An Intervention Model| Principal Professional Learning Communities (PPLC)

<p> The high expectations of the standards movement, the many budgetary constraints, and the societal challenges of living in cities are some of the complexities principals in urban districts face when trying to serve the needs of children in their schools. This research explores an interventi...

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Main Author: Tupponce, John Thomas
Language:EN
Published: University of Pennsylvania 2019
Subjects:
Online Access:http://pqdtopen.proquest.com/#viewpdf?dispub=10978796
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spelling ndltd-PROQUEST-oai-pqdtoai.proquest.com-109787962019-01-10T16:13:36Z An Intervention Model| Principal Professional Learning Communities (PPLC) Tupponce, John Thomas Educational leadership|Educational administration <p> The high expectations of the standards movement, the many budgetary constraints, and the societal challenges of living in cities are some of the complexities principals in urban districts face when trying to serve the needs of children in their schools. This research explores an intervention model of principal professional learning communities (PPLCs) that bridges the gap between the districts&rsquo; goals and priorities and the ways schools are addressing them. Nine principals using the PPLC model experienced collaboration, support, and collective accountability with their peers. Furthermore, as a result of their collaboration and support, principals examined their own practices in specific areas of observation and feedback, how they used their leadership teams to support next steps, and how they created opportunities for professional development. Qualitative data collection took place through surveys, observations, and interviews. </p><p> The study findings indicated that a common learning experience like the PPLC is a valuable tool for principal learning and development. Principals reported that the development of relational trust was an essential reason why principals valued collaboration, and why they supported each other in the PPLC. Principals also became internally motivated to coach, support, and mentor their peers, and they developed a collective accountability in which they aligned themselves with the goals of the district. In addition, the findings indicated that conducting learning walks together and collaborating about instructional practices in the PPLC helped principals to reflect on their own instructional practices in their own schools. Principals could then use the strategies they learned from observation and feedback, working with their leadership teams and developing professional development to structure the next steps for better implementation of pedagogy.</p><p> University of Pennsylvania 2019-01-05 00:00:00.0 thesis http://pqdtopen.proquest.com/#viewpdf?dispub=10978796 EN
collection NDLTD
language EN
sources NDLTD
topic Educational leadership|Educational administration
spellingShingle Educational leadership|Educational administration
Tupponce, John Thomas
An Intervention Model| Principal Professional Learning Communities (PPLC)
description <p> The high expectations of the standards movement, the many budgetary constraints, and the societal challenges of living in cities are some of the complexities principals in urban districts face when trying to serve the needs of children in their schools. This research explores an intervention model of principal professional learning communities (PPLCs) that bridges the gap between the districts&rsquo; goals and priorities and the ways schools are addressing them. Nine principals using the PPLC model experienced collaboration, support, and collective accountability with their peers. Furthermore, as a result of their collaboration and support, principals examined their own practices in specific areas of observation and feedback, how they used their leadership teams to support next steps, and how they created opportunities for professional development. Qualitative data collection took place through surveys, observations, and interviews. </p><p> The study findings indicated that a common learning experience like the PPLC is a valuable tool for principal learning and development. Principals reported that the development of relational trust was an essential reason why principals valued collaboration, and why they supported each other in the PPLC. Principals also became internally motivated to coach, support, and mentor their peers, and they developed a collective accountability in which they aligned themselves with the goals of the district. In addition, the findings indicated that conducting learning walks together and collaborating about instructional practices in the PPLC helped principals to reflect on their own instructional practices in their own schools. Principals could then use the strategies they learned from observation and feedback, working with their leadership teams and developing professional development to structure the next steps for better implementation of pedagogy.</p><p>
author Tupponce, John Thomas
author_facet Tupponce, John Thomas
author_sort Tupponce, John Thomas
title An Intervention Model| Principal Professional Learning Communities (PPLC)
title_short An Intervention Model| Principal Professional Learning Communities (PPLC)
title_full An Intervention Model| Principal Professional Learning Communities (PPLC)
title_fullStr An Intervention Model| Principal Professional Learning Communities (PPLC)
title_full_unstemmed An Intervention Model| Principal Professional Learning Communities (PPLC)
title_sort intervention model| principal professional learning communities (pplc)
publisher University of Pennsylvania
publishDate 2019
url http://pqdtopen.proquest.com/#viewpdf?dispub=10978796
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