OUTCOMES: Professional learning that increases educator effectiveness and results for all students aligns its outcomes with educator performance and student curriculum standards.
For all students to learn, educators
and professional learning must be
held to high standards. Professional
learning that increases results for
all students addresses the learning
outcomes and performance expectations
education systems designate for students and
educators. When the content of professional learning
integrates student curriculum and educator
performance standards, the link between educator
learning and student learning becomes explicit,
increasing the likelihood that professional learning
contributes to increased student learning. When
systems increase the stakes for students by demanding
high, equitable outcomes, the stakes for professional
learning increase as well.
Educator performance standards typically delineate
the knowledge, skills, practices, and dispositions
of highly effective educators. Standards guide
preparation, assessment, licensing, induction, practice,
and evaluation. Frequently regulated by government
agencies, standards establish requirements
for educator preparation, define expectations of an
effective workforce, guide career-long professional
learning of the education workforce, and set fair
and reliable indicators of effectiveness for measuring
educator performance.
Teacher standards specify what teachers need to
know and do to deliver on the promise of an effective,
equitable education for every student. Typical
areas included in teacher standards are knowledge,
skills, and dispositions related to content knowledge;
pedagogy; pedagogical content knowledge;
assessment; understanding how students learn;
understanding how students' cognitive, social, emotional,
and physical development influences their
learning; engaging students with diverse cultures,
language, gender, socioeconomic conditions, and
exceptionalities; engaging families and communities
in student learning; creating learning environments;
professional growth and development; and professional
collaboration.
Standards for school and system leaders, like
teacher standards, describe what effective leaders
know and do so that every student and educator
performs at high levels. Whether for teacher leaders
or school or school system administrators, these
standards delineate specific expectations for preparation,
assessment, licensure, professional learning,
practice, and evaluation of those engaged in leadership
roles within a school or school system. Typical
areas covered in leader standards include establishing
a vision and strategic plan for effective learning;
leading learning of students and staff; developing
workplace culture to support learning; engaging in
their own professional learning; managing facilities,
workforce, operations, and resources; establishing
effective relationships and communication systems;
managing change; sharing leadership with others;
engaging staff and families in decision making;
understanding and responding to the diverse needs
of students and communities; understanding and
responding to cultural, political, social, legal, and
financial contexts; and securing individual, team,
school, and whole system accountability for student
success.
Standards for other members of the education
workforce delineate the unique knowledge,
skills, qualities, and dispositions required of those
in specialized roles. These roles include school
nurses, guidance counselors, librarians, instructional
coaches, resource personnel, classroom assistants,
and other instructional and noninstructional staff
who are vital to schools and school systems. Standards
for advanced or specialized certification guide
professional learning for those who seek career advancement
or differentiated roles.
Student learning outcomes define equitable
expectations for all students to achieve at high
levels and hold educators responsible for implementing
appropriate strategies to support student
learning. Learning for educators that focuses on
student learning outcomes has a positive effect on
changing educator practice and increasing student
achievement. Whether the learning outcomes are developed locally or nationally and are defined in content standards, courses of study, curriculum, or curricular programs, these learning outcomes serve as the core content for educator professional learning to support effective implementation and results. With student learning outcomes as the focus, professional learning deepens educators' content knowledge, pedagogical content knowledge, and understanding of how students learn the specific discipline. Using student learning outcomes as its outcomes, professional learning can model and engage educators in practices they are expected to implement within their classrooms and workplaces.
BUILD COHERENCE
Coherence requires that professional learning builds on what educators have already learned; focuses on learning outcomes and pedagogy aligned with national or local curriculum and assessments for educator and student learning; aligns with educator performance standards; and supports educators in developing sustained, ongoing professional communication with other educators who are engaged in similar changes in their practice. Any single professional learning activity is more likely to be effective in improving educator performance and student learning if it builds on earlier professional learning and is followed up with later, more advanced work to become a part of a coherent set of opportunities for ongoing professional learning. Coherence also ensures that professional learning is a part of a seamless process that begins in the preparation program and continues throughout an educator's career and aligns tightly with the expectations for effectiveness defined in performance standards and student learning outcomes.