Quote by Christa Vaudrey, Principal, Las Cruces Public Schools, New Mexico:
"As a principal of an elementary school, it is crucial that professional learning is meaningful and impacts staff and student learning. The Five-Part Plan (FPP) provided us a simple, yet very impactful structure to focus on professional learning. It led to student learning through teacher choice and voice, collaborative work time, classroom implementation, feedback and follow-through with a shared Learning Showcase at the end of the year. It is incredibly powerful to see teachers learning and collaborating with each other, providing each other feedback, restructuring and refining instruction, and seeing their efforts result in increased student learning. For me, the beauty of the FPP is that I now have a structure to provide any theme of professional learning. For example, our current FPP will focus on the critical areas in CCSS Mathematics. Next year our FPP focus may be oral language development. As teachers become familiar with this process, we begin to build a culture where learning is our focus no matter whether you are the student or the adult. Teachers become excited about professional learning because they have choice, they are learning from each other, it directly impacts their practices, their classrooms, and their students.
The bonus to FPP was that it directly related to our new system of teacher evaluation for our state. Many of the state's criteria for professional learning and responsbilities were directly tied to our FPP. Through the evaluative process we also saw the results of the teachers working through the FPP in their instruction and student learning. For example, one group of teachers asked me to do an observation during their FPP process. I observed teachers planning together, observing each other, and providing feedback to each other. I then observed the second group of teachers teach the same lesson, but with lessons learned from what was taught by the first group of teachers. The process was incredibly powerful with teachers learning about their instruction as well as the increased quality of student learning. There was not an area of the evaluation observation protocol that was not touched by this process.
I will continue to use the FPP for professional learning in the future, in new schools, and new environments because of its powerful simplicity and because of the results I have experienced through using the plan."
"As a principal of an elementary school, it is crucial that professional learning is meaningful and impacts staff and student learning. The Five-Part Plan (FPP) provided us a simple, yet very impactful structure to focus on professional learning. It led to student learning through teacher choice and voice, collaborative work time, classroom implementation, feedback and follow-through with a shared Learning Showcase at the end of the year. It is incredibly powerful to see teachers learning and collaborating with each other, providing each other feedback, restructuring and refining instruction, and seeing their efforts result in increased student learning. For me, the beauty of the FPP is that I now have a structure to provide any theme of professional learning. For example, our current FPP will focus on the critical areas in CCSS Mathematics. Next year our FPP focus may be oral language development. As teachers become familiar with this process, we begin to build a culture where learning is our focus no matter whether you are the student or the adult. Teachers become excited about professional learning because they have choice, they are learning from each other, it directly impacts their practices, their classrooms, and their students.
The bonus to FPP was that it directly related to our new system of teacher evaluation for our state. Many of the state's criteria for professional learning and responsbilities were directly tied to our FPP. Through the evaluative process we also saw the results of the teachers working through the FPP in their instruction and student learning. For example, one group of teachers asked me to do an observation during their FPP process. I observed teachers planning together, observing each other, and providing feedback to each other. I then observed the second group of teachers teach the same lesson, but with lessons learned from what was taught by the first group of teachers. The process was incredibly powerful with teachers learning about their instruction as well as the increased quality of student learning. There was not an area of the evaluation observation protocol that was not touched by this process.
I will continue to use the FPP for professional learning in the future, in new schools, and new environments because of its powerful simplicity and because of the results I have experienced through using the plan."