The Common Work of the Five Teachers Institutes
The Directors' Meeting: A Directors’ Meeting of the five Institutes was held on March 19, 2001, in New York City. The Directors reported on the programs that each of the five Teachers Institutes had planned for 2001 and commented on any significant developments at their sites, and any changes being adopted or considered. They decided that the survey on curriculum use at each demonstration site would be made during December of 2001or in January of 2002 and that the results would be reported not in the third Annual Narrative Report but in the Final Report.
James Vivian noted that the site visits this year would spend less time in visiting schools than in previous years. They would seek to include meetings with university and district people who were thinking with an Institute about prospects for sustainability after this year and plans for achieving significant systemic impact within the district. He also stated that the contractual specification of size for an Institute had been somewhat underestimated, given the need to expand over the period of three years, and he assured the Directors that they might well add other schools within their partnering district if that seemed appropriate. (In a later communication, he reminded the Directors that we need a current table of demographic characteristics of teachers and students in all the schools presently targeted.)
The group agreed on a planning process for the Third Annual Conference, to be held in New Haven on October 19-20. It was agreed that for this Conference the members of the participating teams would be distributed among different groups according to topic discussed or function performed. It was also agreed that the number of teachers and seminar leaders attending from each Institute would be increased. And it was further agreed that each Institute might recommend inviting a few persons from the following categories: a university or college president or chancellor or his representative; a school superintendent or his representative; principals from schools with concentrations of Fellows; officers of foundations and corporations that have funded the Institute, or are considering future funding; and the state commissioner or superintendent of public education. The National Steering Committee and the University Advisory Committee, joined by Helen Faison, Director of the Pittsburgh Teachers Institute, as the representative of the Directors, would establish the Conference agenda. Directors would then name the teachers and seminar leaders who would attend the Conference and nominate people from other categories who might be invited, and they would also nominate those who volunteered to lead or participate in the various discussion groups.
In conclusion, there was some discussion of the meeting of university and school officials with Yale President Levin and the Institute’s National Advisory Committee (described above) concerning the proposal for the establishing of Teachers Institutes across the nation. A draft revised to incorporate their recommendations had been enclosed in the mailing that announced the Directors’ meeting.
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The National Steering Committee and the National University Advisory Council: Separate and joint meetings of this Committee and this Council were held in Chicago on May 18-19. A separate meeting of the Steering Committee discussed, in the light of suggestions made by the Directors, the design of the survey on curriculum units. They will be conducted at all demonstration sites in December 2001 or January 2002 and will request information regarding the use of curriculum units from 1999 through the end of the first semester or term of the 2000-2001 school year. They will be administered to all Fellows who have participated in seminars during the life of the project (1999, 2000, and 2001) and to non-Fellows in the participating schools in which at least five percent of the faculty currently eligible for participation have been Fellows. A second separate meeting of the Steering Committee agreed upon a plan for the members to communicate with each other via e-mail and arrange to conduct monthly virtual meetings via Yahoo Messenger. A separate meeting of the Council discussed the progress made in establishing faculty councils at each Institute and explored further means that might exist for strengthening communication among seminar leaders from all the Institutes. Both meetings also provided opportunities to give advice on the possible plans for deepening the four new Institutes’ work and establishing additional Institutes in cities across the country. The joint meeting, which Helen Faison attended as a representative of the Directors, was then devoted to planning the agenda for the Third Annual Conference.
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National Steering Committee meeting in Chicago, May 2001. (Clockwise from left: Blake Learmonth, Albuquerque; Mel E. Sanchez, Santa Ana; Daniel Addis, Houston; Helen S. Faison and Carol Petett, Pittsburgh.)
The Third Annual Conference: The Third Annual Conference, the culminating event in the National Demonstration Project, was held in New Haven on October 19-20. Each site was asked to send four current or former seminar leaders, eight current Fellows, and its Director. Each site could also recommend that a few individuals be invited from the following categories: university or college president or chancellor or his representative; school superintendent or his representative; principals from schools with concentrations of Fellows; officers of foundations and corporations that have funded the Institute, or are considering future funding; and state commissioner or superintendent of public education. The Conference was designed to afford the participants and their invited guests an opportunity to discuss their experience and to talk about the future of their own educational partnerships and of their collaborative work across the country.
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The Steering Committee discussed the design of the survey on curriculum units.
The Conference, the culminating event in the National Demonstration Project, was held in New Haven.
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Plenary Session at the Third Annual Conference in New Haven, October 2001.
Concern about airline safety only slightly reduced attendance, indicating the importance of this Conference in the minds of the participants. The five teams of Directors, university faculty, and Fellows were augmented by invited guests that included: the Counsel to the Secretary, U.S. Department of Education; the President of Yale University; the Vice President for Academic Affairs, Chatham College; the Associate Dean, College of Arts & Sciences, University of New Mexico; the Associate Superintendent, New Haven Public Schools; the Chief Academic Officer, Houston Independent School District; the Chief of Staff, Pittsburgh Board of Education; a Principal from Houston; a Principal from Pittsburgh; the Dean of Instruction, Sharpstown Middle School, Houston; a Homebound Teacher, Community Services, Houston; the Director of Foundation Relations and a Development Officer, Yale University; the Senior Program Officer, William Randolph Hearst Foundation; and a Grant Officer, Houston Endowment.
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The Conference program was designed by the National Steering Committee, composed of a Fellow from each site; the National University Advisory Council, composed of a seminar leader from each site; and the Pittsburgh Teachers Institute Director, who represented all the site directors when these groups met in Chicago in May with the National Project Director to plan the meeting.
The Opening Plenary Session was chaired by Mary E. Miller, Co-Chair of the University Advisory Council for the Yale-New Haven Teachers Institute. She introduced Helen Faison, Director of the Pittsburgh Teachers Institute, who reported for the Conference Planning Committee. “Now that we have demonstrated that the approach to professional development that has been so successful in New Haven can be tailored to establish similar university-school partnerships under different circumstances, in different places,” she said, “we need now to exchange ideas, to cross-fertilize the thinking of each of our groups in order that we may move forward.”
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The Third Annual Conference in New Haven, October 2001. (Left to right: Richard C. Levin, Mary E. Miller, Helen S. Faison.)
President Richard C. Levin, President of Yale University, then welcomed the group and made some opening remarks about the Yale-New Haven Teachers Institute and the National Demonstration Project. “The Yale-New Haven Teachers Institute,” he said,
is a remarkable, successful experiment. It’s taken root here; it’s really very much a part of the fabric of the life of the New Haven schools. It is an important component of professional development for the teachers in this city and an extraordinary opportunity for our faculty to participate in a collegial way with school teachers whose work is so important in the future of this nation. I am a great enthusiast for the National Demonstration Project. And I do want to encourage all of you to sustain the programs in each of your cities. Even though the National Demonstration Project comes to an end, the mission carries on, and we do hope that the programs in Santa Ana, and Albuquerque, and Pittsburgh, and Houston will take root in your communities in the same way that the Yale-New Haven Teachers Institute has taken root in New Haven.
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The Third Annual Conference in New Haven, October 2001. (Left to right: Mary E. Miller, Richard C. Levin, and Renee C. Tolliver.)
He vigorously endorsed the aim of expanding “the number of cities and universities and colleges who are engaged in this kind of enterprise, ” noting that this idea has received a ringing endorsement from Secretary Rod Paige in the current issue of On Common Ground. And he expressed thanks to the people from the Wallace Reader’s Digest Funds, “who have made it possible for all of this to happen.”
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“We need now to exchange ideas, to cross-fertilize the thinking of each of our groups in order that we may move forward.”
—Helen S. Faison
“Even though the National Demonstration Project comes to an end, the mission carries on, and we do hope that the programs . . . will take root in your communities in the same way that the Yale-New Haven Teachers Institute has taken root in New Haven.”
—Richard C. Levin
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Mary E. Miller then moderated a panel on the topic: “What Have We Accomplished?” Brief comments were offered by Ninfa Sepúlveda, a Fellow from the Houston Teachers Institute, Rene Tolliver, a Fellow from the Pittsburgh Teachers Institute, and Kate Krause, a seminar leader from the Albuquerque Teachers Institute. They spoke of the growth of the Institutes over three years, the increasing impacts they have had on the teachers’ lives and teaching and so on the learning of many more students, the financial challenges and successes, and the teachers’ work in recruiting for an Institute, monitoring its processes, and shaping its direction. These points were amplified by various members of the group in the discussion that followed.
After a break for examining Institute displays, those in attendance moved to Breakout Sessions on the topic: “From Institute Seminar to School Classroom.” Four concurrent roundtable discussions were held on the impact of Institute participation on teaching and learning in urban schools, each led by two Fellows from different sites. Among the topics considered were the impact on the teaching experience and on the students; possible enduring effects of the bridge built between the classroom or school and the host university; specific components of curriculum units that would have been impossible or unlikely without the seminar experience; ways in which the Institute experience has opened doors for the Fellows’ students at the host university; and suggestions for strengthening the impact of the Institutes on teaching and learning. In one session, for example, the participants emphasized the need for Institutes to be “institutionalized” in order for them to be sustained in the long term. They urged the development of portfolios and other means of assessing the outcomes of student endeavor. And they suggested that, because of the evident value of the seminars, an Institute should work to make them more visible to parents, to other schools, and to other segments of the community.
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At the luncheon, then, the whole group received reports on these Breakout Sessions and James R. Vivian gave a charge to the Caucuses on Past Accomplishments and Future Plans. He reviewed the planning for the expansion of the Institute’s national initiative and the strong support given to the proposal by site representatives and the National Advisory Committee last November. He said:
We also heard a consensus in favor of adding an initial phase in which we concentrate on strengthening the existing Institutes and documenting the contributions of the Institute approach, followed by a steady pursuit of the national expansion the proposal described. Now that they have implemented the Institute approach under diverse circumstances, each new Institute, they thought, should intensify its local efforts and devise its own strategy for systemic impact. This, it appeared . . . might be a highly creative next phase of the national project.
He then announced the extension of support from the Wallace-Reader’s Digest Funds into 2003 and a new grant from the Jessie Ball duPont Fund that would make possible the Preparation Phase of the Yale National Initiative. And he stated that we therefore need the Caucuses’ advice, to help us shape that Preparation Phase, on three questions in particular:
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“Now that they have implemented the Institute approach under diverse circumstances, each new Institute . . . should intensify its local efforts and devise its own strategy for systemic impact.”
—James R. Vivian
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• What are the most promising ways for assessing and demonstrating what you believe the Demonstration Project has accomplished locally and nationally?
• How best can we study our collaborative work over the past four years to identify those strategies for working together—whether through conferences such as this one, Summer Intensives such as those conducted in 1999 and 2000, site visits, or in other ways—for developing new Teachers Institutes?
• How can each of the Institutes now achieve a systemic impact in the school district?
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The Caucus of Fellows was led by Ninfa A. Sepúlveda of the Houston Teachers Institute; the Caucus of Seminar Leaders was led by Jules D. Prown of the Yale-New Haven Teachers Institute; the Caucus of School and University Administrators and Foundation Officials was led by Michele J. Sabino, Grant Officer at the Houston Endowment; and the Caucus of Directors was led by Paul Cooke of the Houston Teachers Institute.
In the very large Caucus of Fellows, four groups reported on their responses to the key questions. There was a consensus that there have been successful transplants of the Yale-New Haven program; that successful collaborations have been developed, not only between teachers and university faculty members, but also among teachers; that these are successful teacher-driven programs; that many well-developed curriculum units have been written; that the teaching of these units has encouraged higher level questioning and thinking and increased mastery of content areas; that there are successful interdisciplinary programs; that there has been significant development of teacher leadership; that the Institute are being incorporated into district infrastructures; and that a basis for a national network has been established. With regard to a research agenda and future developments, however, the responses were various. It was agreed that much data collection takes place now and should be continued. It was felt, however, that in some respects the autonomy of the Institutes and the teacher-driven nature of the programs might best be served by not integrating the Institutes too deeply with district infrastructures. It was noted that in larger districts it would be difficult or impossible to reach a large percentage of the teacher population. All agreed that each Institute should continue to be active with a national network of Institutes, that July Intensive Programs have been valuable, and that it will be useful to have further annual conferences.
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There was a consensus that there have been successful transplants of the Yale-New Haven program; that successful collaborations have been developed, not only between teachers and university faculty members, but also among teachers; that these are successful teacher-driven programs.
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In the Caucus of Seminar Leaders, much emphasis was placed on the achievement of a bridge between the university and the community in which it exists. It is a mode for institutional outreach and a way in which to keep the focus on issues of diversity. An Institute is also valuable, members of this Caucus said, in strengthening the “educational continuum,” the continuity of the educational experience, and helping people at different stages of their academic career. Another accomplishment is the development within each university of a core of senior faculty who remain in contact with each other and have an influence within the institution that they can exercise on behalf of the Teachers Institute and related issues. Seminar leaders also spoke of the advantages of visiting the schools in which their Fellows have taught. They felt that new Institutes should visit the existing sites as part of their developing their own proposals. They also felt that the new sites should, if possible, be K-12 sites and should arrive at a clear understanding of the degree of support that can be expected from their school district or districts and from the university. The seminar leaders also thought that the July Intensives were valuable but in future should led by faculty from other institutions in addition to Yale. The annual conferences, too, in future, should move around from site to site. The seminar leaders thought that the National Project office should be a center for communication and have a role in developing national funding. Some felt that it should also have an important role in establishing standards and assessing the progress and the operation of the various Institutes.
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Breakout Session at the Third Annual Conference in New Haven, October 2001. (Clockwise from back left: Joan R. Gundersen, Verdell M. Roberts, Susanne Baackmann, Carolyn N. Kinder, Glenda Thompson, and Patricia Y. Gordon.)
Those attending the Caucus of School and University Administrators and Foundation Officials testified to the professional growth of public school teachers, a decrease in teacher isolation and an increase in collaboration, a growth of high quality, content-rich curriculum in direct correlation with the participation of colleges of arts and sciences, a mutual respect among institutions, and a reinvigorated interest in the joy of learning in both teachers and university professors. The group proposed that there be studies of the impact of the curriculum units on student learning, the impact of the Institutes’ programs on teacher progress and professional development (specific skill-related outcomes), and the ways in which teaching teachers to become inquiry-based learners has improved styles and strategies of teaching and so improved the learning in the classroom. It also wanted to add communicative skills as an integral part of the Institute program, and then conduct research to determine whether an increase of communicative skills would improve teaching and learning. And it felt that Institutes should become a line item in the professional development budgets of school districts. The National Project office, in the view of this group, might coordinate a research agenda, help all the sites network with each other, establish priorities for grant applications, promote a national legislative agenda, disseminate strong outcomes, and assist local sites with public relations and publicity.
The Caucus of Directors covered many of these same points. They also spoke of the development of a national organization for rigorous professional development of teachers on both school and university levels. They noted that an Institute can provide an unusual opportunity for university faculty members to analyze their own teaching methods. Institutes have also moved the professional development of public school teachers outside the exclusive province of colleges of education, have strengthened the professional morale for teachers and faculty, and have involved teachers in addressing standards. And the Directors also cited the importance of using the Teachers Institutes to meet outreach requirements for grants, and the desirability of a national group to assist in providing rigorous planning and benefits for institutions.
The Plenary Session that followed, moderated by Roberto González Echevarría, Co-Chair of the University Advisory Council of the Yale-New Haven Teachers Institute, received reports from these four Caucuses.
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Those attending the Caucus of School and University Administrators and Foundation Officials testified to the professional growth of public school teachers, a decrease in teacher isolation and an increase in collaboration, a growth of high quality, content-rich curriculum.
Institutes have strengthened the professional morale for teachers and faculty, and have involved teachers in addressing standards.
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After a reception at the Yale Center for British Art, during which Jules D. Prown presented some remarks on the Center and current exhibitions, those in attendance had dinner at the Sterling Memorial Library. James Vivian then introduced Susan Sclafani, Counsel to the Secretary of Education. “No one,” he said, “has provided more strategic or more timely leadership and support for the establishment of the Houston Teachers Institute than our speaker this evening has done.”
Susan Sclafani addressed the group on “Teacher Development, Critical to Leaving No Child Behind.” After speaking of the necessity of both standards and an assessment system, she said: “We’ve got to change the way in which we prepare our young people.” And she amplified:
Part of the reason that you are working in this Institute is because you have understood that you weren’t getting all of your children engaged; that there had to be better ways to develop curriculum, there had to be better ways to learn. You needed yourself to learn new strategies that could be effective with the young people you teach—and to do that in a way that you had some say about.
Most professional development offered in America, she said,
is not first rate. It is an attempt to focus on those areas that we think are most important, but to do it the same way for everybody. That ends up not being much better than our trying to teach all of our students the same way; it doesn’t work. What appealed to us in Houston—and what appealed to your in Albuquerque and Pittsburgh and Santa Ana—was that there was a different way of doing it. There was a way to change your way of thinking about how you might approach a topic, how to engage yourselves in an experience that got you excited about a topic that you thought you might have some interest in, and then to figure out, among you, how do you take this back—some of you to elementary-school children, others of your to middle-school children, others of you to high-school children. That is one of the challenges that is so exciting about this project: that the same topic that you engage in, on an adult level, can be presented at so many different levels to the young people that you teach.
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Third Annual Conference in New Haven, October 2001. (Left to right: Jean E. Sutherland, Robert Stockwell, Verdell M. Roberts, Susan K. Sclafani, and Helen S. Faison.)
Sclafani spoke of “teacher quality” as “the most important factor in whether our children learn.” And that, she said, “is what this project is all about.”
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“That is one of the challenges that is so exciting about this project: that the same topic that you engage in, on an adult level, can be presented at so many different levels to the young people that you teach.”
—Susan K. Sclafani
Counsel to the Secretary of Education
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It is taking teachers who sometimes get disheartened by what large systems do to them, who don’t believe that people really believe that they are very good or that they are important or that they can make real contributions, because sometimes administrations don’t act that way. Instead, it says, “Take this opportunity, create for yourselves a seminar that will excite you, that will give you an opportunity to look at a topic in a different way, and then figure out how to take this back to your students in a way that will engage them as they haven’t been engaged before.”
She challenged the group “to figure out how to expand and grow” the number of teachers involved in Teachers Institutes, within the cities represented now by such Institutes and within other cities when they want to join in this process. “How do we turn district-wide professional development into this?” she asked. “How do you start having an influence on the way in which all teachers are engaged in intellectual pursuits? Because that really is the great issue.”
On the following morning there were five concurrent Breakout Sessions on Institute practices: “Handling Seminar Dynamics,” led by Amelia Regan, UCI-Santa Ana Teachers Institute, and Lynn W. Marsico, Pittsburgh Teachers Institute; “Writing Syllabi and Helping Teachers Write Curriculum Units,” led by Thomas R. Whitaker, Yale-New Haven Teachers Institute; “Challenges of Leading and Coordinating a Seminar,” led by Janet E. Stocks, Pittsburgh Teachers Institute, and Jean Sutherland, Yale-New Haven Teachers Institute; “Disseminating Curriculum Units,” led by Douglas Earick, Albuquerque Teachers Institute, and Marilyn Frenz, UCI-Santa Ana Teachers Institute; and “Implementing and Influencing District and State Standards,” led by Helen S. Faison, Pittsburgh Teachers Institute. The session on “Writing Syllabi and Helping Teachers Write Curriculum Units,” for example, dealt to a large extent with the need for seminar leaders to meet at the outset with the directors and with experienced Fellows to get a better sense of the nature of this kind of seminar. The session on “Handling Seminar Dynamics” dealt with several problems that might be met by a seminar leader. It suggested some techniques that seminar leaders and coordinators might use in such instances and two institute-wide measures that should be maintained or inaugurated—a strong commitment to equity, inclusion, and respect for diversity, and training sessions for leaders and coordinators.
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“How do we turn district-wide professional development into this? . . . How do you start having an influence on the way in which all teachers are engaged in intellectual pursuits? Because that really is the great issue.”
—Susan K. Sclafani
Counsel to the Secretary of Education
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Breakout Session at the Third Annual Conference in New Haven, October 2001. (Clockwise from left: David Judkins, Debi Kierst, Elisabeth L. Roark, Paul D. Cooke, Leonard Retiz, Renee C. Tolliver.)
The session on “Implementing and Influencing District and State Standards,” in contrast, began with a review by Helen Faison of the history of the movement toward standards, and it then addressed questions concerning the advantages and the dangers in standards-based education, the special problems related to such education in urban school districts, the role of the Institute in the standards-based movement in those districts, the future role of the Institute as the model expands. At the end of the session a principal and school district official praised the institutes as “a new wave of professional development” and “invaluable.” An associate superintendent urged “a national teachers institute of some kind.” And teachers said: “The Institutes give teachers a chance to be responsible for their own teaching,” and “It’s the best professional development I’ve ever had.”
After a break for informal discussion, there were four concurrent Breakout Sessions on Core Values. Each participant was assigned to one of the four sessions. They were led by Colston Chandler, Albuquerque Teachers Institute; Daniel Addis, Houston Teachers Institute; James Davidson, Pittsburgh Teachers Institute; and Connie Weiss, Pittsburgh Teachers Institute. Those in one session felt emphatically that the most important thing that Teachers Institutes do is to improve the quality of teaching in the schools by infusing rigorous academic content knowledge. The seminars, they also felt, provide an opportunity to participate in the joy of learning, which allows the participants to appear to their students as role models of life-long learners. The Fellows in that session felt that the ability to write an academically solid curriculum unit was a more important achievement than the unit itself—though they believed the units to be valuable, especially as the basis for modification in later years. They found that collegiality is an essential feature of the Institutes, they urged that all seminars should be open to all grade levels. With regard to assessment, they urged that, in addition to devising portfolios and other means of assessing the performance of students taught by both Fellows and non-Fellows, there should be some effort to discover evidence that a well-trained teacher leads to better student performance.
Those in another session found the core values of an Institute to be: intellectual rigor (interpreted broadly to include access to resources, real immersion in serious knowledge, fostering the love of learning, and sharing teacher experience with students); professionalism (as fostered by the university, involving seminars based on teacher needs and interests, including adequate compensation, and dictating reciprocal openness of the schools to the university); collegiality (involving equity, openness of seminars to all teachers, respect for diversity, a sense of community, and collaboration); and creation of a curriculum (research-based, designed for specific students, demonstrating professionalism, with narrative guidelines allowing some flexibility).
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A principal and school district official praised the institutes as “a new wave of professional development” and “invaluable.” An associate superintendent urged “a national teachers institute of some kind.”
Those in one session felt emphatically that the most important thing that Teachers Institutes do is to improve the quality of teaching in the schools by infusing rigorous academic content knowledge.
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Those in a third session stressed as core values: teacher leadership (as articulated through the Institute’s structure); the curriculum units (substantive, including an appropriate form of assessment, written to be implemented in the classroom, and making a contribution to the educational community); the Director (chosen through collaboration between the partners of the Institute); and compensation (for Director, seminar leaders, teacher representatives, and Fellows).
At the closing Plenary Session and luncheon, there were reports from the Breakout Sessions and discussion, moderated by Mary E. Miller, of the topic: “What are the core values in our common work?” A faculty member from a fourth session summed up their conclusions in this way: “At the top of our list, we are teacher-driven and collegial. That’s the source of where these seminars come from. We give seminars, we produce curriculum units, the whole Institute seminar is built on sustained contact between faculty and teachers and it results in some kind of professional transformation, a process of professional development.” The moderator said: “I think the thing that matters most to me is the sense of common professionalism that exists between the university and the school teachers. This has really been for me a very rewarding experience, and one that I think is alien to many people within the university. I would say that from the role I would play in an Institute, it’s at the core of what we do.”
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“At the top of our list, we are teacher-driven and collegial. That’s the source of where these seminars come from.”
—Caucus Chair
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The Third Annual Conference showed that the five Institutes are prepared to collaborate in many ways, through formal and informal meetings and other communications. All participants welcomed the fact that the Yale-New Haven Teachers Institute had now assumed a position of equality with the others in both the planning and the carrying out of the Conference.
Responses from team-members to the questionnaire distributed by the Yale-New Haven Teachers Institute were even more uniformly positive than after the Second Annual Conference. There were repeated calls for the continuation of Annual Conferences and for a new series of July Intensives. There were many suggestions as to ways of assessing student outcomes and providing demonstrations of an Institute’s effectiveness. One Director said:
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Overall, I think this year’s Conference was the most organized and best run of all the Annual Conferences. In particular, I think the discussions on Future Plans and on ways for the National Teachers Institute Association to work together hold the most promise and should be developed more fully.
Another Director said:
It is my hope that the new Institutes will continue to exist and will remain in touch with each other and with the Yale-New Haven Teachers Institute. It is my hope that the Institute will be expanded to accommodate more of the schools and teachers in the district and that the School District will encourage teacher participation in the Institute and their use of the curriculum units that they and other teachers develop. It is also my hope that the Institute will be able to respond successfully to the local district’s need to offer seminar experiences for teachers in academic disciplines that are undergoing significant change to prepare students to achieve the new academic standards that are being implemented nationwide, such as in reading, mathematics, and writing. This, I hope, the Institute will be able to do without abandoning the salient features of the teacher professional development model that has been developed in New Haven.
For the local research effort, this Director indicated an interest in discovering if there is a difference in the performance of teachers after they participate in the Institute and a difference in the learning outcomes of the students enrolled in their classes, and also discovering if the instructional competence of teachers who participate in Institute seminars of their choice exceeds that of teachers who participate in mandatory professional development offered by their school districts. A university administrator said on this topic:
There’s a growing body of research on teacher effectiveness, and growing interest in sustaining teacher professional growth, building on the call from the National Commission on Teaching and America’s Future for a qualified teacher in every classroom and the observed need to retain qualified teachers in a time of teacher shortage. And research on learning has pretty clearly established that active, inquiry-based learning is more effective than learning by lecture, rote, or drill. The Institutes should build a research agenda around these observations by systematically studying teachers’ professional lives to understand how participating in Institutes affects Fellows’ longevity in the classroom, their motivation to engage in other professional development, and their approaches to teaching. While “teacher testimonials” won’t be persuasive, systematic study of the quality of teacher professional lives can be.
A school district administrator agreed that “We need to articulate the professional development research that has linked student achievement with quality teachers and teaching. It is available.” The university administrator also suggested, with regard to “systemic impact,” that
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“This, I hope, the Institute will be able to do without abandoning the salient features of the teacher professional development model that has been developed in New Haven.”
—Institute Director
“Research on learning has pretty clearly established that active, inquiry-based learning is more effective than learning by lecture, rote, or drill. The Institutes should build a research agenda around these observations.”
—University Administrator
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We should study the schools in which concentrations of Fellows teach to understand how colleagues can influence the professional community within those walls, what difference Fellowship makes to those communities, and how Fellows and those without them may help to establish the value of the Institutes.
Looking toward the future, a university faculty member said: “There can be no impact unless the school system wants it. The substantial commitment of the school system in the preparation of the proposals should be carefully verified.” He added: “I feel that the most important thing prospective new sites can do is to develop strategies for long-term financial stability, at least to the extent that local political uncertainties allow.” And he concluded:
I was extremely pleased to return to this last Annual Conference to see how well each program was developing and to learn something of the impact of the program at each site. Because I lean naturally toward cynicism, it was especially useful in boosting my belief that a collection of these programs can really make a difference.
The responses of school teachers were generally in accord with the views expressed by directors, administrators, and university faculty members. Several urged the use of pre- and post-testing as part of curriculum units. Such data, said one, “can be collected and put into a format that can be meaningful.” Another stated that “it is necessary to establish greater district level involvement without diminishing the significance of the seminars being teacher driven.” Another said: “I think the Yale model is a good one and that new Teachers Institutes should adhere as closely to the model as is practical. We received a lot of help from Yale and the new Institutes will also need this same sort of guidance.”
Another teacher said: “I think we should have a national office or a national organization that will allow the various Institutes to retain the same core values and original mission of the Yale-New Haven Institute as a unifying theme.” And yet another teacher said that the continued collaboration of the new Teachers Institutes is “crucial.” Commenting on the value of such an Annual Conference as this, she said: “I only wish we had more time to discuss curriculum units, problems in writing, teaching conditions, and strengths and weaknesses of site practices.” And she recalled with approval the process by which the Urban Sites Network (under the National Writing Project) took on new sites as cohorts, adding more each year, the new sites working with the existing sites.
As it prepares for the continuing of the National Initiative, the Yale-New Haven Teachers Institute will be paying close attention to the suggestions offered during this Third Annual Conference.
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“I was extremely pleased to see how well each program was developing . . . Because I lean naturally toward cynicism, it was especially useful in boosting my belief that a collection of these programs can really make a difference.”
—University Faculty Member
“I think we should have a national office or a national organization that will allow the various Institutes to retain the same core values and original mission of the Yale-New Haven Institute as a unifying theme.”
—School Teacher
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