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Professional Learning Communities: transforming school culture
Tracy_Reimer_4
Tracy Reimer

Professional Learning Communities:
Transforming the Culture of a School

Best Practices in Instructional Leadership
(December 2010)

Tracy Reimer, principal
Bendix Elementary, Annandale

Current federal legislation, such as No Child Left Behind and The Race to the Top, have elicited high levels of accountability for increasing student reading achievement. Professional organizations and researchers encourage educators to organize schools into professional learning communities (PLCs) to improve student learning. Despite the increasing popularity of the term PLC, actually transforming the culture of a school into a PLC continues to be a complex and challenging task. Leadership has been identified in studies as a critical element of change that leads to improvement; yet, research does not define the daily principal practices that are successful in developing and sustaining a school-wide professional learning community.

To learn more about the principal’s role in developing professional learning communities, I conducted a qualitative study in spring 2009 in preparing my dissertation at the University of Minnesota. My study addressed successful leadership practices of principals in four schools that “beat the odds” in reading. The schools were at or above the district mean proficiency on the MCAII, and had higher ELL and poverty levels than other elementary schools in the district. Data was gathered through 34 one-on-one interviews with principals, teachers (K-5 classroom, Title 1, and special education), and instructional coaches, as well as principal observations and artifact collection. Data collection was guided by five attributes of professional learning communities: shared leadership, shared values and vision, deprivatized practice, collective creativity, and supportive conditions.

The major findings of the study identified the following principal actions as conducive to the establishment of professional learning communities.

1.     Teachers had input in curriculum, instruction, and assessment decisions.

2.     School building level systems (committees, staff meeting norms) were involved in decision making and information dispersion.

3.     Schools had a reading instructional framework informed by research.

4.     Grade-level and cross grade-level collaboration on reading instruction included reflecting on practice, reviewing student work, common planning, studying research, and analyzing student data.

5.     Teaching peers provided instructional support to colleagues by mentoring, observing, and co-teaching.

6.     A high commitment to quality instruction and achievement elicited collective creativity via seeking research, professional development and internet resources.

7.     Extrinsic recognition of student reading achievement.

I’m eager to participate in continued professional discussions with other principals to share and discuss how to successfully implement the seven actions. Just as teachers learn from the best practices of their peers, it is important principals do, too.