International School Magazine - Spring 2019

Page 33

Curriculum, learning and teaching a functioning CoP. Salary or wages, clearly, will be the first consideration to many potential employees wishing to move to new employment places or retain their existing positions. Institutions wishing to attract, retain and sustain quality staff that form CoP need to put in place salary/wage structures that will make that possible. Incentives also play a very important role in nurturing CoP within institutions. A common view is that incentives need to be formalized and structured along the lines of salary and remuneration packages. My view on this is rather divergent: an incentive should appear as a gift which is not asked for. It should be a natural occurrence based on clearly excellent performance and should not be tied to some kind of ad hoc criteria. Any teacher who performs well should be pleasantly surprised to receive gifts and tokens as unexpected surprises that can enhance their morale and provide encouragement to all employees. I stated in the first sentence of this article that human beings are social animals: they will appreciate occasional, surprise praises to perform beyond expectation, just as Maslow proposed in his hierarchy of needs. An appraisal system which is directly geared towards retaining and sustaining quality teaching staff needs to be put in place. Career development based on sound teacher professional development will be valued by any employee who is eager to perform beyond expectation. Generally, top performers in institutions do not like rigid rules, regulations, long meetings, job descriptions and duty statements (Shelley, n.d). These dislikes at first glance may appear controversial, but Shelley had a point: top performers

know what to do and do not need constant reminders in the form of readings and meetings. These to them are basically time-wasting bureaucratic system bottlenecks that waste valuable time that they would rather use in doubling or tripling the institution’s output. These performers just want to do their stuff and be held accountable for their output. Maybe further research needs to be done in this area. In summary, the effort required to establish and sustain a community of practice is enormous. This further requires care and dedication in implementation. This is a process and not an event: institutions wishing to implement a community of practice must therefore be prepared to go the long haul. References Kilpatrick, S, Barrett, M & Jones, T (2003) Defining Learning Communities. AARE (Australian Association for Research in Education) Conference. Chalmers, L & Keown, P (2006) Communities of practice and professional development. International Journal of Lifelong Education. 25:2, 139-156. Schlager, M S & Fusco, J (2003) Teacher Professional Development, Technology, and Communities of Practice: Are We Putting the Cart Before the Horse? The Information Society. 19, 3, 203-220. Shelley, L (n.d) Finding the Needle in the Haystack: The Challenge of Recruiting and Retaining Sharp Employees. California State Personnel Board.

Kennedy Bwanga is Head of Design Technology and IT at Ecole Mondiale World School, Mumbai Email: kennedybwanga@gmail.com

Forthcoming Conferences February 4-6, AAIE Conference & Expo, San Francisco, California, US February 7-8, COBIS Conference for Bursars, Business Managers and HR Staff, London, UK February 15-16 COBIS The Power of Early Learning Cultures - EYFC Conference, Hong Kong February 18-21 AIEA Annual Conference,Washington, US March 1-2, EARCOS Middle Leadership Conference, Jakarta, Indonesia March 7-8, COBIS Conference for PAs and Secretaries, Luxembourg March 21-23, EARCOS Annual Teachers’ Conference, Bangkok, Thailand March 24-26, IB Global Conference, Hong Kong March 25-29, APAIE Conference & Exhibition, Singapore April 15-18, ECIS PE Conference, Barcelona, Spain April 24-27, ECIS Annual Leadership Conference, Lisbon, Portugal April 25-26, COBIS Conference for Marking, Development and Admissions Staff, Astana, Kazakhstan May 11-13, COBIS Annual Conference, London, UK

Autumn

Spring |

| 2019

33


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook

Articles inside

book reviews

3min
pages 59-60

Little Soldiers: An American Boy, a Chinese School and the Global Race to Achieve, by Lenora Chu

7min
pages 65-68

Linguistic capital in the 21st century, Graham Noble

9min
pages 54-56

N/a’an ku sê, Clémentine Paris

2min
pages 57-58

Internationalism in an internment camp, Lois Warner

5min
pages 52-53

Do we really impact the future? Varduhi Grigoryan-Avetisyan

5min
pages 50-51

people and places

3min
pages 48-49

Science matters: Recognition in science, Richard Harwood

4min
pages 46-47

Is your school assessment approach effective and efficient in promoting learning?

4min
pages 43-44

Developing independent learners through self-paced math projects

6min
pages 38-39

Fifth column: Laughter unites us; jokes divide us, E T Ranger

4min
page 45

Teaching phonological awareness effectively, Hester Hoette

3min
pages 36-37

Against intuition, Simon Foley

6min
pages 34-35

Real science and global experiences, Glenys Hart

9min
pages 40-42

regulars

3min
page 33

curriculum, learning and teaching

1min
page 32

All the world is a classroom, Scott Stephens and Jennifer Kuhel

3min
pages 18-19

features

10min
pages 9-14

Looking for adventure or just love teaching?, Maria Casson

5min
pages 25-26

Managing allegations of child abuse by educators and other adults

10min
pages 20-22

Blue sky thinking redesigns refugee education, Richard CC Davies

13min
pages 27-31

comment

7min
pages 5-8

Supporting students for university success, Diane Glass

5min
pages 15-17

Emotional impact of student relocation, Sarah Whyte

6min
pages 23-24
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.