|

The Hope team expanded its membership by bringing in more staff, parents
and community members to the first summer professional development institute.
Prior to this, the Hope team implemented the goals-setting activity in
the school and collaboratively developed school goals emphasizing literacy,
a nurturing environment for students, and parent involvement in school
efforts.
At the institute, Hope’s team used their school goals as a framework
within which to review a fictional school. AED facilitators set up a
simulation of a review in which participants—organized in teams
of 8 to 10—reviewed student work and “visited” classrooms
(observed videotapes) for evidence that the fictional school under
review was addressing its teaching and learning goals.
The teams worked under the guidance of a senior reviewer, discussed and
weighed evidence, resolved differences of opinion, and developed a collective
perspective on how well the school was fulfilling its goals.
|
|

The teams then wrote a report to mirror a school back to itself. They
also posed questions for reflection to the school, which urged it to consider
how it could address its goals by building on the resources that already
existed within the school. At all times, AED facilitators urged review
teams to adopt a constructive tone so that the school would find the report
useful, without being prescriptive. A good report, AED senior reviewers
advised, lets a school know that the team has “gotten” the
school; if the team has not done so, the report will not be useful.
|
|