‘No book I have read in the past ten years has made clearer to me the difference between what I am doing as a professional developer and what I should be doing. It is so unremittingly honest about the difficulty of our work, and yet so rich in practical examples that I cannot help but feel inspired to move forward and change the way I teach and learn with teachers.’
Richard W. Strong, Vice President
Silver Strong & Associates, LLC
‘There are many books on the market covering school improvement and teachers as experts as well as staff development; however, this book is concise, provides excellent templates, and is backed by real experiences and expertise.’
Suzanne C. Fonoti, Principal
Flagstaff Arizona Unified School District
Forget expensive consultants—use the expertise within your own school for quality professional development!
Martin-Kniep offers practical methods for developing a reflective, collaborative environment where teachers and administrators work together to enhance teachers′ practices, increase student learning, and produce valuable school processes. Developing Learning Communities Through Teacher Expertise includes frameworks, templates, and examples that can be employed to determine the value and implications surrounding the use of teacher-designed standards-based curriculum and assessment, data-driven inquiry, and professional portfolios.
Based on work completed at the nonprofit Center for the Study of Expertise in Teaching and Learning, this innovative volume includes:
- Examples of teachers′ reflections, portfolio artifacts, and student work
- Sample standards-based curriculum units for different content areas and grade levels
- Discussion questions and recommended readings
- Sample worksheets and self-assessments
- Standards-based curriculum and assessment design tools
- Sample rubrics for student and teacher development
Developing Learning Communities Through Teacher Expertise offers step-by-step instructions for developing an action plan for incorporating learning communities into a school. Providing numerous real-life examples, Martin-Kniep includes three specific teaching units and supporting material, which illustrate how to identify and capitalize on teachers′ existing expertise.
Tabela de Conteúdo
Preface
Acknowledgments
About the Author
1. Learning Communities
What Are Learning Communities?
Why Are They Important?
What Do Learning Communities Do? What do They Require to Function?
What Gets in the Way of the Development of Learning Communities?
What Can We Do to Support Learning Communities?
Possible Questions for the Reader
Recommended Books on Learning Communities
2. Standards-Based Curriculum and Assessment Design
What Does It Take to Develop a Standards-Based, Learner-Centered Unit?
How Do We Help Teachers Develop High-Quality Standards-Based Units?
Possible Questions for the Reader
Recommended Books on Standards-Based Curriculum and Assessment Design
3. Data-Driven Inquiry and Action Research
Three Examples of Inquiry
How Can Schools Support Individual, Collaborative, and School-Based Research?
Possible Questions for the Reader
Recommended Books on Action Research and Use of Data
4. Professional Portfolios
What Do Professional Portfolios Include?
Understanding and Use of Standards-Based and Learner-Centered Curriculum and Assessment
Use of Reflection and Data to Improve One′s Practice
How Are Professional Portfolios Organized?
How Can Schools Begin to Support the Development and Use of Professional Portfolios?
Possible Questions for the Reader
Recommended Books on Portfolios
5. Developing an Action Plan
Identification of Internal Expertise
Assessment of Needs
Brokering of Relationships Among Teachers
Curriculum and Assessment Design Work
Inquiry and Analysis Work
Professional Portfolio Work
Appendix A: Description of CSETL and Its Mission
Appendix B: Unit Design Template
Appendix C: Application to Become a CSETL Fellow
Appendix D: Professional Portfolio Rubric
References
Index
Sobre o autor
Giselle Martin-Kniep is a teacher educator, researcher, program evaluator, and writer. She is the President of Learner-Centered Initiatives, Ltd., an educational consulting organization specializing in comprehensive regional and school-based curriculum and assessment work. She is also the CEO of the Center for the Study of Expertise in Teaching and Learning, an organization committed to the discovery and dissemination of teacher expertise.
Dr. Martin-Kniep has a strong background in organizational change and has graduate degrees in communication and development, social sciences in education, and educational evaluation from Stanford University. She has taught at Adelphi University, the University of British Columbia, and the University of Victoria. In the last fourteen years, she has worked with hundreds of schools and districts nationally and internationally in the areas of alternative assessment, standards-based design, school change, and action research.
Dr. Martin-Kniep has written extensively. Her most recent books are Why Am I Doing This: Purposeful Teaching with Portfolio Assessment, published by Heinemann; Capturing the Wisdom of Practice: Portfolios for Teachers and Administrators; and Becoming a Better Teacher: Eight Innovations that Work both published by ASCD.