Leading Learning 1

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Fís Foghlaim Forbairt www. pdst. ie © PDST 2016 This work is made available under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution Share Alike 3.0 Licence http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0/ie/ . You may use and re-use this material (not including images and logos) free of charge in any format or medium, under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution Share Alike Licence.

Transcript of Leading Learning 1

Page 1: Leading Learning 1

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www.pdst.ie© P D S T 2 0 1 6

This work is made available under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution Share Alike 3.0 Licence http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0/ie/. You may use and re-use this material (not including images and logos) free of charge in any format or medium, under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution Share Alike Licence.

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Leading Learning

Des Cullen

Norma O’Brien

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• Effective school leadership is identified as crucial to student outcomes, second only to the quality of the teacher (Augustine et al., 2009).

• Principals have to set high expectations for all students and teachers to succeed (Matthews, 2009).

• School leaders influence student achievement through two important pathways: – the support and development of effective teachers – the implementation of effective organisational

processes (Leithwood et al., 2004)

The School Leader

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ieVariables influencing a child’s life chances and well-

being excluding gender, disability and ethnicity

Personal Capacity 40% (resilience, readiness, moti-vation, ability);

40%

Social Factors 40% (family, social class,

social capital, poverty); 40%

School 20% - (Leadership 7%)

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Think back to your interviewWhat questions were you asked on the role of the principal in relation to Leading Learning in your school.

You said…..???

Activity

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The domains I. Leading learning and teaching II. Leading school development III. Building culture, capacity and teams IV. Professional growth and development V. Organisational management SELF-EVALUATION OF SCHOOL LEADERSHIP (Draft)Domains, standards and statements of practice . DES Oct 2015

Domains & Standards

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A well-functioning school requires leaders who: • create a culture of professional learning that fosters continuous

improvement in learning, teaching and assessment as the core functions of the school

• foster the development of the full range of teacher competencies, and work to ensure that teacher professional development leads to improved student learning

• foster a commitment to inclusion and equality of opportunity and develop goals to realise the holistic potential of each student

• develop and implement a system to promote professional responsibility and accountability

• manage the design, planning and implementation of the school curriculum

LEADING LEARNING AND TEACHING

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• Divide into groups• Unpack one bullet point• Brainstorm• Feedback to plenary

Unpack Leading Learning

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Post-its / Placemat

• What do we do well?

• Even better if…?

Exercise for Staff meeting(general or specifically related to Teaching & Learning)

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• Learning to know – knowledge of core subjects• Learning to do – practical skills, critical thinking, problem-

solving, communication, collaboration, creativity, innovation, ICT

• Learning to be – personal responsibility, self-regulation, metacognition, social / cross-cultural skills, learning to learn

• Learning to live together – value diversity, team-work, inter-connectedness, civic and digital citizenship, global and inter-cultural competence

http://unesdoc.unesco.org/images/0024/002429/242996e.pdf

What are we helping our students to learn?

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• Learners at the centre• Social Nature of Learning• Emotions as Integral to Learning• Recognising Individual Differences• Stretching all Students• Assessment for Learning• Building Horizontal Connectedness

https://www.oecd.org/edu/ceri/50300814.pdf

7 Principles to Guide the Learning Environment

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• Moral imperative to change in relation to social and economic changes

• New era of technical knowledge• Need for flexibility and adaptability in the

workplace and in life – learning for life

The Why and How of Learning-Centred Leadership

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