You are here

Building and Connecting Learning Communities
Share
Share

Building and Connecting Learning Communities
The Power of Networks for School Improvement

Edited by:
  • Steven Katz - Director, Aporia Consulting Ltd. and Faculty Member, Ontario Institute for Studies in Education at the University of Toronto
  • Lorna M. Earl - University of Toronto, Canada
  • Sonia Ben Jaafar - Assistant to the Researcher in Residence, Ontario Ministry of Education, Ontario Ministry of Education


September 2009 | 136 pages | Corwin

"Taking your school from great to greater—this compelling book gives you tools to use with staff for reflecting on and refining professional practices. You and your team will find tools for taking learners to the next level of improvement!"
—Lynn A. Kaszynski, Principal
Harrison Street Elementary School, Sunbury, OH

Networked learning communities: A powerful school improvement strategy for school leaders!

Ideal for school leaders and superintendents leading change efforts, this book describes how separate professional learning communities can be linked across schools by common instructional and learning issues to create dynamic networked learning communities (NLCs). Drawing on their work with schools throughout North America and England, Steven Katz, Lorna M. Earl, and Sonia Ben Jaafar show how participants in NLCs can share professional knowledge that ultimately improves performance at the school and district level.

Through a sample school narrative, the book illustrates how NLCs can significantly enhance instruction, increase student performance, and empower local professional learning communities. This resource examines:

  • Collaborative inquiry as a process that challenges teachers' thinking, generates new learning, and fosters trusting relationships
  • The development of formal and informal leadership roles in NLCs
  • How NLCs support systematic data analysis and accountability

Demonstrating how NLCs—small or large, local or statewide—can promote critical reforms while strengthening the work of individual professional learning communities, this invaluable resource reveals how educators can join forces across school and district boundaries to generate deep, meaningful, and sustainable change.


 
Preface
 
Acknowledgments
 
About the Authors
 
1. Why Networks? Why Now?
It’s About Learning

 
Networks: A Powerful Organizational Tool

 
Time for Reflection

 
 
2. How Networked Learning Communities Work
What Are Networked Learning Communities?

 
How NLCs Work: The Theory of Action

 
Using NLCs to Focus Local PLCs

 
The Anatomy of a NLC: A Refined Theory of Action

 
Time for Reflection

 
 
3. Establishing a Clear and Defensible Focus
Focus Foremost

 
Evidence-Based Focus

 
From a School Focus to a Network Focus

 
Time for Reflection

 
 
4. Collaborative Inquiry to Challenge Thinking and Practice
The Importance of Relationships

 
From Inquiry to an Inquiry Habit of Mind

 
From Relationships to Deep Collaboration

 
Getting to Powerful Collaborative Inquiry

 
Time for Reflection

 
 
5. Leadership in Networked Professional Learning Communities
Roles of Formal Leaders

 
Roles of Informal Leaders

 
Time for Reflection

 
 
6. From Student Learning to Teacher Learning
Towards Focused Collaborative Inquiry

 
Collaborative Inquiry for Teacher Leaders

 
Within-School Focused Professional Learning: Collaborative Inquiry for Teachers

 
Time for Reflection

 
 
7. Using the Network to Support Professional Learning for Leaders
Collaborative Inquiry and Focused Learning for Leaders

 
Using Critical Friends to Promote Inquiry and Focus Efforts

 
From Collaborative Inquiry to Instructional Leadership Actions

 
Time for Reflection

 
 
8. Sustaining Networked Learning Communities
Sustaining Collective Understanding

 
Sustaining Professional Learning

 
Sustaining and Broadening Leadership

 
Sustaining Powerful Networked Learning Communities

 
Time for Reflection

 
 
References
 
Index

"Taking your school from great to greater—to get there, this compelling book gives you tools to use with staff for reflecting on and refining your professional practices. It provides you and your team with effective options for taking learners to the next level of improvement."

Lynn A. Kaszynski, Principal
Harrison Street Elementary School, Sunbury, OH

Used the following text:
Davis, J. A. (1985). The logic of causal order. Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage Publications.

Dr Tirupalavanam Ganesh
School for Engineering of Matter, Transport and Energy, Arizona State University - Tempe
September 26, 2011
Key features
  • Details a process for cultivating the conditions for knowledge creation and sharing in relation to an identified needs-based focus
  • Identifies a set of key enablers at both the school and network levels that have been found to be influential in enhancing classroom practice and improving student learning and achievement
  • Illustrates how these key enablers can be intentionally developed at both the school and network levels, and how both units—school and network—can be strengthened through their relationship to one another
  • Develops a running narrative of a single school's place and interactions within a networked learning community to illustrate the inner-workings of NLC development

Select a Purchasing Option


Rent or Buy eBook
ISBN: 9781452272726

Paperback
ISBN: 9781412966016
$33.95

Hardcover
ISBN: 9781412966009
$75.95

This title is also available on SAGE Knowledge, the ultimate social sciences online library. If your library doesn’t have access, ask your librarian to start a trial.