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2013/10/30

Teacher-Leaders in Ireland: Lessons on Adult Culture


Recently two of our Fellowship alumnae and our Executive Director from the Greater New Orleans region visited Ireland, touring schools and meeting with members of the N. Ireland DOE to learn about their system and the avenues for teacher-leadership. The trip was a reciprocal visit after several Irish and British teacher-leaders visited New Orleans last year as part of an exchange program facilitated by the British Counsel.

Alumna Meghan Mekita wrote some of her key observations about adult leadership in the schools she visited. Later this week, she will have a follow-up post on student leadership.


by Meghan Mekita, Leading Educators Fellow in New Orleans, Cohort 2012


It has been one week since we returned from Belfast-just enough time to recover from jet lag and allow all that we learned to marinate a bit.

Leading Educators teacher-leaders visiting a school in Ireland.  
My greatest challenge in looking for best practices in Northern Ireland was reconciling the differences we in New Orleans have in terms of culture, race, and socioeconomic status. A school with 98% of students receiving free or reduced lunch was unheard of amongst the educators we spoke with. Belfast has had struggles aside from poverty, however.

Since “the troubles” ended about ten years ago, Northern Ireland is experiencing a heightened level of political correctness. People are kind or at least cordial to one another, and discrimination is no longer institutionalized as it was, but no one seems to be talking about their differences either. The solution to the loyalist/nationalist or Protestant/Catholic divide was to separate children based on their religion. As a result, all public schools in Northern Ireland have a religious background. They are either Catholic, Protestant, or from a relatively new category called “integrated”. Students can still choose which school they wish to attend, until they reach age 11, when most students take a test to try to gain acceptance to a selective high school.

Most towns have one selective and one non-selective school.  We were definitely surprised to see prayer happen in almost every school we visited, but we also found many similarities between our system and the Irish system, and many practices to borrow.

Though we are working ourselves to the bone in New Orleans to establish schools that develop new and veteran teachers as much as possible, we are disadvantaged by the newness of our establishments. My most significant take-away was something I learned from Ian Collen at Ballyclare High School. Mr. Collen manages a staff development program that has the benefit of being 20 years in the making. His work is to direct new staff members along a pathway of mentorship, certification, career advancement, and intellectual discovery. All first year teachers spend three years in an adjustment period where they are mentored and monitored. After the three years are up, teachers are required to participate in content-based professional development through outside programs. Mr. Collen searches for teacher exchange programs, grants for teachers to travel abroad, and graduate degree programs that he can share with the staff.

My reflection is that in New Orleans, we need to develop plans within each charter network or school system to promote long-term teacher growth and longevity in the profession. Creating a map graphic of this plan and sharing it with new teachers would send the message that we value teaching as a profession and that our goal is to see teachers move through the system to positions of leadership.

2013/10/22

School Visits Inspired Me to Improve


by Jeff Fouquet, Leading Educators Fellow in Kansas City, Cohort 2012

As a classroom teacher and aspiring administrator, I love borrowing ideas from great teachers and effective schools. During my two-year teacher-leader fellowship, Leading Educators has offered me countless opportunities to evaluate and improve my educational impact, but one of the most eye-opening experiences in all of my Fellowship has been the School Visits Trip (to Chicago) last winter.

Visiting schools in communities much more diverse and disadvantaged than my own helped me see that everywhere, regardless of how they are portrayed, children are children, and they will respond positively to the efforts and support of tireless, caring adults. Witnessing schools that have instituted strong rituals of “community” or “celebration” helped me think about what my own building and district were doing to associate learning with pride and a shared sense of success. Similarly, having my knock on each classroom door greeted by a young student who stepped into the hallway, shook my hand, told me what class it was and the topic of the lesson before asking if I had any questions was pivotal in my rethinking of who owns the classroom and whose space it is. More than any other investigation of effective educational cultures, the School Visits Trip proved to me that in the best schools, even the small decisions reflect a deeply held conviction that every student can experience remarkable academic growth. 

As the next School Visits Trip approaches, I am excited for all the great learning and growth the new cohort of Leading Educators will experience—so excited, in fact, that I am going with them, to New Orleans this year, to see if I can learn even more from those teachers and  schools. Although there are no perfect models, each exposure to new ideas challenges teachers and administrators to revise their own measures of success – and that is the attitude that any enterprise seeking continuous improvement requires. 

2013/10/16

Fellowship Application Opening Today!

We are excited to announce that the application for Fellowship Cohort 2014 will open today! The Fellowship is available to teacher-leaders in New Orleans and Baton Rouge, Kansas City, and Washington, D.C.

Interested educators apply this afternoon by clicking on on this link: www.leadingeducators.org/apply 

The application process involves four steps:

Step 1: Online Application
Candidates begin their application for the Leading Educators Fellowship by completing an online application. 

Step 2: Principal Endorsement
An applicant's principal must support the application by submitting a Principal Endorsement online. The Principal Endorsement allows the school leader to describe the leadership role the candidate will play during the following school year and outlines program expectations.

Step 3: Classroom Observation
Based on the Online Application and Principal Endorsement, successful candidates are invited to participate in a 20 to 30 minute classroom observation. This snapshot provides insight into the candidate's instructional skill.

Step 4: Interview and Assessment Days
Candidates that move to the next step in the application process participate in an Interview and Assessment Day. This challenging experience stretches candidates’ leadership skills by engaging them in interviews, role plays, and simulations.

Deadlines and Important Dates 

Kansas City:
Priority I Deadline: Dec. 2
Priority II Deadline: Feb. 3
Final Deadline: March 24
Interviews: April 12 - 26
Final Notification Date: May 2

New Orleans & Baton Rouge:
Priority Deadline: Feb. 10
Final Deadline: March 31
Interviews: April 12 - 23
Final Notification Date: May 2

Washington D.C.:
Dates to be announced soon


Successful candidates will join a cohort of approximately 40 other teacher-leaders from their region, and will work closely with second-year Fellows as well. For more information, please click here to find more information on how to apply, the Fellowship curriculum, and who should apply.



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