R&L Education
Pages: 192
Trim: 6 x 9⅛
978-1-57886-053-1 • Paperback • October 2003 • $60.00 • (£46.00)
978-1-4616-5382-0 • eBook • October 2003 • $57.00 • (£44.00)
Jane Bumpers Huffman is an associate professor in the College of Education at the University of North Texas in Denton and teaches in the master's and doctoral programs. Huffman also serves as her department's program coordinator for Educational Administration and has been instrumental in receiving eight grants. Her research interests include change management, professional development, leadership, professional learning communities, and parent involvement. Huffman has also directed the annual Assistant Principals' Conference in Texas for the past six years. Huffman worked in the Norman, Oklahoma public schools for ten years as a teacher, school administrator, and staff development administrator. She also served as a Research Assistant at Southwest Educational Develpment Laboratory in Austin, Texas. Contact Janie at huffman@unt.edu or 940-565-2832.
Kristine Kiefer Hipp is an associate professor in the College of Education at Cardinal Stritch University, Milwaukee, Wisconsin. She teaches in a master's program in Educational Leadership and a doctoral program in Leadership for the Advancement of Learning and Service. Hipp consults widely, facilitating organizational change in K-12 schools/districts related to her research in leadership, professional learning communities, and collective efficacy. Hipp also taught in a Master's program in Educational Leadership at Ball State University in Muncie, Indiana. She worked for the School District of Janesville for 25 years as a special education teacher/support teacher, district level staff developer, graduate-level adjunct at the University of Wisconsin-Whitewater, research assistant at the University of Wisconsin, Madison, and consultant in effective teaching practices. Contact Kris at kahipp@stritch.edu or 414-410-4346.
Part 1 Part 1: The Challenge of Developing PLCs
Chapter 2 Overview of Professional Learning Communities
Chapter 3 Responding to the Challenge
Part 4 Part 2: From Initiation to Implementation: Dimensions of a PLC
Chapter 5 Shared and Supportive Leadership
Chapter 6 Shared Values and Vision
Chapter 7 Collective Learning and Application
Chapter 8 Shared Personal Practice
Chapter 9 Supportive Conditions
Part 10 Part 3: Assessing and Reculturing Schools
Chapter 11 Assessing Schools as PLCs
Chapter 12 The PLC Connection to School Improvement
Part 13 Part 4: Five Case Studies
Chapter 14 Case Study Overview
Chapter 15 Case Study #1: Role Expectations in Schools Moving to Site-Based Leadership
Chapter 16 Case Study #2: Nurturing the Human Side: A Crucial Component for PLCs
Chapter 17 Case Study #3: Trust as a Foundation in Building a Learning Community
Chapter 18 Case Study #4: The Role of Principal Commitment in Creating Learning Communities
Chapter 19 Case Study #5: Reculturing a School in Crisis
Part 20 Part 5: From Implementation to Institutionalization
Chapter 21 Lessons Learned
A lot has been written about Professional Learning Communities (PLCs), but no book dissects the concept with such clarity and utility as does Huffman and Hipp's Reculturing Schools. This compact book has it all: 1) a clear delineation of six powerful dimensions of a PLC; 2) a portrayal of flow from initiation to institutionalization; 3) a practical instrument for assessing PLCs; 4) five case studies that provide further clarity of PLCs in action; and 5) a summary of lessons learned. All and all, this book provides a clear and practical, evidence-based resource for working productively with one of the most powerful concepts we know of for improving schools.
— Michael Fullan, Professor Emeritus, Ontario Institute for Studies in Education/University of Toronto, Author of Leading in a Culture of Change
Huffman and Hipp's book is neither a scholarly tome nor a "quick fix" how-to-do-it manual. Instead, it presents a clear but nuanced overview of current thinking about how teachers and administrators learn and work together, along with useful tools for development. Their survey instrument should be useful for school self-assessment as well as research, and the real-life cases are presented with guides for discussion that will undoubtedly stimulate thoughtful practice. This is a must-read for those who have responsibility for fostering high performance work teams in schools.
— Karen R. Seashore, professor, educational policy and administration, University of Minnesota