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Report on introducing School based professional development to support the implementation of the New National Curricula Pedagogical Institute Cyprus June 2012 Professor Tony Townsend Chair of Public Service, Educational Leadership and Management School of Education, University of Glasgow Our meeting today • An overview of the report • Understanding change management • Putting the recommendations into practice with some examples and the roles of the Ministry, the Pedagogical Institute, Inspectors and School Leaders • Discussion on next steps Part 1: An Overview of the report Strategies for Implementing and Supporting the new Curriculum This report suggests two main strategies for implementing the new curriculum into Cypriot schools. The first is to develop a school self-evaluation approach to curriculum improvement and the second is to establish a series of professional learning communities, for inspectors (at the national level), for school leaders (at the regional level) and for teachers (at the school level). School Self-evaluation Approach to School Improvement Essentially the school self-evaluation approach can be considered as responding to a number of questions: • What does our school do well? • How do we know how well we are doing? • What would we like to see our school achieving in 3 – 5 years? • What are the things we need to work on in order to build the bridge from question 1 to question 3? Professional Learning Communities Stoll et al (2006) define a Professional Learning Community in the following way • A professional learning community is an inclusive group of people, motivated by a shared learning vision, who support and work with each other, finding ways, inside and outside their immediate community, to enquire on their practice and together learn new and better approaches that will enhance all pupils’ learning. Final Recommendations • RECOMMENDATION 1: Development of indicators for student success associated with the curriculum areas together with the identified competencies. • RECOMMENDATION 2: Establish a national resource base • RECOMMENDATION 3: Establish an ongoing process of school curriculum planning, self-evaluation and inspection. • RECOMMENDATION 4: Support the development of national, regional and local professional learning communities. Understanding Change Management Change management: moving from good intentions to good results • Many organizations are increasingly exposing their employees to change, but they are not teaching their leaders and teams how to effectively manage the "people" side of change. We all have good intentions for managing change well, but sometimes our results fall short. What is change management? The process, tools and techniques to manage the people-side of change to achieve the required outcome(s) Managing change: people “8. My organization is good at managing the “people” side of change initiatives.” 36% 40% 30% 20% 24% 20% 10% 10% 8% 2% 0% Stongly Disagree Disagree Almost 1/2 disagree Neutral Agree Strongly Agree Don't Know & N/A Key points to consider Key point 1: We have to realize that effective change management is more than just a few pieces of communication Key point 2: We have to realize that we (the “changers”) may be “living” in the future state, while everyone else (“the changees”) is living in the present Key point 3: Effective change management MUST be focused on helping individuals change Key point 4: Individual change is a process Key point 5: We need to select and use the tools available to us Key point 6: We need the right people involved and engaged in the right ways Key point 7: Begin with end in mind. Measure the “right” things for this change, at the organizational level and the individual level Current State • Staff (including school leaders and administrators!) generally prefer the current state, because that is where they work now Current State Transition State Future State “better the devil you know is better than the devil you don’t” Future State • The future state is unknown to the staff; will it be better, or worse? • This is where the new curriculum teams “live” Current State Transition State Future State Transition State • The transition state creates stress and anxiety Current State Transition State Future State Successful change addresses both the technical and the people side The New curriculum is designed, developed and delivered effectively (Technical side) Project management Current Transition Change management + Future The new curriculum is embraced, adopted and utilized effectively (People side) = CHANGE SUCCESS Individual PEOPLE change, NOT organizations Individual change management is the Centerpiece of success The secret to successful change lies beyond the visible and busy activities that surround change. Successful change, at its core, is rooted in something much simpler: How to facilitate change with one person. From ADKAR: a model for change by Jeff Hiatt The five building blocks of successful individual change Awareness Desire Knowledge Ability Reinforcement A D K A R of the need for change to participate and support the change on how to change to implement required skills and behaviours to sustain the change ADKAR is the (relatively) easy-to-remember acronym ADKAR – Awareness of the need for change (why). – Desire to support and participate in the change (our choice). – Knowledge about how to change (the learning process). – Ability to implement the change (turning knowledge into action). – Reinforcement to sustain the change (celebrating success). Some Key Change Management Tools Communications Plan Training Readiness / Resistance Mgt. Coaching These channels enable Effective change management Mapping the tools to the personal change elements (ADKAR) Communications These channels enable project team to facilitate organization through phases of ADKAR. Plan Training Readiness / Resistance Mgt. Coaching Awareness Desire Knowledge Ability Reinforcement Change management requires a system of ‘doers’ Executives and senior managers Middle managers and supervisors Each ‘gear’ plays a specific role based on how they are related to change Change management resource/team Project team Project support functions Measuring Outcomes: the Organisational perspective Outcome: Did the new curriculum deliver the intended results? Organisational Current Transition Future • Process: Was the new curriculum delivered on time and on budget? Were milestones met along the way? Organisational Current Transition Future Measuring Outcomes: the Individual perspective Outcome: Individual Are teachers doing their work the “new way” that was required by the new curriculum? Current How well did teachers make the transition? How well did we** support that transition? Future Individual Process: Transition Current Transition A D K A R Future Implementing the recommendations Final Recommendations • RECOMMENDATION 1: Development of indicators for student success associated with the curriculum areas together with the identified competencies. • RECOMMENDATION 2: Establish a national resource base • RECOMMENDATION 3: Establish an ongoing process of school curriculum planning, self-evaluation and inspection. • RECOMMENDATION 4: Support the development of national, regional and local professional learning communities. Roles for various groups RECOMMENDATION 1: Development of indicators for student success associated with the curriculum areas together with the identified competencies. Ministry • Support a national workshop to identify major objectives and priorities of the Cypriot school system. Pedagogical Institute Inspectors Head Teachers • Conduct the national workshop inviting representatives of all stakeholder groups in education with the objective of identifying a specific list of national indicators. • Participate in workshop and nominate appropriate representatives from stakeholder groups. • Identify possible student parent and community representatives to participate in the national workshop. RECOMMENDATION 1: Development of indicators for student success Proposal: • National workshop funded by the Ministry and conducted by the Pedagogical Institute Objectives: • A series of goals associated with school and student success will have been identified and prioritised. • A series of behavioural indicators associated with these goals will have been identified. • A series of generic activities that will encourage this behaviour will have been identified. • Strategies for identifying specific activities for the various curriculum areas, for each of the behaviours, will have been developed. • A strategy for reporting student progress on each indicator will be identified. Three main pillars of the New Curriculum Students should: • Acquire an adequate (sufficient) and coherent (consistent) body of knowledge from all disciplines. • Develop attitudes and attributes that characterize a democratic citizen • Develop high levels of “key competences”, abilities and skills required for the society of the 21st century for the development of creative human being Key Competences in the New Curriculum a) Creativity b) Critical thinking and reflective management knowledge c) Theoretical thinking and ability to convert theory into practice d) Abilities and skills of analysis and design e) Willingness and ability for teamwork and information exchange f) Ability to problem solve, to develop and search options and develop the capacity to identify alternative theories g) Excellence in testing and prudent use of information and communication technologies h) Empathy and interpersonal skills and communication. Workshop activity: Part 1 Identifying goals • Step 1: Identify 5 curricular/academic goals, 5 attitudes, values or skills and 2 other outcomes that you would want every student to achieve by the time they leave school. Identifying Goals Step 1: Individual Goals Curriculum/Academic Goals (Individual List) C1 C2 C3 C4 C5 Values/Skills/Attitudes V1 V2 V3 V4 V5 Other Goals O1 O2 Workshop activity: Part 1 Identifying goals • Step 1: Identify 5 curricular/academic goals, 5 attitudes, values or skills and 2 other outcomes that you would want every student to achieve by the time they leave school. • Step 2: Small groups (5-6) discuss the individual goals and come up with an agreed list of 5 curricular/academic goals, 5 attitudes, values or skills and 2 other outcomes for the group Identifying Goals Step 1: Individual Goals Curriculum/Academic Goals (Individual List) C1 C2 C3 C4 C5 Values/Skills/Attitudes V1 V2 V3 V4 V5 Other Goals O1 O2 Workshop activity: Part 1 Identifying goals • Step 1: Identify 5 curricular/academic goals, 5 attitudes, values or skills and 2 other outcomes that you would want every student to achieve by the time they leave school. • Step 2: Small groups (5-6) discuss the individual goals and come up with an agreed list of 5 curricular/academic goals, 5 attitudes, values or skills and 2 other outcomes for the group • Step 3: The lists are consolidated into a single list so that all goals identified are listed but none are duplicated. Workshop activity: Part 2 Prioritising goals • Step 1: Individuals indicate the level of importance (on a 5 point scale) of the complete list of curricular/academic goals, attitudes, values or skills and other outcomes that they would want every student to achieve by the time they leave school. Scoring Priorities • Extremely important – Schools must do this 4 POINTS • Really important – Schools should ensure resources are found to do this 3 POINTS • Important - Schools should do this when resources become available 2 POINTS • Valuable – Schools could consider this when the more important things are done 1 POINT • Unimportant – This is not something that the Schools should be worried about 0 POINTS Workshop activity: Part 2 Prioritising goals • Step 1: Individuals indicate the level of importance (on a 5 point scale) of the complete list of curricular/academic goals, attitudes, values or skills and other outcomes that they would want every student to achieve by the time they leave school. • Step 2: Small groups (5-6) discuss their priorities and are asked to come up with a group priority list, with rules to make sure that all goals cannot be identified as equally important. Rules from Group Priorities 1. The number of points to be allocated will be 2 times the number of items. 2. The group must allocate all, but no more than their points budget in total. 3. At least one item in each group (so one curricular, one values and one other) must be given four points – the maximum score. 4. Four points can be allocated to as many items as the budget will allow. 5. Items can be given zero points. 6. The group must come to agreement on the allocation of points to each Workshop activity: Part 2 Prioritising goals • Step 1: Individuals indicate the level of importance (on a 5 point scale) of the complete list of curricular/academic goals, attitudes, values or skills and other outcomes that they would want every student to achieve by the time they leave school. • Step 2: Small groups (5-6) discuss their priorities and are asked to come up with a group priority list, with rules to make sure that all goals cannot be identified as equally important. • Step 3: The groups results are documented publicly and a final decision of agreed set of goals are identified. These form the list that will be used to create the national priorities. Further workshop activities 1. 2. 3. 4. Identify a series of behaviours that demonstrate successful achievement of the goals identified (eg How do we know when someone is literate? How do we know when someone is co-operative?) Some can be associated with what we would expect by the end of the primary school years and others by the end of the secondary school years. Consider some activities that might be used to enable students to demonstrate these behaviours for all of the curriculum areas of the new curriculum. Develop a mechanism for enabling teachers to identify and report student capabilities in these areas. Develop and publish on the Ministry website some of the activities that teachers might use for this purpose. Final Recommendations • RECOMMENDATION 1: Development of indicators for student success associated with the curriculum areas together with the identified competencies. • RECOMMENDATION 2: Establish a national resource base • RECOMMENDATION 3: Establish an ongoing process of school curriculum planning, self-evaluation and inspection. • RECOMMENDATION 4: Support the development of national, regional and local professional learning communities. Roles for various groups RECOMMENDATION 2: Establish a national resource base Ministry Pedagogical Institute Inspectors Head Teachers • Develop a dedicated website related to the implementation of the curriculum on the Ministry website • Conduct and publish research to support the introduction • Develop online training and support materials for teachers to use • Identify activities and processes at school level that could become models for best practice • Encourage teachers to use the resource base to support their teaching of the new curriculum The current website http://www.moec.gov.cy/dde/anaptyxi_veltiosi_scholeiou/index.html Action areas: · Leadership-Vision · Organisation-school management · Organization-class management · Self evaluation · Planning – Action plans · Climate – culture · Quality of the teaching and learning · Changes – innovations · Professional development of the personnel · New National curricula · New Time Schedules · School for all the kids RECOMMENDATION 2: Establish a national resource base An Example: Early years development framework, Victoria http://www.education.vic.gov.au/earlylearning/eyldf/default.htm Outcomes • Outcome 1: Children have a strong sense of identity • Outcome 2: Children are connected with and contribute to their world • Outcome 3: Children have a strong sense of wellbeing • Outcome 4: Children are confident and involved learners • Outcome 5: Children are effective communicators Research papers • • • • • Practice Principle One: Family-Centred Practice Practice Principle Two: Partnerships with Professionals Practice Principle Three: High Expectations for Every Child Practice Principle Four: Equity and Diversity Practice Principle Five: Respectful Relationships and Responsive Engagement • Practice Principle Six: Integrated Teaching and Learning Approaches • Practice Principle Seven: Assessment for Learning and Development • Practice Principle Eight: Reflective Practice Professional Learning opportunities • Module 1 - An Introduction to the Victorian Framework and Reflective Practice • Module 2 - An Introduction to Collaborative Practice • Module 3 - An Introduction to Effective Practice • Module 4 - Assessment for Learning and Development: The Early Years Planning Cycle These are offered as professional development and also are contained online for those that cannot attend in person. Reading about Improving professional practice • Practice Guide One: Family-centred Practice • Practice Guide Three: High Expectations for Every Child • Practice Guide Five: Respectful Relationships and Responsive Engagement • Practice Guide Eight: Reflective Practice Four more to be published in 2012 Conference opportunities http://www.earlychildhoodvictoria.org.au/Page.asp?_=Conferences The key themes of the 2012 conference include: understanding learning styles, talking to learn, learning frameworks and learning environments. Final Recommendations • RECOMMENDATION 1: Development of indicators for student success associated with the curriculum areas together with the identified competencies. • RECOMMENDATION 2: Establish a national resource base • RECOMMENDATION 3: Establish an ongoing process of school curriculum planning, self-evaluation and inspection. • RECOMMENDATION 4: Support the development of national, regional and local professional learning communities. Roles for various groups RECOMMENDATION 3: Establish an ongoing process of school curriculum planning, self-evaluation and inspection. Ministry Pedagogical Institute • Establish a policy of school self-evaluation and external inspection. Provide resources for a national pilot study and training program. • Work with the Ministry to establish a national training program and research activity to support the implementation of school selfevaluation. Inspectors • Undertake training in inspecting school progress using a school selfevaluation model. Head Teachers • Identify a leadership team that will undertake the training for school selfevaluation and support all school staff to learn these methods RECOMMENDATION 3: Establish an ongoing process of self-evaluation and inspection A Framework for continuous improvement The Scottish Model Supporting Schools to Improve Journey to Excellence website http://www.ltscotland.org.uk/journeytoexcellence/index.asp Curriculum for Excellence Curriculum for Excellence http://www.ltscotland.org.uk/curriculumforexcellence/index.asp The road map to improvement The Journey to Excellence Guide contains: Part 1: Aiming for Excellence • describes the concept of excellence • discusses the nature of the learning process and what we mean by successful learning • outlines ten dimensions of excellent schools and early education centres. Part 2: Exploring Excellence • describes the key features of each of the ten dimensions of excellence in more detail • provides examples and illustrations in a variety of forms • indicates some of the ways in which excellent practice differs from practice which is good • suggests the direction schools need to travel to transform their practice from good to excellent. The road map to improvement The Journey to Excellence Guide contains: Part 3: How good are we now? • provides the next version of How good is our school?, a quality framework made up of quality indicators and performance measures to help you work out where you are now and think through your next steps in continuous improvement. Part 4: Planning for Excellence • • • provides advice about how you and your partners can go about selecting the most appropriate dimensions for improvement recommends ways of planning for your journey to excellence suggests how you can check your progress. Part 5: Journeys to Excellence • • • provides real examples of excellent practice in schools and early education centres, in audio-visual format presents the voices of children, young people, staff, parents and partners describing the stage their school has reached on the journey to excellence, the route it has taken and where they are going next. The Slovenian Model Slovenian School self-evaluation training model DEFINING SCHOOL PRIORITIES AND GOALS IN TERMS OF STUDENTS’ ACHIEVEMNTS DATA-BASED IMPROVEMENT PLANNING AND DECISION MAKING STUDENTS’ ACHIEVEMNTS FOCUS LEADERSHIP WHOLE SCHOOL APPROACH SCHOOL/ EVALUATION CULTURE REFLECTION AND REPORTING SCHOOL IMPROVEMENT PLANNING IMPLEMEMNTING AND MONITORING IMPROVEMENT Train the trainers National School for Leadership in Education (NSLE) School self-evaluation team (SET) – 84 schools 7 days training (headteacher + 2 or 3 teachers) – 255 participants 7 intermediate activities School staff – over 3900 participants … whole school approach … leadership (SET) … from theory to practice … school/evaluation culture 7 days of training for Schools • Setting priorities and goals (learning, teaching, student achievement) • Improvement and self-evaluation planning • Improvement monitoring (data) • The role of leadership, self-evaluation stakeholders • Analysis and reflection as the foundation for selfevaluation • Reporting and long-term improvement and selfevaluation planning • A model of self-evaluation at school level Training for establishing a self-evaluation culture Each of the 7 days of training includes: • Direct contact hours or a workshop, organised for headteachers by the Leadership School, and by self-evaluation teams for entire teaching staff • Interim activities in schools, such as: – Professional discussions taking place within the entire teaching staff or in teacher groups (organised eg. according to subjects, age groups, triads) – Individual interim activities taking place at the level of individual participants External Evaluation of School’s reportsTraining for External evaluation training Day 1: Introduction, external evaluators' knowledge and skills Day 2: Self-evaluation and external evaluation Day 3: Evaluating the quality of self-evaluation – data gathering Day 4: Communication and feedback, reporting Day 5: External evaluation and inspection Day 6: Preparing for external evaluation Day 7: Introductory meeting of external evaluators and schools to be evaluated … conducting external evaluations in schools Day 8: Evaluation of external evaluations (evaluators and schools' representatives) School’s evaluation of the SSE and External evaluation process Why is such an approach to external evaluation good? • External evaluation is first and foremost a positive experience • It is not an inspection • Evaluators' visit brings positive tensions (not fear!), preparation and a more in-depth reflection about selfevaluation and quality as such • It is not control, it is not academic/science level … it is practice, it is exchange of practitioner knowledge and experience • Two evaluators per school are enough, the protocol and everything else (meetings, materials, communication, reporting…) is well organized School’s evaluation of the SSE and External evaluation process Why is such an approach to external evaluation good? • External evaluation is focused on self-evaluation process, report and quality of teaching and learning – that is good/necessary because other areas are covered by other reviews (eg. inspection) • It can be of a big help to headteacher (if one wants that) • It is good for school image • School gets a critical/constructive, positive and professional feedback with regards to it's improvement goals, activities, monitoring, self-evaluation as a part of school policy (not just a project) etc • Helps in making sense of self-evaluation for school staff • Focused only on self-evaluation, teaching and learning processes Strengths of self-evaluation (Brejc and Savarin 2011) • Accustoms teachers to systematic monitoring and evaluation of their own performance (3.5) • Focuses quality endeavours to teaching and learning (3.5) • Directs school activities to priorities (3.5) • Enables all teachers to actively and participatory contribute to school improvement (3.5) • Encourages systematic approach to ongoing school activities (3.4) Final Recommendations • RECOMMENDATION 1: Development of indicators for student success associated with the curriculum areas together with the identified competencies. • RECOMMENDATION 2: Establish a national resource base • RECOMMENDATION 3: Establish an ongoing process of school curriculum planning, self-evaluation and inspection. • RECOMMENDATION 4: Support the development of national, regional and local professional learning communities. Roles for various groups RECOMMENDATION 4: Support the development of national, regional and local professional learning communities. Ministry Pedagogical Institute Inspectors • Provide resources on the new curriculum website that will help people understand and develop professional learning communities • Provide facilities and support for inspectors to form a national PLC of inspectors to enable them to meet regularly and discuss issues of school improvement. • Establish one or more PLCs in their local regions to bring together Head Teachers and other school leaders to discuss issues associated with the new curriculum and school improvement Head Teachers • Provide the time and resources for teachers to form and develop PLCs associated with improving student learning in either subject areas or grade levels. RECOMMENDATION 4: Support the development of Recommendation 4: Develop national, regional and local PLCs professional learning communities • An effective professional learning community has the capacity to promote and sustain the learning of all professionals in the school community with the collective purpose of enhancing pupil learning. (Stoll, et al, 2006) Professional Learning Communities in Cyprus National Level • Inspectors create a professional learning community where national objectives and policies can be discussed and debated Regional Level • Inspectors support the development of professional learning communities for Head Teachers in a particular region Local Level • Head Teachers support the development of learning communities in their schools Professional Learning Communities Research Project UK • Project website: www.eplc.info • Project report available: www.dfes.gov.uk/research Bolam et al (2005) Source Materials for Professional Learning Communities • What is a professional learning community? A summary • User guide: getting started and thinking about your journey • Creating and sustaining an effective professional learning community • Setting professional learning communities in an international context • Broadening the learning community: key messages • Exploring the idea of professional learning communities • Investigating the culture of your professional learning community Source Materials for Professional Learning Communities • Comparing your preferred future and the current situation in your professional learning community • Deciding where you are as a professional learning community • Planning your professional learning community • Developing your professional learning community • Bringing about change: Starting out, developing and sustaining • Reflecting on the progress of your professional learning community • Assessing the impact of your professional learning community If you would like more details contact ProfessorTony Townsend: School of Education University of Glasgow Phone: +44(0)141 330 4434 Fax: +44(0)141 330 5451 email: [email protected]