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The New York City Lab School for Collaborative Studies
New York, NY
School Type: Public
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School Setting: Urban
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Level: 7-12
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School Design: Alternative
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Content Presented By:
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The Education Alliance at Brown University
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Summary
The practice: Professional development should be continuous and on-going, involving follow-up and support for further learning, including support from sources external to the school that can provide necessary resources and new perspectives.
- Small public school includes grades 6-12.
- School leadership is collaborative, involving co-directors, teachers, students, and parents.
- Professional development initiative fosters faculty collaboration as a route to improved practice.
- Collaborative problem solving clarifies school vision and helps to create a "culture of excellence."
Habits honed during professional development initiative are now integrated into on-going work of teachers.
The New York City Lab School for Collaborative Studies reached a crisis in its growth from a smaller school with a cohesive vision to a larger school whose faculty could no longer keep the vision coherent through casual contact. The school's co-directors, Sheila Breslaw and Rob Menken, used outside facilitation over a span of five years to establish new patterns of communication based on collegial collaboration. Teachers learned to critique curriculum plans and rubrics, to offer constructive feedback after observing each other's classes, and to grow from constructive criticism of their own practice. Together, they shaped a new school vision, creating a "culture of excellence" through collaboration.
While collaborative problem solving was an integral part of the Lab School's five-year professional development initiative, it is now part of the ongoing work of school staff. In 90-minute weekly team meetings, teachers lead each other toward improved teaching practices. They create plans to help struggling students succeed, and they also engage in cross-curricular planning, sharing lessons and ideas and designing interdisciplinary projects to build bridges among content areas. Teachers who were once reluctant to question each other's methods or to open their own classes up for examination are now willing and able to discuss and change their practice. The school's collaborative approach to professional growth has been essential to its success.
This site also exemplifies the following practice(s):
 
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