What Is A Professional Learning Community
What Is A Professional Learning Community
What Is A Professional Learning Community
Richard Du Four
Educational Leadership May 2004 | Volume 61 | Number 8
Schools as Learning Communities Pages 6-11
To
create
a
professional
learning
community,
focus
on
learning
rather
than
teaching,
work
collaboratively,
and
hold
yourself
accountable
for
results.
The
idea
of
improving
schools
by
developing
professional
learning
communities
is
currently
in
vogue.
People
use
this
term
to
describe
every
imaginable
combination
of
individuals
with
an
interest
in
educationa
grade-level
teaching
team,
a
school
committee,
a
high
school
department,
an
entire
school
district,
a
state
department
of
education,
a
national
professional
organization,
and
so
on.
In
fact,
the
term
has
been
used
so
ubiquitously
that
it
is
in
danger
of
losing
all
meaning.
The
professional
learning
community
model
has
now
reached
a
critical
juncture,
one
well
known
to
those
who
have
witnessed
the
fate
of
other
well-intentioned
school
reform
efforts.
In
this
all-too-familiar
cycle,
initial
enthusiasm
gives
way
to
confusion
about
the
fundamental
concepts
driving
the
initiative,
followed
by
inevitable
implementation
problems,
the
conclusion
that
the
reform
has
failed
to
bring
about
the
desired
results,
abandonment
of
the
reform,
and
the
launch
of
a
new
search
for
the
next
promising
initiative.
Another
reform
movement
has
come
and
gone,
reinforcing
the
conventional
education
wisdom
that
promises,
This
too
shall
pass.
The
movement
to
develop
professional
learning
communities
can
avoid
this
cycle,
but
only
if
educators
reflect
critically
on
the
concept's
merits.
What
are
the
big
ideas
that
represent
the
core
principles
of
professional
learning
communities?
How
do
these
principles
guide
schools'
efforts
to
sustain
the
professional
learning
community
model
until
it
becomes
deeply
embedded
in
the
culture
of
the
school?
Timely.
The
school
quickly
identifies
students
who
need
additional
time
and
support.
Based
on
intervention
rather
than
remediation.
The
plan
provides
students
with
help
as
soon
as
they
experience
difficulty
rather
than
relying
on
summer
school,
retention,
and
remedial
courses.
Directive.
Instead
of
inviting
students
to
seek
additional
help,
the
systematic
plan
requires
students
to
devote
extra
time
and
receive
additional
assistance
until
they
have
mastered
the
necessary
concepts.
The
systematic,
timely,
and
directive
intervention
program
operating
at
Adlai
Stevenson
High
School
in
Lincolnshire,
Illinois,
provides
an
excellent
example.
Every
three
weeks,
every
student
receives
a
progress
report.
Within
the
first
month
of
school,
new
students
discover
that
if
they
are
not
doing
well
in
a
class,
they
will
receive
a
wide
array
of
immediate
interventions.
First,
the
teacher,
counselor,
and
faculty
advisor
each
talk
with
the
student
individually
to
help
resolve
the
problem.
The
school
also
notifies
the
student's
parents
about
the
concern.
In
addition,
the
school
offers
the
struggling
student
a
pass
from
study
hall
to
a
school
tutoring
center
to
get
additional
help
in
the
course.
An
older
student
mentor,
in
conjunction
with
the
struggling
student's
advisor,
helps
the
student
with
homework
during
the
student's
daily
advisory
period.
Any
student
who
continues
to
fall
short
of
expectations
at
the
end
of
six
weeks
despite
these
interventions
is
required,
rather
than
invited,
to
attend
tutoring
sessions
during
the
study
hall
period.
Counselors
begin
to
make
weekly
checks
on
the
struggling
student's
progress.
If
tutoring
fails
to
bring
about
improvement
within
the
next
six
weeks,
the
student
is
assigned
to
a
daily
guided
study
hall
with
10
or
fewer
students.
The
guided
study
hall
supervisor
communicates
with
classroom
teachers
to
learn
exactly
what
homework
each
student
needs
to
complete
and
monitors
the
completion
of
that
homework.
Parents
attend
a
meeting
at
the
school
at
which
the
student,
parents,
counselor,
and
classroom
teacher
must
sign
a
contract
clarifying
what
each
party
will
do
to
help
the
student
meet
the
standards
for
the
course.
Stevenson
High
School
serves
more
than
4,000
students.
Yet
this
school
has
found
a
way
to
monitor
each
student's
learning
on
a
timely
basis
and
to
ensure
that
every
student
who
experiences
academic
difficulty
will
receive
extra
time
and
support
for
learning.
Like
Stevenson,
schools
that
are
truly
committed
to
the
concept
of
learning
for
each
student
will
stop
subjecting
struggling
students
to
a
haphazard
education
lottery.
These
schools
will
guarantee
that
each
student
receives
whatever
additional
support
he
or
she
needs.
Big
Idea
#2:
A
Culture
of
Collaboration
Educators
who
are
building
a
professional
learning
community
recognize
that
they
must
work
together
to
achieve
their
collective
purpose
of
learning
for
all.
Therefore,
they
create
structures
to
promote
a
collaborative
culture.
Despite
compelling
evidence
indicating
that
working
collaboratively
represents
best
practice,
teachers
in
many
schools
continue
to
work
in
isolation.
Even
in
schools
that
endorse
the
idea
of
collaboration,
the
staff's
willingness
to
collaborate
often
stops
at
the
classroom
door.
Some
school
staffs
equate
the
term
collaboration
with
congeniality
and
focus
on
building
group
camaraderie.
Other
staffs
join
forces
to
develop
consensus
on
operational
procedures,
such
as
how
they
will
respond
to
tardiness
or
supervise
recess.
Still
others
organize
themselves
into
committees
to
oversee
different
facets
of
the
school's
operation,
such
as
discipline,
technology,
and
social
climate.
Although
each
of
these
activities
can
serve
a
useful
purpose,
none
represents
the
kind
of
professional
dialogue
that
can
transform
a
school
into
a
professional
learning
community.
The
powerful
collaboration
that
characterizes
professional
learning
communities
is
a
systematic
process
in
which
teachers
work
together
to
analyze
and
improve
their
classroom
practice.
Teachers
work
in
teams,
engaging
in
an
ongoing
cycle
of
questions
that
promote
deep
team
learning.
This
process,
in
turn,
leads
to
higher
levels
of
student
achievement.
References
Barth, R. (1991). Restructuring schools: Some questions for teachers and principals. Phi Delta
Kappan, 73(2), 123128.
Marzano, R. (2003). What works in schools: Translating research into action. Alexandria, VA:
ASCD.