"Much of the dysfunction in schools is a result of the historical
isolation of classrooms and schools as compartmentalized hierarchies.
This establishes teaching as individualistic rather than as a collegial enterprise.
Many problems identified specifically with ineffective teaching
practices are attributed to teacher isolation. Isolated classroom cells
are symbolic of teachers working out of sight and hearing of one another
and solving problems on their own. This professional isolation operates
as a bulwark against school improvement and can be a useful priority
for many schools and district leaders.
Learning is a social enterprise and people learn best in groups.
Collaborative structures help to decrease teacher isolation, codify and
share successful teaching practices, increase staff morale, and open the
door to experimentation and increased collective efficacy.
Collaborative environments are also likely to attract talented staff who
thrive on interactions with like-minded talented individuals. High
levels of collaboration are likely to exist when the leadership marks it
as a priority, when common time and physical space are set aside for
collaboration, and when teaching and learning are seen as a team
responsibility, rather than an individual responsibility.
Collaborative structures imply the provision of both time and space
for teachers to interact. Time is perhaps the most precious resource,
and time to meet and talk is an essential resource for schools.
Collaboration is time-consuming and staff need to be provided with
adequate time to interact. The movement from ‘me’ or ‘I’ to ‘us’ or ‘we’ requires
frequent teacher interactions which can be achieved through common
planning time, team-teaching, and coaching and mentoring.
Physical structures also need to support collaborative learning.
Classrooms, staff workspaces, and furniture all either reinforce or
detract from collaboration. Schools should be designed more like
advertising agencies than prisons. The provision of comfortable sofas
and water fountains can do a great deal to support collaboration.
The most important outcome of teacher collaboration may be that
teachers learn how to improve their teaching practice. When teachers
collaborate, they share experiences and knowledge that can promote
learning for instructional improvement. A team focus on learning helps
teachers to discover causal connections between teaching and student
learning and encourages collective questioning of ineffective teaching
routines. High levels of teacher collaboration are also likely to
improve teaching and learning, student behavior, and student achievement
on high-stakes tests.
Teachers who work collaboratively think and behave on the basis of an
understanding of teaching as a shared responsibility. The scrutiny of
peers is welcomed. Collaborative structures enable teachers to learn
from the experience and expertise of their peers. However, just because
teachers work together does not mean that the outcomes will be positive,
as there needs to be an appropriate knowledge base from at least one
teacher for it to be worthwhile.
Merely placing staff into teams will not necessarily lead to improved
learning. There is the problem of contrived collegiality, where the
collaboration is promoted as a means of achieving executive purposes,
rather than the goals of the teachers. Communication and interdependence
are methods of overcoming the balkanization of the silo-like
subject-based teams in high schools. Developing cross-disciplinary
curriculum structures is another possible method of overcoming the
problem of balkanization.
Organizations learn collectively in groups and collaborative
structures enable people to work together in teams to accomplish
collective purposes."
For more, see:
- Why You Should Create a Collaborative Classroom This Year
- Defining (and Driving) Collaboration
- Collaboration: Key to Successful Teams and Projects
via getting smart...
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