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Teacher Leadership: What do we know so far? nn Lieberman, Ph.D. enior Scholar, Stanford University pril 11, 2013
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Teacher Leadership: What do we know so far?

Jan 20, 2016

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Teacher Leadership: What do we know so far?. Ann Lieberman, Ph.D. Senior Scholar, Stanford University April 11, 2013. WHY TEACHER LEADERSHIP? AND WHY NOW?. * CHANGES IN THE WORLD * CHALLENGES FOR SCHOOLS * TEACHER LEADERS CAN MAKE THE DIFFERENCE. GLOBALIZATION : CHALLENGES FOR SCHOOLS. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
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Page 1: Teacher Leadership: What do we know so far?

Teacher Leadership: What do we know so far?

Ann Lieberman, Ph.D.Senior Scholar, Stanford UniversityApril 11, 2013

Page 2: Teacher Leadership: What do we know so far?

WHY TEACHER LEADERSHIP? AND WHY NOW?

* CHANGES IN THE WORLD

* CHALLENGES FOR SCHOOLS

* TEACHER LEADERS CAN MAKE THE DIFFERENCE

Page 3: Teacher Leadership: What do we know so far?

GLOBALIZATION:

CHALLENGES FOR SCHOOLS

Teaching to learning Passive to active involvement Rote to teaching for understanding Solo artisans to members of a professional

community Anecdotes to evidence Aligning policies with practices

Page 4: Teacher Leadership: What do we know so far?

Learning in Practice

Schon’s reflective practice Making the private public Making implicit-explicit Wenger’s “communities of practice” Learning as social participation Learning as discovering meaning Learning as identity

Page 5: Teacher Leadership: What do we know so far?

Learning to Lead in a Network

The Social Practices of the NWP

• Approaching each colleague as a potentially

valuable contributor

• Honoring teacher knowledge.

• Creating public forums for teacher sharing, dialog, and critique.• Turning ownership over to learners

Page 6: Teacher Leadership: What do we know so far?

Social Practices (Cont’d)

• Situating human learning in practice and relationships.

• Providing multiple entry points in the the learning community.

• Guiding reflection on teaching through reflection on learning.

• Sharing leadership.

Page 7: Teacher Leadership: What do we know so far?

Social Practices (Cont’d)

• Promoting a stance of inquiry. • Reconceptualizing professionalidentity and linking it to professionalcommunity.

Page 8: Teacher Leadership: What do we know so far?

Yvonne’s website

Joan’s website

Sarah's website

Learning to Lead through Teacher Scholarship

Page 9: Teacher Leadership: What do we know so far?
Page 10: Teacher Leadership: What do we know so far?

Learning from Teacher Consultants: Vignettes on Leadership Learning Leadership: Acquiring an identity Learning to handle conflict: Making it

productive Learning to develop collaboration and

community Learning from practice: Reflecting on old and

new knowledge.

Page 11: Teacher Leadership: What do we know so far?

Learning from Mentors as Teacher Leaders Building a new identity Developing trusting relationships Accelerating teacher development Mentoring in challenging contexts Learning leadership skills

Page 12: Teacher Leadership: What do we know so far?

Learning from the Teacher Learning and Leadership Program (TLLP)

Promoting trust and cooperation between government and unions

Teachers teaching teachers Growing teacher leaders Building community rather than

compliance Joining practice, research and enabling

policy

Page 13: Teacher Leadership: What do we know so far?

TLLP STUDY RESULTS

Teacher led, self directed unique & vital. Knowledge exchange clearly advanced

as 85% worked with another person or team.

Huge benefits in teacher learning, leadership, spreading practices, small budgets.

Teachers felt professionally valued.

Page 14: Teacher Leadership: What do we know so far?

Teachers who lead: Become inquirers into their own practice Provide leadership through their

example of becoming lifelong learners Take risks by expanding their own

comfort zones. Inspire their peers through a continual

struggle to improve their practice.

Page 15: Teacher Leadership: What do we know so far?

Teachers who lead (Cont’d) Work hard expanding their own

knowledge base. Organize novice and veteran teachers

into communities of support Care about the content and character of

colleagueship as well as the content of the curriculum

Understand that learning the culture is a critical part of leadership

Page 16: Teacher Leadership: What do we know so far?

Teachers who lead (Cont’d)

Go public with their understandings of students; strategies for student learning

and the organization of curriculum. Pursue working with their peers despite

sometimes negative responses. Lead in different ways - both formally

and informally

Page 17: Teacher Leadership: What do we know so far?

TEACHER LEADERSHIP IS: A way of organizing learning. A way of understanding the

connections between knowledge and practice.

A way of combining the explicit and tacit ways of knowing.

A way of learning the skills, abilities and capacities for developing and nurturing community among peers.

A way of negotiating the tensions between privacy and a new view of community.