Achievement Teams:  How a Better Approach to PLCs Can Improve Student Outcomes and Teacher Efficacy, 2022

Achievement Teams: How a Better Approach to PLCs Can Improve Student Outcomes and Teacher Efficacy, 2022

The authors offer a framework based on John Hattie’s Visible Learning research that makes teacher collaboration more efficient, rigorous, satisfying, and effective.  The Achievement Teams' four-step meeting protocol is:

Step 1—Teams focus on the evidence from a pre-assessment to provide specific feedback to students and teachers about concepts and skills that students did and did not learn.

Step 2—Teams use that evidence to establish SMART goals for both teachers and students.

Step 3—Teams summarize the collected data and make inferences around students’ mastery levels.

Step4—Teachers select high-impact strategies directly targeted to student needs.  A post-assessment reveals what did and didn’t work.  

Reviewed by Carol Campbell, PhD

Vice President for Education

Southwestern Union Conference

 

Read some additional reviews

Common Formative Assessment:  A Toolkit for Professional Learning Communities at Work, 2023
Common Formative Assessment: A Toolkit for Professional Learning Communities at Work, 2023

Authors:  Kim Bailey and Chris Jakicic

Read the Review
What If I’m Wrong and Other Key Questions for Decisive School Leadership, 2020
What If I’m Wrong and Other Key Questions for Decisive School Leadership, 2020

Author:  Simon Rodberg

Read the Review