 |
|
Home > Resources
> School Design > Teacher Collaboration & Learning
Making Great Teachers into Great Advisors: Advisory Training at Parker Charter Essential School
Type: Horace Feature
Author(s): Jill Davidson
Source: Horace. Vol.19, #1. Fall 2002.
|
|
Many Coalition schools have incorporated advisories into their school
structure to helping students Wnd personal connection and opportunities
for growth in school. Schools that Wnd advisories essential to their success
have learned that they need to devote thought, time, resources, and training
to put advisories at the center of school life. Several years ago, to
help each other bolster the skills they needed to make the most of their
thrice-weekly advisories, staff at Parker Charter Essential School decided
to put advisor training at the heart of its professional development efforts.
Parker's advisory program encompasses four goals: academic advising
(students develop personal learning plans, meet with advisors to monitor
their progress, and discuss ongoing assessments of their work), community
service (each advisory group designs and implements a community service
project), community conversations (citizenship in the Parker community),
and recreation (students have fun and learn about group dynamics). Advisory
groups are age-specific, staying together while students complete the
work of the school's two-year divisions and then, as students move
on to the next division, regrouping. Advisories are crucial to the school's
mission to know all students well and help them make the most of their
skills and opportunities, but as principal Teri Schrader says. "Several
years ago, we concluded that terrific teachers don't always make
terrific advisors."
Schrader and other Parker staffers decided to help themselves improve
their skills as advisors. "We named a faculty collaborative inquiry
question: what does it mean to be an eVective advisor at Parker? We hired
Debbie Osofsky, a former Parker teacher, as our advisory coordinator and
she met with a task force of ten teachers. The task force asked, 'What
do we know? What do we need to explore advisory from teacher's perspective?'
That group came up with what we knew and wanted to institutionalize, what
we wanted keep alive. During the summer, the whole faculty participated
in six advisory panels. We relied on the advisory coordinator to figure
out what we needed next, and we devoted one staff meeting per month to
advisory issues."Following Parker's intense focus on helping
excellent teachers become excellent advisors, the school incorporated
elements of the advisor training into its ongoing professional development
work. Schrader says, "Now Debbie comes in once a week-she moves
around the school, checks in with advisors, helps those who are having
trouble locating community service or getting their group to come together.
Our new teachers spend twelve hours of their summer planning in advisory
training working on material developed during our summer training."
Schrader feels confident that the time, personnel resources and effort
devoted on strengthening advisories have been spent wisely. "Advisory
is central to our mission. It puts the kids at center of their education
and helps them see their academics as an integrated experience. It pushes
them to make sense of the world."
This resource last updated: December 17, 2002
Database Information:
|
Source: Horace. Vol.19, #1. Fall 2002.
Publication Year: 2002
Publisher: CES National
School Level: All
Issue: 19.1
STRAND: School Design: teacher collaboration & learning
Teacher Collaboration and Learning: Peer Coaching
|
|
|