Learning from success as a leverage for professional learning community

Author
Schechter, C.
Lecturer
Background: Although the professional learning community as a means of improving student
achievement has received growing support from researchers and practitioners alike, professionals are still exploring ways to develop interaction networks regarding teaching and
learning issues.
Purpose: This study explores the evolving stages of a collective learning-from-success process within the framework of a professional learning community.
Research Design: A qualitative case study of a comprehensive (middle and secondary) public school community was conducted to explore practitioners' collective learning from successful practices.
Data Collection and Analysis: A total of 12 detailed session transcripts from the learningfrom-
success sessions (circle of learners), 42 evaluation forms (21 internal and 21 external
evaluations), 6 observations of the development team's sessions, and pertinent documents
were collected for analysis. The analysis process involved identifying patterns in the data-
recurring ideas and perspectives that depicted the social world studied.
Findings: Data revealed that this collective process moved through three distinct, but closely
interrelated, dynamic stages: invitation and framework building; collective inquiry into colleagues' professional successes; and experimentation and dissemination.
Conclusion: Whereas collective learning has been approached from a deficit-based orientation, this study reinterprets the professional learning community to include the collective learning-from-success process, thus providing a new outlook for linking concepts with practical capabilities in light of public school reality

Last Updated Date : 13/08/2012