Thursday, February 24, 2011

Teachers In Professional Communities: Improving Teaching and Learning (Series on School Reform) (Series on School Reform) Reviews



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Teachers In Professional Communities: Improving Teaching and Learning (Series on School Reform) (Series on School Reform)





''Breaks new ground....Lieberman and Miller tell us how teacher learning community develops inside and outside schools, using evidence from research, theory, and reflections on practice. A must-read for anyone committed to improving teaching quality teacher leaders, teacher educators, principals and district administrators, school reformers, and professional developers.'' --Joan Talbert, co-director of the Stanford University Center for Research on the Context of Teaching

''Lieberman and Miller give teaching back to teachers and demonstrate the power of what can be done when teachers improve their work together. This is not a text about numbers and targets, but a book about people working to improve their practice in the real and messy worlds of children and classrooms that all teachers know so well.'' --Andy Hargreaves, Brennan Chair in Education, Boston College

''This book provides a rich and rewarding collection of perspectives on teachers' professional communities. Contributing practitioners draw on their experience to show how both teachers and students benefit from the new expectations and practices created in the professional communities. The editors' research-based framework pulls together this experience and existing literature to deepen our understanding of professional communities both practically and theoretically--an important contribution to the field.'' -- Milbrey McLaughlin, David Jacks Professor of Education and Public Policy, Stanford University

''Support for the notion of professional learning communities has become widespread but deep understanding of how to start and sustain such groups of teacher learners is much more scarce. This book brings the practice of professional learning communities alive, with vivid examples drawn from real schools in a wide range of settings. It is a must-read for those who want to support teacher learning that enables student learning.''--Linda Darling-Hammond, Charles E. Ducommun Professor of Education, Stanford University


Based on research and many years of lived experience in schools, the authors have become convinced that teachers learn best within their own work communities. In this volume, they explore what research and practice have to tell us about how such communities grow and develop, and how to negotiate the inherent tension between improving competence and building community. Using five themes that emerged from their studies of practice (context, capacity, content, commitment, and challenge), the authors examine selected research studies, personal reflections, and five cases that were especially commissioned for this volume in order to uncover new insights and understandings. The text begins with essays on research and long-term development projects and concludes with vignettes that address the following questions: What is the context of your program? How does your program deal with facilitating both competence and the building of community? What are the challenges and how has your program dealt with them?









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