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Teacher Leadership Programs in Pittsburgh and El Paso
On
the East Side of Pittsburgh, Vonnie Holbrook is known as "the
math lady." A teacher in Pittsburgh for 24 years, she has
taught mathematics in many schools and to many children from
kindergarten to eighth grade. But for the last six years Holbrook
has found herself teaching mathematics to a new group of studentsher
colleagues in the Pittsburgh Public Schools.
Holbrook
is a math resource teacher, one of many different titles given
to a growing cadre of seasoned educators across the country known
more informally as "teacher leaders." As a resource
teacher, she is responsible for helping her colleagues implement
a new, standardsbased mathematics curriculum in eight elementary
schools.
Like teacher
leaders across the country, Holbrook has a varied set of responsibilities,
including coaching, coteaching, joint lesson planning,
and staff development activities—but all of this work keeps her
close to the classroom. She feels welcomed by her teacher colleagues,
perhaps because she has worked alongside them for so long: "With
the new teachers, the relationship is a formal one—classroom
observations, joint lesson planning, that sort of thing. With
the older teachers the relationship is less formalI'll
run into someone in the corridor and they'll say, 'I taught that
lesson and it just didn't work.' And I can say, 'Well, when I
did it recently, I tried this or that. . . ' This kind of support
really works with teachers."
Pittsburgh's
curriculum implementation and teacher leadership programs are
part of a national standards-based reform effort known as the
Urban Systemic Program (USP). Funded by the National Science
Foundation (NSF), USP is helping to bring topquality mathematics
and science programs to bigcity schools around the country
as those schools work to meet the new national standards in these
subject areas.
As part of
Pittsburgh's reform initiative, staff development time for mathematics
is used to bring groups of teachers together to actually do the
mathematics lessons themselves. To date Holbrook has led teacher
sessions on geometry, invented algorithms, and strategies for
allowing children to share their work constructively. Holbrook
is also leading teachers in dialogue across grade levels and
across subject matters: "Recently some of the middle school
teachers testified to the impact the program is having on their
workthere is a big improvement in the amount of math they're
able to do with the kids. It was important for the elementary
teachers to hear that."
According to
EDC's Brian Lord, the longterm success of standards-based
reform ultimately hinges on teacher learning initiatives like
those underway in Pittsburgh, "because these reforms call
for a new depth of mathematical understanding and ability on
the part of teachers as well as students." Lord, along with
his EDC colleague Barbara Miller, codirects an NSF research
project, Teacher Leadership for Systemic Reform, studying the
effectiveness of teacher leadership programs in six different
USI and USP sites. More broadly, they are interested in learning
whether teacher leadership programs have the potential to bring
about the kind of deep and lasting improvement in teaching and
learning that the standards movement requires. "Assessments
alone won't do it. Curriculum alone won't do it. High standards
alone won't do it," says Lord. "At some point you have
to ensure that teachers are learning what they need to know to
help kids meet these tougher requirements."
In El Paso,
Texas, Blanca LopezMartinez has recently witnessed the
importance of teacher learning in the process of school improvement.
A teachermentor for elementary science in the El Paso Independent
School District, she is an experienced classroom teacher who
now commits herself fulltime to working with her colleagues
in the science department as a coach, mentor, coteacher,
and professional development provider. As part of the USP program
in El Paso, MartinezLopez is also helping to lead the science
department in the "lesson study" model of professional
development. In this model, a pair of teachermentors leads
a cohort of six teachers from across grade levels in regular
lessonplanning sessions. After a planning period, one member
of the group teaches the lesson in her classroom while the rest
of the group observes. The group then meets again to discuss
and offer feedback on how the lesson went. The mentors also meet
individually with the teachers to follow up on the group sessions
and sometimes teamteach. "Based on the feedback, the
teacher might decide she needs to reteach the lesson, or maybe
someone discovers an interesting extension to try, or a variation
for a different age group. Or two in the group might decide to
teamteach the lesson," says MartinezLopez. "Everybody's
participating and everybody is learning a lot from each other." She
has found that the crossgrade collaborations have been
especially enlightening. As an example, she cites a recent discussion
between first and sixth grade teachers: "First grade teachers
aren't always aware that what they're doing with patterns is
laying the foundation for algebra. When they see this, they come
to understand how important their work is."
According to
Brian Lord, the potential of teacher leadership as a farreaching
professional development strategy lies in the intimate knowledge
of the daytoday life of classrooms and schools that
teacher leaders bring to the work of improving instruction. As
MartinezLopez explains, "The mentors all have different
backgrounds, but we're all teachers. We know the struggles firsthandthe
time constraints, the pressures with testing, and so forth. It
really helps our credibility with the teachers. I don't see how
someone could do this work with just the theory. You need to
know the practice."
Vonnie Holbrook
agrees: "I think this program is working because it reaches
the teachers where they live. If you've been teaching in a traditional
style and you were taught that way yourself, you don't really
believe that kids can reach this depth of mathematical understanding
until you see it happening with real kids in real classrooms.
Then you're willing to go ahead and try it yourself in your own
classroom." Holbrook adds that the impact cuts across disciplines: "I
was reading teacher evaluations recently, and teachers were writing
things like, 'This has had a deep impact on the way I'm teaching
right nowand not just in math.'"
For his part,
Lord is cautiously optimistic about the potential impact of teacher
leadership modelsprovided that they are integrated into
a districtwide approach. "We're in the same place
now with teacher learning that we were 20 years ago with student
learning and standards," he says. "Twenty years ago,
everyone would have laughed if you had said we were going to
have national standards in all subject areas, that we would have
curriculum written to those standards, and that we would have
a set of criterionreferenced tests based on those standards.
Well, we've seen all that happen. The missing piece is teacher
learning. Right now most people see only the obstaclesthe
institutional changes that need to happen, or the changes in
the profession. But we're beginning to see how those obstacles
can be overcome."
For questions or comments, contact mosaic@edc.org.
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Education Development Center, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
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