaching approach or framework. Thanks Dr Simon Breakspear for the article.

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Dale Zawertailo

Head of English, Teacher of VCE English and IB Language and Literature

3 年

Love teaching sprints. I have been using them to help our teachers focus on one area of their teaching that can become even better.

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Anne-Maree Crivelli

Principal Consultant

3 年

Great to see your work in continuing to support teachers

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Bronwen Martin

Victorian High Ability Program : Leading Teacher-English

3 年

Great ideas. In the reality of remote learning we are introducing a trial “walk through” focussing on a teacher selecting samples of the student work a task produced. We are scaffolding our team members to ‘notice’ and ‘wonder,’ after reading the work samples, before the teacher reacts and explains both their insights in relation to their colleagues’ observations as well as how they, as a teacher, mindfully scaffolded the students with the task.

Ben Gibbs

Psych-informed and systemically-minded organisational consultancy, executive coaching & leadership development - I enable clarity in complexity, helping you and your teams know what to do when you don't know what to do

3 年

Oh the irony! Maybe by suggesting they’re good enough already?

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