45 Ten Roles for Teacher Leaders Cindy Harrison and Joellen Killion
September 2007 | Volume 65 |
Number 1
Teachers as Leaders Pages 74-77 Ten Roles for Teacher Leaders
Teachers as Leaders Pages 74-77 Ten Roles for Teacher Leaders
Cindy Harrison
and Joellen Killion
The ways teachers can lead are as varied as teachers themselves.
Teacher leaders
assume a wide range of roles to support school and student success. Whether
these roles are assigned formally or shared informally, they build the entire
school's capacity to improve. Because teachers can lead in a variety of ways,
many teachers can serve as leaders among their peers.
So what are
some of the leadership options available to teachers? The following 10 roles
are a sampling of the many ways teachers can contribute to their schools'
success.
1. Resource Provider
Teachers help
their colleagues by sharing instructional resources. These might include Web
sites, instructional materials, readings, or other resources to use with
students. They might also share such professional resources as articles, books,
lesson or unit plans, and assessment tools.
Tinisha becomes
a resource provider when she offers to help Carissa, a new staff member in her
second career, set up her classroom. Tinisha gives Carissa extra copies of a
number line for her students to use, signs to post on the wall that explain to
students how to get help when the teacher is busy, and the grade-level language
arts pacing guide.
2. Instructional Specialist
An
instructional specialist helps colleagues implement effective teaching
strategies. This help might include ideas for differentiating instruction or
planning lessons in partnership with fellow teachers. Instructional specialists
might study research-based classroom strategies (Marzano, Pickering, &
Pollock, 2001); explore which instructional methodologies are appropriate for
the school; and share findings with colleagues.
When his fellow
science teachers share their frustration with students' poorly written lab
reports, Jamal suggests that they invite several English teachers to recommend
strategies for writing instruction. With two English teachers serving as
instructional specialists, the science teachers examine a number of lab reports
together and identify strengths and weaknesses. The English teachers share
strategies they use in their classes to improve students' writing.
3. Curriculum Specialist
Understanding
content standards, how various components of the curriculum link together, and
how to use the curriculum in planning instruction and assessment is essential
to ensuring consistent curriculum implementation throughout a school.
Curriculum specialists lead teachers to agree on standards, follow the adopted
curriculum, use common pacing charts, and develop shared assessments.
Tracy, the
world studies team leader, works with the five language arts and five social
studies teachers in her school. Using standards in English and social studies
as their guides, the team members agree to increase the consistency in their
classroom curriculums and administer common assessments. Tracy suggests that
the team develop a common understanding of the standards and agrees to
facilitate the development and analysis of common quarterly assessments.
4. Classroom Supporter
Classroom
supporters work inside classrooms to help teachers implement new ideas, often
by demonstrating a lesson, coteaching, or observing and giving feedback. Blase
and Blase (2006) found that consultation with peers
enhanced teachers' self-efficacy (teachers' belief
in their own abilities and capacity to successfully solve teaching and learning
problems) as they reflected on practice and grew together, and it also
encouraged a bias for action (improvement through collaboration) on the part of
teachers. (p. 22)
Marcia asks
Yolanda for classroom support in implementing nonlinguistic representation
strategies, such as graphic organizers, manipulatives, and kinesthetic
activities (Marzano et al., 2001). Yolanda agrees to plan and teach a lesson
with Marcia that integrates several relevant strategies. They ask the principal
for two half-days of professional release time, one for learning more about the
strategy and planning a lesson together, and the other for coteaching the
lesson to Marcia's students and discussing it afterward.
5. Learning Facilitator
Facilitating
professional learning opportunities among staff members is another role for
teacher leaders. When teachers learn with and from one another, they can focus
on what most directly improves student learning. Their professional learning
becomes more relevant, focused on teachers' classroom work, and aligned to fill
gaps in student learning. Such communities of learning can break the norms of
isolation present in many schools.
Frank
facilitates the school's professional development committee and serves as the
committee's language arts representative. Together, teachers plan the year's
professional development program using a backmapping model (Killion, 2001).
This model begins with identifying student learning needs, teachers' current
level of knowledge and skills in the target areas, and types of learning
opportunities that different groups of teachers need. The committee can then
develop and implement a professional development plan on the basis of their findings.
6. Mentor
Serving as a
mentor for novice teachers is a common role for teacher leaders. Mentors serve
as role models; acclimate new teachers to a new school; and advise new teachers
about instruction, curriculum, procedure, practices, and politics. Being a
mentor takes a great deal of time and expertise and makes a significant
contribution to the development of a new professional.
Ming is a
successful teacher in her own 1st grade classroom, but she has not assumed a
leadership role in the school. The principal asks her to mentor her new
teammate, a brand-new teacher and a recent immigrant from the Philippines. Ming
prepares by participating in the district's three-day training on mentoring.
Her role as a mentor will not only include helping her teammate negotiate the
district, school, and classroom, but will also include acclimating her
colleague to the community. Ming feels proud as she watches her teammate
develop into an accomplished teacher.
7. School Leader
Being a school
leader means serving on a committee, such as a school improvement team; acting
as a grade-level or department chair; supporting school initiatives; or
representing the school on community or district task forces or committees. A
school leader shares the vision of the school, aligns his or her professional
goals with those of the school and district, and shares responsibility for the
success of the school as a whole.
Joshua, staff
sponsor of the student council, offers to help the principal engage students in
the school improvement planning process. The school improvement team plans to
revise its nearly 10-year-old vision and wants to ensure that students' voices
are included in the process. Joshua arranges a daylong meeting for 10 staff
members and 10 students who represent various views of the school experience,
from nonattenders to grade-level presidents. Joshua works with the school
improvement team facilitator to ensure that the activities planned for the
meeting are appropriate for students so that students will actively participate.
8. Data Coach
Although
teachers have access to a great deal of data, they do not often use that data
to drive classroom instruction. Teacher leaders can lead conversations that
engage their peers in analyzing and using this information to strengthen
instruction.
Carol, the 10th
grade language arts team leader, facilitates a team of her colleagues as they
look at the results of the most recent writing sample, a teacher-designed
assessment given to all incoming 10th grade students. Carol guides teachers as
they discuss strengths and weaknesses of students' writing performance as a
group, as individuals, by classrooms, and in disaggregated clusters by race,
gender, and previous school. They then plan instruction on the basis of this
data.
9. Catalyst for Change
Teacher leaders
can also be catalysts for change, visionaries who are “never content with the
status quo but rather always looking for a better way” (Larner, 2004, p. 32).
Teachers who take on the catalyst role feel secure in their own work and have a
strong commitment to continual improvement. They pose questions to generate
analysis of student learning.
In a faculty
meeting, Larry expresses a concern that teachers may be treating some students
differently from others. Students who come to him for extra assistance have
shared their perspectives, and Larry wants teachers to know what students are
saying. As his colleagues discuss reasons for low student achievement, Larry
challenges them to explore data about the relationship between race and discipline
referrals in the school. When teachers begin to point fingers at students, he
encourages them to examine how they can change their instructional practices to
improve student engagement and achievement.
10. Learner
Among the most
important roles teacher leaders assume is that of learner. Learners model
continual improvement, demonstrate lifelong learning, and use what they learn
to help all students achieve.
Manuela, the
school's new bilingual teacher, is a voracious learner. At every team or
faculty meeting, she identifies something new that she is trying in her
classroom. Her willingness to explore new strategies is infectious. Other
teachers, encouraged by her willingness to discuss what works and what doesn't,
begin to talk about their teaching and how it influences student learning.
Faculty and team meetings become a forum in which teachers learn from one
another. Manuela's commitment to and willingness to talk about learning break
down barriers of isolation that existed among teachers.
Roles for All
Teachers
exhibit leadership in multiple, sometimes overlapping, ways. Some leadership
roles are formal with designated responsibilities. Other more informal roles
emerge as teachers interact with their peers. The variety of roles ensures that
teachers can find ways to lead that fit their talents and interests. Regardless
of the roles they assume, teacher leaders shape the culture of their schools,
improve student learning, and influence practice among their peers.
References
Blase, J., & Blase, J. (2006). Teachers
bringing out the best in teachers: A guide to peer consultation for
administrators and teachers. Thousand Oaks, CA: Corwin Press.
Killion, J. (2001). What works in
elementary schools: Results-based staff development. Oxford, OH: National
Staff Development Council.
Larner, M. (2004). Pathways: Charting a
course for professional learning. Portsmouth, NH: Heinemann.
Marzano, R., Pickering, D., & Pollock, J.
(2001). Classroom instruction that works. Alexandria, VA: ASCD.
Authors' note: The 10 roles are described in more detail in Taking
the Lead: New Roles for Teachers and School-Based Coaches by J.
Killion and C. Harrison, 2006, Oxford, OH: National Staff Development Council.
Although the names have been changed, all examples are based on actual teachers
we encountered in our research.
Cindy Harrison (crh@instructimprove.org) is an independent consultant, Instructional Improvement Group, 305
West 6th Ave., Broomfield, CO 80020. Joellen Killion (Joellen.Killion@nsdc.org) is Deputy Executive Director, National Staff
Development Council, 10931 West 71st Place, Arvada, CO 80004.
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