Название: A Summing Up
Автор: Robert Eaker
Издательство: Ingram
Жанр: Учебная литература
isbn: 9781949539745
isbn:
Starting a Movement
Taking a Collaborative Journey: Life After Stevenson, 2001
Building the Team: Stone Mountain, Georgia, 2003
Creating Lasting Friendships: Hawaii Professional Learning Communities at Work Institute, 2004
Traveling Side by Side: The Brawn Behind the Brains
About the Author
Robert Eaker, EdD, is professor emeritus at Middle Tennessee State University, where he also served as dean of the College of Education and interim vice president and provost. Dr. Eaker is a former fellow with the National Center for Effective Schools Research and Development. He has written widely on the issues of effective teaching, effective schools, teachers’ use of research findings, and high expectations for student achievement. Dr. Eaker has been a frequent consultant to schools and school districts across North America. He is a regular speaker at national, regional, and state professional meetings.
To learn more about Dr. Eaker’s work, visit AllThingsPLC (www.allthingsplc.info).
To book Robert Eaker for professional development, contact [email protected].
FOREWORD
Gamble, Carouse, and Explore
By Douglas Reeves
Do not play intellectual poker with Bob Eaker. Just when you’ve been suckered into his good-ol’-boy routine, he is quoting W. Somerset Maugham, Shakespeare, and Voltaire. Maugham, from whom the title of this book is inspired, in one of his most famous short stories, relates the tale of the father who admonishes his son not to gamble, carouse, or explore the wider world. The son, of course, defies all three commands and, confounding the father, wins at the table, finds love, and learns lessons from exploration that his father could never have taught him. So, in the spirit of Maugham, I offer the following foreword to this wonderful book: gamble, carouse, and explore.
Gamble
Take a chance on Bob Eaker’s lessons. I’m not asking you to buy in, and I’m not asking you to believe. Every leadership decision, as world champion poker player Annie Duke (2018) has demonstrated, is a combination of strategy and chance. You may not yet believe in his work on Professional Learning Communities at Work® (PLCs), but take a chance. Even though the probabilities are strongly in your favor, Eaker would be the first to admit that you may run into resistance, defiance, and roadblocks. Do it anyway. As Duke (2018) would say, go all in for your students and staff. In this context, gambling is neither a vice nor an addiction but rather the result of the calculated risks that leaders take every day. In our world of education, the risk-to-reward ratio is clear. The risks are criticism and resistance; the rewards are the lives of children. It’s not a difficult calculation to make.
Carouse
Fall in love, as Rick and Becky DuFour did with each other, and as Eaker has done, with generations of students, teachers, and leaders. Just as gambling can be entirely rational, falling in love can be entirely irrational, but it is precisely this irrational passion—loving students and colleagues even when they are not very lovable—that Eaker calls us to embrace.
In chapter 8, Eaker addresses the imperative of passionate persistence. All the research and strategies in the world are not a replacement for passionate persistence. Therefore, like Maugham’s hero, defy rationality and passionately pursue those values that drive you, and fall in love with the futures that your students and colleagues have, even when your students and colleagues don’t necessarily believe in those futures.
Explore
We hear the voice of authority in Maugham’s story: stay close, don’t stray, don’t take risks, don’t explore. But Eaker takes us beyond our comfort zones. Along with Rick and Becky DuFour, Eaker asks us to consider how we can improve, from our first years in the profession to the twilight of our careers. My best days as a researcher are when I hear teachers in their thirty-ninth year of work seek, in the context of their PLC, to make their fortieth year even better. I watch new teachers take risks in trying professional practices that were omitted in their undergraduate training. I watch twenty-year veterans defy conventions of tradition to have dramatic impacts on student achievement. I watch leaders who are inclined toward safety and convention explore new ways to engage students, faculty, and staff. Read this book and follow their example.
So, take it from Bob Eaker and W. Somerset Maugham: gamble, carouse, and explore. The journey in the pages ahead will be richly rewarding.
INTRODUCTION
Accidental Friendships
Titles, especially titles for books that are autobiographical in nature, can be tricky. Gore Vidal thought Palimpsest was the perfect title for his 1995 memoir. Curious to learn more about the word, I turned to the dictionary: “Something reused or altered but still bearing visible traces of its earlier form” (“Palimpsest,” n.d.). Since my professional life has taken any number of distinct—and often unexpected—twists and turns, always retaining elements of previous events, people, and experiences, palimpsest provided a strong possibility for my title.
But, alas, W. Somerset Maugham provided another possibility. In 1938, Maugham’s The Summing Up was published. At sixty-four years of age, after a career that had earned him widespread critical acclaim as a playwright, novelist, and writer of short stories, Maugham (1938) undertook to sum up his reflections about writing, his career, influences on his work, and to some degree, the journey of his life.
After a career in education that has spanned almost half a century, I can relate to Maugham’s desire to sum up what one has learned and come to believe. And, like Maugham, I recognize that my beliefs and what I’ve learned have been shaped by events, experiences, and especially people I’ve encountered. As I approach the end of my professional journey, it seems natural that I sum up what I have come to believe and know about teaching, effective schools, and school improvement. So, A Summing Up it is!
I must admit, however, a feeling of trepidation. There is something inherently narcissistic about a book that is, even to a small degree, autobiographical. Although my overarching intent with this effort is to provide readers with information and insights regarding what I’ve learned about school improvement, instruction, and student learning throughout my professional journey, I believe context matters. So, I am placing what I’ve learned within the context of my life during various stages of my professional journey.
And, there is always the risk associated with not providing appropriate recognition to those СКАЧАТЬ