To find Teacher Based Team trainings from the Dufours check out this website:
http://www.solution-tree.com/
I highly recommend their work in moving schools forward with Teacher Based Teams.
Tuesday, October 30, 2012
The Dufour Training and How It Helped Us
The
Dufour Training
At the end of our first year in Teacher
Based Teams, a group of teachers attended the training Professional Learning Communities at Work: Bringing the Big Ideas to
Life from Dr. Rick Dufour and Becky Dufour. This training moved us forward
with what TBTs could be and what they could do for our students. If you are interested in learning more
from the Dufours’ thoughts on Professional Learning Communities, check out this
website: http://www.allthingsplc.info/
Our
New Direction
The teachers that attended this conference
agreed to share what they learned with the staff and within their Teacher Based
Teams. Last year our TBTs worked collaboratively to review data of the students
as a group. As a result of our training, this year our goal is to look at the
individual student’s work through common formative assessments and change
instruction and intervention based on those results. Then, we will come back to
see what’s working best and make adjustments for our boys and girls as
necessary.
Team
Norms
During our first year, teachers established
team norms. This came up again at the Dufour training. The training helped us
remember the importance of being accountable to each other, to remain positive
with each other, and to remember that all team members are valuable and should
be heard.
During the training, the Dufours suggested
teachers call those to task who choose not to adhere to the norms. There were several suggestions offered
to help teachers with this work. Our team did not reach a conclusion about what
teachers could do to help other teachers in this situation. Most teachers felt
uncomfortable telling another teacher that he/she needed to follow the norms
when he/she wasn’t. The lean was that the principal would step in and assist if
this should become an issue.
Why
Common Assessments
The Dufour training focused on the
importance of common assessments. When teachers create common assessments, they
are creating an agreed upon rubric to judge student work. What is proficient
now becomes the same across the grade level. It creates a common language for
us to discuss student progress and teacher instruction.
Moving
Forward
Teachers worked together before the school
year started to establish SMART goals, set team norms, and establish a schedule
for common assessments and data review for intervention groupings. At the end
of the first year, the East team decided that we needed a more consistent and longer
period of time for teachers to meet in Teacher Based Teams. We also needed a
regular daily time to provide intervention for our students based off the
analysis of the TBT day. In the next blog, I will share what our solution was
to make TBTs and intervention a regular part of our school week.
Thursday, October 4, 2012
End of the First Year in Teacher Based Teams
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During the last three months of the first
year, teachers worked on a variety of activities during Teacher Based Teams. A
big chunk of time in March and April was spent preparing for Ohio Achievement
Assessments. Teachers came together to discuss what had been done in previous
years for test preparations and what should be done for this year. Activities
were created both as a team and as individuals. Other work completed during TBT
times including creating and assigning work for common assessments.
Towards the end of the year, TBTs began to
discuss what they would like to do for the next school year. One of the very
last activities was taking the Ohio TBT 5-Step Implementation Rubric. This
information gave the team clear direction on where we were in the TBT process
and where we needed to go.
Our Building Leadership Team shared with
the District Leadership Team what our successes and struggles were for the
first year of TBTs.
Here were our strengths:
•having our staff trained in the TBT
process
•creating 3 TBTs in our building
•establishing a TBT meeting schedule
• having each TBT create norms and a SMART
goal to guide their work this year
•Developing a TBT Meeting Notes Template so
TBTs could have a record of their meeting and assign tasks to be completed
before the next meeting
•Giving everyone access to the TBT notes
via a folder on first class as a communication tool so everyone knows on what
work each TBT is focusing
Here were our struggles:
•scheduling issues (TBT meetings need to be
longer in duration and had less often and during a time that doesn’t interfere
with instruction)
•having a common time for
intervention/extension built in the schedule so that teachers can act on the
data they analyze in their TBT more effectively
At the beginning of May, a group of
teachers attended the training Professional
Learning Communities at Work: Bringing the Big Ideas to Life from Dr. Rick Dufour
and Becky Dufour. This training moved us forward with what TBTs could be and
what they could do for our students.
In the next blog, I will share the big
take-aways from that training and how it began to shape the future of our TBTS.
In an upcoming blog, I will also share how
our teachers worked together to problem solve to make our first year struggles
change into solutions for the next year.
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