Taking it to the Next Level
Prefer audio? Listen to the full conversation between Jenna and Sarah(+ extras!) here .
By Jenna Fournel , Director of Teaching & Learning
Several years ago, when Sarah Elwell was a librarian in DC Public Schools she took part in Inspired Teaching’s “Building Literacy in the Social Studies” program. “It was absolutely different but necessary, and I don’t know many curriculum development projects or programs that link like that one did to the pedagogical experience in order to create the kind of curriculum that is going ot have us take students out of the box. It was definitely professional learning that was uncomfortable for me but I grew so much.”?
That hunger for meaningful learning has driven Sarah since she entered the profession.?
“To be frank professional learning saved me,” she says. “Without professional learning, I would have never become the teacher that I needed to be or the educator that my students needed me to be.” Now Sarah is the Assistant Director of Professional Learning for the American Federation of Teachers and in this role, she’s responsible for creating learning modules for teachers across the country. With attrition in the profession making headlines due to dissatisfaction with the job, she sees PD as a solution. “Do [teachers] feel they have efficacy in what they are doing? Do they feel as if they are making a difference? That comes from very strong professional learning support.”?
How does a teacher find those job-affirming learning opportunities? Sarah recommends looking for:?
Sarah notes that too often in one-off PD sessions, a facilitator unloads a bunch of information. But the participants can bring much to the learning and good PD “lifts up the experiences and the great knowledge that is a resource in the room, facilitating that conversation and discourse.?I do not think that you can disentangle teacher empowerment from high-quality transformative professional learning.”
Part of that empowerment comes from helping teachers find and fund the professional learning they need. “As a new teacher I had no idea that I could advocate for any professional learning that was outside the school or the district,” Sarah notes. “Knowledge is power. Having mentors that share that with newer teachers and also newer teachers tapping into that is really crucial because?districts, schools, communities, families, they’re all going to agree that they want the most prepared, most invigorated educators in front of students. That’s a united concept.?Yet securing the funding to get professional learning may seem like an insurmountable challenge.” Sarah offers these?ways to tackle that challenge:?
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When you see professional learning as central to your practice, finding exceptional opportunities becomes part of the fun of the job. Sarah noted that this ongoing learning ensured she was never bored or disconnected from her work. “I felt supremely confident in my knowledge base and pedagogy. But I don’t think I ever taught something the same way twice because I was always wondering how could I take it to the next level to be highly effective … to make those memorable and transformative moments for students.”?
As you engage in professional learning at the end of this school year or during the summer, may it be memorable and transformative for you!?
Resources
Today’s resources come from our?Instigator of Thought challenges , a series of bite-sized professional learning modules that you can try out anytime, anywhere. These challenges can be done all by yourself or in community with your colleagues so you can share notes and learning together.?
Descriptive feedback orients students toward their learning process. In this Challenge, you will track how often you provide generic praise and try some new language for meaningful feedback.
The posters we put in our classrooms communicate expectations to students, but what other intentional or unintentional messages do they send? The goal of this activity is to encourage you to consider these messages and their connection to your goals.
Brain science shows that exercise boosts blood flow to the brain, your students have to walk the halls of your school several times a day. This challenge invites you to reconsider how you might use those walks to do more than get from place to place.