I’ve been elbow-deep in PLCs this week, and I’m receiving a world-class education on the model. Dr. Rick DuFour has been incredibly gracious and responsive to the questions and comments from all the participants, even my half-baked remarks. Bill Ferritter, the host of the conversation (and the author of a new PLC book), has contributed with encouragement toward every participant and even made some rather raw confessions about his own practice. It’s amazing and inspiring to hear such honest reflection from a North Carolina teacher of the year.
Several key ideas stand out in my mind so far:
- For all the emphasis on standardization, high stakes testing, and common assessment in the popular discourse education, DuFour is really promoting a balanced approach to assessment. We need both standard and individualized assessments to really know what students know.
- Technology will be our friend. Eventually. I seem to remember Rick mentioning technology as a catalyst for improvements in student achievement. However, both DuFour and Ferritter mentioned that computer software needs to gain in quality and sophistication before teachers and students can realize their full benefits in a Professional Learning Community.
- They don’t call them communities for nothing. Dr. DuFour explained in very clear terms the reasoning behind the selection of the word “Communities” in the title of his groundbreaking book and model: it’s about people and their values and beliefs, not just structures and efficiency.
I know I dogged VoiceThread for being clunky and slow, but I’m enjoying the the tool more and more. Despite VT’s minor shortcomings (no RSS, crashes my system), I’ve found myself planning the times when I can check back to read and listen and watch new comments and questions. I can only blame the crashy-ness on Adobe and my dinosaur of a PowerBook.
VoiceThread - Revisiting Professional Learning Communities at work