horizon: thought leadership
ISSUE #03 What’s Inside: The importance of leadership to teacher collaboration, collective efficacy and achievement
Bastow // Horizon // Issue 3
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What’s happening at Bastow Leading Instruction for Excellence and Equity (LIFE™) About the session What is the strong statistical relationship between effective instructional leadership, collaboration, collective efficacy, and student learning? This seminar is based on extensive research in Leading Instruction for Excellence and Equity (LIFE™) by Dr Roger Goddard (the lead developer of the DET School Staff Survey). Greg Cameron will be hosting this session along with Dr Roger Goddard who will be connecting with the audience via video link from the USA. Throughout this session Greg Cameron and Dr Roger Goddard will discuss: • the newest research on the link between leadership and learning • actionable strategies and tools for developing collaboration • collective efficacy through effective instructional leadership. Date: Wednesday 8 June 2016 Time: Session 5.00 pm - 6.30 pm Nibbles and networking from 6.30 pm Queensberry St, North Melbourne Cost: $35 pp incl. GST
Venue: Bastow Institute of Educational Leadership 603-615 Queensberry St, North Melbourne Cost: $35 pp incl. GST Register to attend: At Bastow Via Video Conferencing
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About the speakers Dr Roger Goddard’s work focuses on the ways in which school leaders can improve teacher practice, the ways in which teacher and leader practice build efficacious school climates, and professional development designs that actually improve practice and student learning. Roger has authored and co-authored over 100 peer-reviewed published papers, conference papers and book chapters and his work has been cited extensively. His work has appeared in peer-reviewed journals and has also been cited in thousands of publications. Greg Cameron has extensive experience as both a school leader and professional developer. His work as an expert in educator effectiveness, instruction and leadership has been captured in more than 20 practitioner focused publications that he has authored and co-authored, including Balanced Leadership for Powerful Learning and The Balanced Leadership Framework: Connection Vision with Action. His background in program design, development and delivery focuses on translating research findings into practical tools and experiences of the highest utility.
A message from the Director I am delighted to present Bastow’s latest Horizon Thought Leadership e-publication. This edition features a paper from Yvonne Goddard, Roger Goddard and Greg Cameron that considers the importance of instructional leadership. Their research indicates that there is a strong relationship between instructional leadership, collaboration, collective efficacy and student achievement. I hope that this research will help to stimulate collaborative inquiry and professional conversations about practice in your school. This article also brings together a number of themes being progressed in Victoria at the moment, including significant work on Professional Learning Communities within schools (and the principal’s role in this), and Principal Networks operating as Communities of Practice. As promoting and encouraging professionals to learn together and from each other is a key objective of all Bastow’s professional learning offerings, these findings complement a number of courses we are currently running here at Bastow, such as Leading Pedagogy and Leading Curriculum and Assessment. Dr Roger Goddard and Greg Cameron will be our thought leaders at a Horizon forum on 8 June 2016. We hope you will be able to join us to explore these questions at the forum here at Bastow or via video conferencing.
Neil Barker Director Bastow Institute of Educational Leadership
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The importance of leadership to teacher collaboration, collective efficacy and achievement Why is instructional leadership important? The answer is addressed in a recent publication co-authored by Drs. Roger and Yvonne Goddard and their colleagues. Goddard, Goddard, Kim and Miller (2015) found that when school leaders supported teachers’ collective work on instruction and professional development, teachers spent more time collaborating with a focus on instructional improvement. In turn, teacher collaboration for instructional improvement led to increased levels of collective efficacy and gains in student achievement. Driving all of this was the quality of principals’ instructional leadership. 4
Bastow // Horizon // Issue 3
In theory, when teachers collaborate and focus their collective work on instruction they have more opportunities for mastery and vicarious learning experiences that, according to Bandura, positively affect their belief that they have what it takes to educate all students (collective efficacy). The more efficacious teachers are, the more effort, creativity and resiliency they demonstrate in teaching and the better their students’ achievement appears in government assessments of learning. In sum, the effects of instructional leadership snowball in such a way that leadership supports collaboration, resulting in more efficacious teachers, thus leading to improved student outcomes. Importantly, leaders do not affect student outcomes directly. Instead, they impact student achievement indirectly via the instructional support they provide their teachers.
Instructional Leadership A vast literature supports various aspects of instructional leadership. Instructional leaders are familiar with classroom instruction in their schools; set high standards for teaching and learning; seek teacher input about and are knowledgeable about curriculum, instruction and assessment in their schools; support teachers’ collaborative work; and are people with whom teachers feel comfortable discussing instruction. Via instructional and collaborative support for teachers, principals create environments in which teachers are more efficacious and students learn. In the Goddard et al. study, student learning was positively and significantly impacted by these factors even after accounting for the influence of prior achievement as well as important student and school demographics such as poverty.
Collaboration The importance of instructional leadership to teachers’ collaborative work was reinforced in this study by a strong effect size of 0.7 standard deviations (SD). The more teachers reported that their principals engaged in such activities as being involved in helping teachers address instructional issues and being aware of instructional practices in classrooms, the more likely those teachers were to work collaboratively on professional development and instruction. The effect size reported (0.7 SD) is very telling. Where teachers reported strong instructional leadership, collaboration for instructional improvement occurred much more frequently. The downside is that where teachers felt their principal was less knowledgeable about teaching and learning and less aware of their classroom practices, the teachers reported much lower rates of collaboration. Supportive school-based leadership is a key to fostering the frequent, structured, focused collaboration present in the Goddard et al. study. Such intensive collaboration requires significant time – something that school leaders can creatively provide their teachers. We define collaboration as the degree to which teachers work formally and frequently on instructional improvement. Collaborative practice requires more than scheduling time together or talking informally in the hallways or teachers’ lounge. In order for frequent and formal, structured collaboration to have an impact, a focus on the talents of
the team and a common understanding of the team’s outcomes and agreements—not only about what the work is, but how it will be done—need to be expected, developed, modeled, and fostered. For collaboration to be most effective and meaningful we have found it requires: • identifying goals and outcomes • establishing trust • establishing agreements around process • developing effective communication • developing skill sets for dealing with difficult interactions • leadership support. One way to support schools and systems as they build or expand this type of collaboration is through instructional rounds. The goals of instructional rounds include the development of observation skills and common understandings of effective teaching, as well as developing agreed upon patterns of practice that guide the work.
Collective Efficacy Teacher collaboration is positively and significantly related to collective efficacy beliefs. Collective efficacy refers to the perceptions of teachers in a school that as a group they can take the necessary actions to have a positive impact on students. Further, teachers’ collective efficacy can be enhanced via vicarious learning. Thus, if teachers are able to spend time in colleagues’ classrooms observing effective instruction, they are likely to improve their own instruction and to believe that they and other teachers in the school are able to teach all students successfully. This perceived collective efficacy is a significant positive predictor of differences among schools in student achievement. Instructional leadership is a significant positive predictor of collective efficacy beliefs through influence on teachers’ collaborative work. Instructional leadership and teacher collaboration provide the enactive and vicarious experiences that can foster collective efficacy in a school and thus lead to improved student achievement, a key goal of leadership in schools.
Conclusion Our approach to leadership and school improvement differs fundamentally from traditions of isolated and uncoordinated efforts too typical of education practice. A focus on the characteristics and practices of instructional leadership, collaboration, and collective efficacy are essential to supporting higher levels of student learning and improved working conditions for teachers. Reference Goddard, R. D., Goddard, Y. L., Kim, E. S. & Miller, R. (2015). A theoretical and empirical analysis of the roles of instructional leadership, teacher collaboration, and collective efficacy beliefs in support of student learning. American Journal of Education, 121, 501530. Bastow // Horizon // Issue 3
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BASTOW EVENING EVENTS FROM ANYWHERE IN VICTORIA Bastow is offering government schools and early childhood networks, outside the Melbourne metropolitan area, the opportunity to participate in our regular evening Twilight Seminars and Horizon Forums via Polycom or Lync.
WHAT ARE POLYCOM AND LYNC? Polycom and Lync are video conferencing technologies. They are an effective and easy way for people in different locations to collaborate and watch live presentations.
HUB FEES The one-off fee to register a Hub is $150 for 6 months or $250 for 12 months.
NEED MORE INFORMATION? For more information about Hubs, visit this link To become a Hub Leader, or register your Hub, contact Carmel Buxton on phone 8199 2959 or email buxton.carmel.m@edumail.vic.gov.au
To stay up to date with the latest Bastow courses, professional practice and events or to find out more: visit www.bastow.vic.edu.au phone 03 8199 2900 email bastow@bastow.vic.edu.au /BastowInstitute /BastowInstitute
bastow.vic.edu.au /BastowInstitute /BastowInstitute 6
Bastow // Horizon // Issue 3