Are we ready for the next education workforce?...practices long considered “normal” in education...

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Are we ready for the Next Education Workforce? All students: Belief that ALL students can achieve and deserve deeper, personalized learning experiences The why: A large and diverse set of stakeholders who can all clearly articulate the why for Next Education Workforce models (e.g., “portrait of a graduate”) Unlearning: Willingness to “unlearn” and revisit long-held assumptions about structures and practices long considered “normal” in education systems Learner-centered: Commitment to shift from teacher-centered models of instruction to learner- centered models of instruction (e.g., inquiry, project-based learning, design thinking, multidisciplinary approaches) Collaboration: An existing culture of collaboration among educators, staff and administration Feedback: Frequent opportunities for families, staff, students and community members to provide meaningful feedback and input Change management: Organizational processes that support change management Educator roles: Openness to prototyping new types of educator roles Team flexibility: Support from school and district leadership to increase flexibility at the team level (e.g., ability to adjust bell schedules, ability to use space differently, ability to make curricular adjustments) Readiness factors associated with transitioning to Next Education Workforce models include: Any change is hard. But moving away from the usual one-teacher-one-classroom model of schooling is very hard. So what are you moving toward? Teams of educators with distributed expertise who collaborate in real time. Students experiencing deeper and personalized learning. Educators with advancement and specialization pathways. Simply put, systems-level change is not for the faint of heart. In an effort to help teams, schools or districts self-assess their readiness to embark on this sort of work, we have created this document to capture a common set of conditions that were present in places that are successfully moving toward Next Education Workforce models. education.asu.edu/workforce A self-assessment tool

Transcript of Are we ready for the next education workforce?...practices long considered “normal” in education...

Page 1: Are we ready for the next education workforce?...practices long considered “normal” in education systems L earn er-cen tered : Commitment to shift from teacher-centered models

Are we ready for the NextEducation Workforce?

All students: Belief that ALL students can achieve and deserve deeper, personalized learningexperiencesThe why: A large and diverse set of stakeholders who can all clearly articulate the why for NextEducation Workforce models (e.g., “portrait of a graduate”)Unlearning: Willingness to “unlearn” and revisit long-held assumptions about structures andpractices long considered “normal” in education systemsLearner-centered: Commitment to shift from teacher-centered models of instruction to learner-centered models of instruction (e.g., inquiry, project-based learning, design thinking,multidisciplinary approaches)Collaboration: An existing culture of collaboration among educators, staff and administrationFeedback: Frequent opportunities for families, staff, students and community members toprovide meaningful feedback and inputChange management: Organizational processes that support change managementEducator roles: Openness to prototyping new types of educator rolesTeam flexibility: Support from school and district leadership to increase flexibility at the teamlevel (e.g., ability to adjust bell schedules, ability to use space differently, ability to make curricularadjustments)

Readiness factors associated with transitioning to Next Education Workforce models include:

Any change is hard. But moving away from the usual one-teacher-one-classroom model

of schooling is very hard. So what are you moving toward? Teams of educators with

distributed expertise who collaborate in real time. Students experiencing deeper and

personalized learning. Educators with advancement and specialization pathways. Simply

put, systems-level change is not for the faint of heart.

In an effort to help teams, schools or districts self-assess their readiness to embark on

this sort of work, we have created this document to capture a common set of conditions

that were present in places that are successfully moving toward Next Education

Workforce models.

education.asu.edu/workforce

A s e l f - a s s e s s m e n t t o o l