From Surviving to Thriving: Building Strong New Teacher Induction
Programs in Our Schools
June 24, 2012
4 Tammuz 5772
© 2012 The Teacher Learning Project
If induction is the solution, what’s the problem?
© 2012 The Teacher Learning Project
The Facts
Beginning teachers are novices in the practice of teaching and newcomers to the school community
Ergo, the early years of teaching are times
of intense on-the-job learning and professional socialization.
© 2012 The Teacher Learning Project
Learning to Teach Continuum
Continuing Continuing Professional Professional DevelopmentDevelopment
PreparationPreparation InductionInduction
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Learning to teach over time
Things that can be learned before one starts teaching
Things that can only be learned when one starts teaching
Things that can best be learned after one has some teaching experience
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From entry level teaching to accomplished practice
1 - 3 years:Entry level
7 - 10 years:Mastery
10+ years:Expertise
4 - 6 years:Consolidation
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What happens to new teachers in their early years on the job not only determines whether they stay in teaching, but what kind of teacher they become.
© 2012 The Teacher Learning Project
Robinson Crusoe syndrome
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© 2012 The Teacher Learning Project
This book is a study of three young women who began a graduate program at the Jewish Theological Seminary in the hopes of finding an arena where their love of Jewish learning, especially Hebrew language, could be directed and where Jewish rituals could punctuate their professional as well as their personal lives. But they were challenged in their idealism and they failed to pass the test. Within four years of graduation, all three had left teaching in Jewish day schools. (p. 3)
© 2012 The Teacher Learning Project
A day school leader admits…
“We had a DeLeT graduate, a new teacher, a really lovely person. We made her teach science, Jewish studies, Hebrew. She got the ADD kids. We were really bad about new teacher assignments.”
Interview with an induction leader
© 2012 The Teacher Learning Project
If induction is the answer, what’s the question?
© 2012 The Teacher Learning Project
The question
How can Jewish day schools create the conditions to nurture new teachers so that they feel successful, stay in teaching, and grow into accomplished teachers?
© 2012 The Teacher Learning Project
Defining induction
a system of ongoing support, development and professional socialization during their first few years of teaching
© 2012 The Teacher Learning Project
Key structures
Information-rich hiring, appropriate assignments
Curriculum guidelines & materials
Educative mentoring
Regular times for observation & collaboration
Transparent assessment and evaluation© 2012 The Teacher Learning Project
A professional culture
At the very least, one must imagine schools in which teachers are in frequent conversation with each other about their work, have easy and necessary access to each other’s classrooms, take it for granted that they should comment on each other’s work, and have the time to develop common standards for student work.
Deborah Meier (1992), The Power of Their Ideas
© 2012 The Teacher Learning Project
Creating the conditions for new teachers to thrive makes day schools good places for all teachers to grow and learn and be more successful.
© 2012 The Teacher Learning Project