Experienceded Curriculum Leaders Series

The Michigan ASCD Experienced Curriculum Leaders Series is a quarterly professional development series for seasoned curriculum leaders. The series will provide a forum for curriculum leaders to gather together and dialogue about current issues in the curriculum field, as well as provide each participant with the most current and relevant practices and tools available.
- Registration Form
- Online Registration
- Location: MELG Building, Lansing
- Time: All sessions will run from 8:30am until 3:45pm, with a light breakfast and lunch included.
Purpose
The overall purpose of this yearlong seminar for experienced central office instructional leaders is to strengthen their confidence, efficacy and competence for the important work they do in their districts.
Description
Informed by the standards provided by Learning Forward for quality professional learning, this seminar focuses on the implementation of knowledge and strategies. Seminar participants will form a cohort as they participate in this highly interactive learning experience. The learning activities are based on theory and research translated into practice and will include ongoing assignments and goal setting.
Specific Outcomes
The planning for the four sessions will be shaped by the following big ideas, ways of working at the central office level, and protocols for the daily work with stakeholders.
There are several big ideas that will shape this learning experience:
- To examine Kouze & Posner’s Five Practices of Exemplary Leaders, and learn to apply them in your leadership practice
- To understand Elmore’s concept of “reciprocal accountability” which balances accountability with support across a system.
- To understand the impact of generational diversity on the work in schools now and in the near future as our demographics change and impact the way we work.
- To foster the ability of central office leaders to manage the “tension of leadership” in the change process: enabling and encouraging faculty members for their positive efforts while simultaneously recognizing the urgency and need for change.
- To learn protocols that will equip participants to engage groups, hold productive meetings, and practice skillful decision-making
There are specific ways of doing this work from the level of central office:
- To design and pose intentional questions that hold others accountable, uncover actual progress toward goals, and promote focused reflection and action.
- To use specific strategies for planning and facilitating productive meetings, work sessions and professional learning.
- To provide and seek feedback in 1-1 and group settings which continuously improves performance, our own and others’.
- To understand how decisions are made and ways to maximize participation and ownership in collaborative planning and decision-making processes.
Protocols will be continuously modeled during the seminar that participants may transfer to their own leadership practice:
- To gather a variety of protocols which stimulate healthy group development.
- To use protocols for promoting the continuous improvement of instruction.
- To consider protocols for discussion around professional reading.
- To use protocols for collaborative problem solving and data collection.
Shared Beliefs & Values
- As central office instructional leaders, we can only nurture others from a position of strength.
- When we model strategies in a transparent manner, there is a higher level of implementation by the participants when they return to their districts.
- Getting all voices heard in the room increases ownership and accountability, ensures a sense of fairness and equity, and informs leadership practice.
- Central office leaders must be purposeful about building the capacity of leaders within their school districts, modeling collaboration and shared leadership in their work so that it may be sustained over time.
Session 1, Five Practices of Exemplary Leaders: Trust and Communication
MELG Building, Lansing, November 22, 2013
This session will focus on strengthening skills in communicating with others, seeking and using feedback, and cultivating collaborative relationships. Recent research has shown that relational trust in schools is imperative for meaningful change to take place.
Session 2, Skillful Feedback to Foster High Performance
MELG Building, Lansing, December 17, 2013
One of the major responsibilities for central office instructional leaders is to ensure effectiveness and productivity across systems and schools. This session will focus on ways leaders can encourage, support, and hold accountable members of the organization as they learn and implement promising practices in their classrooms and schools.
Session 3, Building Your Capacity for Difficult Conversations
MELG Building, Lansing, Tuesday, January 15, 2014
Session 4, Change Leadership: The Challenge of Adaptive Change
MELG Building, Lansing, February 11, 2014
Time is a finite resource that must be managed well by central office instructional leaders. This session, the final learning experience in the seminar, will focus on planning and decision-making processes which will maximize the time and resources available to continuously improve learning for all in a district.
· Share craft knowledge relating to successful practices in their districts around maximizing their resources.

