As a follow to the June 2019
discussion, when endeavoring to develop and sustain a learning culture,
effective leaders must mitigate learning overload. The following discussion seeks to provide strategic
protocols for promoting collaborative teams.
These include a professional learning community, which can reduce stress
and fear while optimizing organizational learning.
An
effective school collaboratively reaches consensus on the mission, core values,
and beliefs (Lezotte & Snyder, 2011).
Thereafter, collective inquiry is effective for building shared
knowledge. This process, “in turn,
allows them to make more informed (and therefore better) decisions, and
increases the likelihood they will arrive at consensus” (DuFour, DuFour, &
Eaker, 2008, p. 17). Given the identified benefits of a collaborative
professional learning community (PLC), Dufour et al were “convinced educators
would benefit from both greater clarity regarding the PLC concept and specific
strategies for implementing the concept” (p. 15).
Effective
communication promotes collaboration, thereby optimizing the learning
organization’s ability to reach consensus. Schmoker (1999) posits teams outperform
individual efforts, therefore, "learning not only occurs in teams but
endures" (p. 12). An effective
learning organization utilizes the following three beliefs to optimize teams and
the PLC concept:
1. the team believes strongly in each
member's capacity to develop practical solutions to everyday teaching and
learning problems;
2. there is a belief that regardless of
a school's social or economic circumstances, improvement can and will occur;
3. the team arrives at each meeting
anticipating that informed trial and error will inevitably lead to better
teaching and hence to higher learning (Schmoker, 1999, p.20).
Utilizing six
elements of an effective PLC helps educators benefit in a number of ways from
working together. These include
developing a clear, shared vision. This
element optimizes the group’s ability to develop a collaborative culture
focusing on learning, engage in collective inquiry, remain action oriented,
commit to continuous improvement, and adjust further based on results (Dufour
et al., 2008). Thus, the six elements of
an effective PLC promote learning by doing.
As with many processes developed for sustaining success, the six elements
work most effectively when treated as an interdependent, cyclical process.
To
be successful, the PLC requires “reculturing the traditional culture of schools
and districts” (Dufour et al., 2008, p. 6).
Crucially, the shift needs to be cultural and not merely structural, thereby
embedding sustained improvements in “the
assumptions, beliefs, values, expectations, and habits that constitute the norm
for that organization” (p. 90). A
skillful educational leader begins developing an effective collaborative
culture by understanding the improvement process rather than merely the
systemic change process. A skillful
educational leader and empowered educators trust in established and agreed upon
non-negotiable goals (NNGs) and values while embracing both school-based and
teacher autonomy.
An
instructional leader can create a defined learning culture to optimize
structured organizational learning by utilizing strategies that encourage high
levels of effectiveness. The first
pursuit in this endeavor is to mitigate learning overload. Learning overload prevents effective
educational leaders from realizing progress and achievement of stated goals
(Reason, 2010). Citing Kennedy (2006)
and Franklin (2005), Reason (2010) notes, “We can’t alter the brain to hold
more information, but we can change our approach to learning in ways that
reduce overwhelm and prepare us to deal with institutional challenges more
effectively” (p. 99). Every stakeholder’s reticular activating
system (RAS) impacts his or her attention and motivation. Therefore, the RAS influences how efficiently
staff addresses the organizational focal points. The effective leader recognizes this and
seeks to “clearly identify the learning focal points that matter” (p. 100) as a
way to mitigate stressors that overwhelms one’s perception and attention to
organizational focal points.
Learning
organizations attend to what Vygotsky called scientific concepts (Tudge &
Scrimsher, 2003). Scientific concepts
are psychological tools such as language, formulas, memory techniques,
concepts, rules, symbols, and signs.
Properly designed class instruction utilizes and learns through these
psychological tools, which reduces learning overload by optimizing
metacognition (Bohlin et al., 2008)
In
the pursuit of defining a learning culture, effective leaders also seek to optimize
structured organizational learning by utilizing a system proven effective for promoting
change. The following eight-step
protocol (Reason, 2010), promotes success while reducing learning overload:
Step One: Acknowledging Learning Limits
Step Two: Lightening the Learning Load
Step Three: Identifying Learning Focal
Points
Step Four: Establishing Emotional
Relevance
Step Five: Establishing Inquiry
Step Six: Identifying Essential Goals and
Outcomes
Step Seven: Making the Focal Points Public
Step Eight: Funneling New Ideas
Into Current Focal Points (pp. 103-112)
Reason
(2010) posits, “The identification of learning focal points, empowering
questions, and must-have outcomes won’t reduce all the confusion in an
organization” (p. 112). However, the eight-step
protocol noted above optimizes the learning organization’s ability to
prioritize elements essential for promoting student learning and sustaining
reform. Clarity and focus mitigates fear
and stress, thereby improving the organization’s culture of learning while reducing
learning overload.
The
improvement to the collaborative culture begins with recognizing promotion of student
learning in schools that are loosely coupled by design requires a tightly
coupled system in relation to the established non-negotiable goals (NNGs). Beginning with district leadership, a culture
based on “defined autonomy” (Marzano & Waters, 2010, p. 8) communicates
NNGs to both the internal and external stakeholders. Otherwise, change can be either slow or
nonexistent.
An
effective educational leader confidently handles more autonomy or increased degrees
of freedom. By contrast, novice
principals or leaders at struggling schools need more guidance and direction
from district-level leaders. An
effective leader recognizes when and how staff can work autonomously and
collaboratively, thereby developing or removing staff as necessary and
promoting a culture of high expectations within the school (Eck & Goodwin,
2010).
Purpose
driven inquiry (Reason, 2010) can be utilized with either small groups or the
entire school community. Reason
presented a six-step protocol useful for small and systemic projects alike:
Step One:
Identifying the Question and Knowing Why We Ask It
Step Two: Igniting Collective Curiosity
Step Three:
Defining Strategic Action
Step Four: Defining Accountability
Step Five: Making the Agenda Public
Step Six: Maintaining Engagement
(pp. 78-86)
Establishment
of non-negotiable goals (NNGs) are a product of earlier collaboration, which
promoted staff empowerment. Determination
to collaborate, time to meet, willingness to ask serious questions, creating an
action plan, and always meeting with an agenda, promotes communication aligned
to those established NNGs. Therefore,
Reason’s (2010) six-step protocol for purpose driven inquiry mitigates learning
overload while encouraging communication directed at sustained improvement and
organizational learning.
Effective
accountability requirements hastened the emergence of professional learning
communities (PLC). Marzano and Waters
(2009) believe, a PLC “suggests a group of people sharing and critically
interrogating their practice in an ongoing, reflective, collaborative,
inclusive, learning oriented, growth-promoting way; operating as a collective
enterprise” (p. 56). The PLC and any potential
action research must address the need to develop and sustain a systemic culture
of continuous improvement that promotes learning (DuFour, et al, 2008).
Positive
change needs new thinking, willingness, humility, collaboration, and a
collective vision grounded in a clear mission.
Unintended consequences, which often fall into the pool labeled
“negative change,” typically ignore those characteristics connected with
positive change. Ideally, this
discussion successfully emphasized it is not enough to want to change or need
to change, for to effectively change, an organization must experience positive
change.
To
Cite:
Anderson,
C.J. (July 30, 2019) Developing
and sustaining a collaborative learning culture.
[Web log post] Retrieved from http://www.ucan-cja.blogspot.com/
References
Bohlin, L., Durwin, C., &
Reese-Weber, M. (2008). Ed psych: Modules. NY: McGraw-Hill.
DuFour, R., DuFour, R., & Eaker, R. (2008). Revisiting
professional learning communities at
work:
New insights for improving schools. Bloomington, IN: Solution Tree Press.
Eck, J., &
Goodwin, B. (2010). Autonomy for school leaders. School Administrator, 67(1),
24-27.
Lezotte, L. W., &
Snyder, K. M. (2011). What effective schools do: Re-envisioning the
correlates. Bloomington, IN: Solution Tree
Press.
Marzano, R. &
Waters, T.(2009). District leadership that works. Bloomington, IN:
Solution
Tree Press
Reason, C. (2010). Leading
a learning organization: The science of working with others.
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IN: Solution Tree Press.
Schmoker, J, (1999) The Key to Continuous School
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Tudge, J., & Scrimsher, S. (2003). Lev S. Vygotsky
on education: A cultural-historical,
interpersonal,
and individual approach to development. In B. J. Zimmerman &
D. H. Schunk (Eds.), Educational
psychology: A century of contributions
(pp. 207–228) Mahwah, NJ: Erlbaum.
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