Round & Round
By Lory Hough“We spring off of medical rounds but don’t take all of it. There are some aspects of the culture that we don’t try to export,” he says, mentioning the tendency in medicine toward hierarchy and the senior-doctor-knows-best mantra. “We feel like we’re all learning from the instructional rounds model, regardless of rank. We’ve done a few debriefings and at one, a teacher from Ohio told us that she couldn’t believe she was sitting with a team of teachers, superintendents, union leaders, and principals, all as peers.”
Teachers, he says, often spend their careers being told what to do, including “mysterious compliances” that filter down. “With rounds, it’s pretty energizing for teachers to have an opportunity that says we’re jointly constructing what this should look like,” he says. “That’s a dramatically different way to work for people within a district.”
Fiarman says this group-learning mentality — which centers on the idea that everyone involved is working on their practice — helps especially with superintendents and principals who, having achieved a certain level in their career, are reluctant to admit they don’t have all of the answers. “This is a network of people learning from one another and being honest with what they don’t know,” she says. “They come to understand this as a strength. That’s very countercultural to leaders, maybe especially with education leaders. A lot of school leaders are afraid to look like they don’t have all the answers. We want the network to be proud to be learning and not have all of the answers.”
She says this “network model” has been particularly helpful in Cambridge. “School leaders started looking at each other as resources to learn and share ideas,” she says. “I was there as a teacher for isolated days of professional development that never went anywhere. Now the teachers and principals are part of a network where they can discuss what they saw and learned.”
Fiarman says she would love to one day see this model played out across the country with all educators speaking the same language and following shared practices.
“It would be great if we had a coherent, national model of what effective teaching is. Even if all the schools of education were teaching the same practices, that would be a miraculous feat,” she says. “But we would still need to get folks to talk about the real practices they see in front of them. It’s a practice, not a theory. You need to see it in action. It’s also not a formula. Teaching, like medicine, is a complex craft that requires a deep conceptual understanding of what you’re doing. You can’t follow a formula if you teach something and the students aren’t following you. As much as anything gets documented in textbooks, you still need to have discussions about how you make decisions.”
