This past July on the Storrs campus, 11 current teacher leaders representing 10 school districts from across the state spent five days engaged in a variety of learning activities during the inaugural Teacher Leadership Academy. (Photo Credit: Stefanie Dion Jones/Neag School)
Robert Colbert, associate professor in the Neag School, passed away on Aug. 12, 2016.
Colbert arrived as a faculty member at the Neag School in 2001, coming to UConn from University of Massachusetts — Amherst. He received tenure and appointment to associate professor in 2008.
For the past three years, Colbert has served as program coordinator of the counseling program within the Neag School’s Department of Educational Psychology. His research expertise and interests focused on addressing disparities in public schools based on race and included the study of microaggressions, discipline sanctions, school counselors’ role in facilitating positive student racial identity development, and college and career readiness in urban schools.
“UConn students, fellow faculty, and schoolchildren around the region have benefited from Dr. Robert Colbert’s longtime commitment to alleviating disparities in public schools and to enhancing the role that school counselors can play as change agents in schools,” says Del Siegle, department head and professor of educational psychology at the Neag School.
Colbert earned his bachelor of science degree in elementary education and master of arts degree in school counseling from the University of Kansas; and a Ph.D. in counseling psychology from the University of Wisconsin.
A Celebration of Life will be held in honor of Robert Colbert on Saturday, Oct. 1, 2016, 11 a.m. – 1:30 p.m. at the Amherst College Alumni House, 75 Churchill Street, Amherst, MA 01002. If you plan to attend, please RSVP to erik.hines@uconn.edu by 5 p.m. on Monday, Sept. 19, 2016. If you would like to donate food for the celebration, please indicate this in your RSVP message.
Monetary donations may be made to the Neag School of Education Dean’s Fund in Robert Colbert’s honor. Contributions will go toward supporting students of color in the school counseling program. If making a donation, please specify that you are giving in honor of Robert Colbert in the “Additional Instructions about my Donations” section.
Eleven current teacher leaders representing 10 school districts from across the state spent five days this past July engaged in a variety of learning activities during the inaugural Teacher Leadership Academy. (Photo Credit: Stefanie Dion Jones/Neag School)
This past July on the Storrs campus, 11 current teacher leaders representing 10 school districts from across the state spent five days engaged in a variety of learning activities during the inaugural Teacher Leadership Academy. The academy, hosted by the Neag School of Education from July 25-29, 2016, and co-directed by assistant professors Rachael Gabriel, Jennie Weiner, and Sarah Woulfin, was designed to enhance participants’ ability to support high-quality instruction, create conditions for reform, and lead change in Connecticut schools.
Participants were encouraged during the five-day program to share professional experiences and problems of practice, as well as collaborate to learn more about multiple aspects of teacher leadership and about how to engage as informal and formal leaders who can activate their voices for change. They also learned about the processes and difficulties of change and developed concrete skills to plan and communicate effectively with colleagues to help achieve growth and positive outcomes.
“I learned so much in such a short amount of time and really do feel empowered to make a difference as a teacher in my school,” says one participant. “I was encouraged and feel more confident in being able to make change in my school. I also know how to tackle a challenge in a positive way, and can speak to others in a problem-solving orientation.”
Partcipants also engaged in logic modeling in order to leave the academy with concrete plans on how they would exert their leadership and then measure their success. Each teacher leader created action plans for the upcoming school year on topics ranging from improving student discourse in math instruction and increasing coherence between middle and high school teachers to instituting a peer-coaching system to shift professional culture.
Among the academy’s featured guest presenters were Lissa Young, assistant professor of leadership and management at the U.S. Military Academy – West Point, who led a case study on climbing Mount Everest that raised several key concepts related to leadership, teamwork, and communication. Other guest speakers included a journalist from the CT Mirror and a troupe from nonprofit ImprovBoston, whose presentations focused on enhancing listening skills and confidence and bringing more fun into the workplace.
The academy also featured several faculty presenters from the Neag School, including John Settlage, who discussed data use in teams; Todd Campbell, discussing current conceptions of teacher leadership; Morgaen Donaldson, who talked about policy, and Marijke Kehrhahn, who focused on workplace learning and the conditions necessary for deeper forms of implementation.
Participants in the academy noted that these experiences, in concert, produced learning that they would take back to their sites and use in practice. One participant called the week an “amazing experience” and says “it’s hard to put into words all that I am taking away with me. This week was equal to a year of “professional development and then some.”
The program’s co-directors — Gabriel, Weiner, and Woulfin — plan to read and comment on the participants’ action plans and follow up with each of them in the coming months to celebrate progress, provide resources, and support further growth and development to help foster ongoing learning for this cohort of teacher leaders.
Editor’s Note: This story — written by Loretta Waldman — originally appeared on UConn Today, the University of Connecticut’s news website.
Professor Richard Schwab, a longtime commissioner for the National Commission on Teaching & America’s Future, helped shape the recently released report “What Matters Now.”
Last week, the National Commission on Teaching & America’s Future (NCTAF) released a report aimed at helping educators reorganize the nation’s education system in ways that support teaching, drive learning, and provide all students with the foundation needed to build a successful future. Building on a report the Commission issued 20 years ago, it addresses current challenges facing the nation’s educators and makes recommendations focused on improving teaching and learning in the U.S.
Professor Richard Schwab, former dean of the Neag School and now Raymond Neag Endowed Professor of Educational Leadership, helped shape the new report, “What Matters Now: A New Compact for Teaching and Learning.” He describes it as a call to collective action ultimately intended to ensure that all students have access to great teaching.
Q. What are the current challenges this report is intended to address?
A. Today, between a quarter and half of new teachers in the U.S. leave the field of teaching within their first four or five years on the job. This turnover incurs costs of more than $2 billion each year. At the same time, a mere five percent of high school students say they intend to pursue careers as educators, according to recent findings, and this is happening at a time when the achievement gap between high- and low-income students has been expanding over the past 25 years.
We have spent billions, passing endless pieces of reform legislation at the state and national level, yet still we have not succeeded in supporting or enhancing the teaching profession to the degree we must if we are to achieve the lofty goals all of us have for our nation’s schools.
Q. To what do you attribute this turnover?
A. My fellow commissioner, Jal Mehta, an associate professor at Harvard’s Graduate School of Education, summed it up well: For so long, we have asked teachers to do too much. The system is radically over-invested in student test scores as the only indicator of success and teacher evaluations as the primary lever of improvement. Those things are important, but it’s a matter of emphasis, and the result of this overemphasis has been a narrowing of curriculum and a lowering of teacher morale.
The bad press on education is giving teachers mixed messages and, in many cases, teachers are the victims. People don’t understand the challenges teachers face every day, and the lack of resources. And not every education program prepares teachers adequately. The report points out that most of the 66 million public school children in the U.S. are students of color. A quarter of those students live in poverty and more than half qualify for free and reduced lunch. More than four million of today’s students are not native English speakers, and more than six million have identified disabilities or special needs. Many more are undiagnosed. This diversity of students and their needs presents new opportunities and challenges for educators.
Q. The focus of your remarks was on teacher preparation, your area of expertise. The report calls for action around a new vision of teaching and learning. What part does teacher preparation play in achieving that vision?
A. I was there to talk about what it takes to do quality teacher education. I believe we’ve made great strides. At UConn, we have a five-year integrated bachelor’s and master’s degree program that provides a variety of professional experiences and puts our students in diverse settings, from Hartford and East Hartford to Mansfield. We have higher than average placement, and retention rates that are among the highest in the nation.
But here’s the rub for me: Teacher preparation has to be built in partnership with schools. If we are really going to do deeper learning and we are setting up these teachers and preparing them, we can’t then put them in schools that are not going to help them become the teachers we have worked so hard to prepare. You can mentor all you want, but if you are teaching well over 100 students in a day, and half of those kids are English language learners, how are you going to do deeper learning from 8 to 2 and still get in a 20-minute lunch? We have to somehow take a look at schools in this country. We have to look at both ends of the continuum.
Q. To help teachers stay in the profession and thrive, the report outlines a new compact that puts teachers at the heart of systemic change. Can you elaborate?
A. In this environment, we need to ensure that teachers have the time and opportunity to shift their methods from encouraging students to find the “right” answers to helping students “own” what they learn and apply it in their everyday lives. This new way of thinking about teaching and learning will drive a new system that asks much of teachers but gives them the supports they need to be successful throughout their careers. Essentially, the new system will establish a new compact between teachers, states, and districts; between teachers, students, parents; and the education system as a whole.
Q. How does this report build on the one 20 years ago?
A. The first one, “What Matters Most: Teaching for America’s Future,” changed the national discussion about what must be done to improve America’s schools so that all students experience success. The Commission drew attention to the overlooked fact that the most important variable affecting student achievement is the teacher. It made recommendations affecting every aspect of the teaching career, from recruitment and induction, to retention and recognition.
Since then, the traction created by that report has eroded. We have made great strides meeting the challenges, but then the political winds changed and the emphasis shifted. That’s why we felt the time was right, with all the talk of reform and when policy is shifting toward more engaging and relevant teaching and learning, to take a deep breath and look systemically at what we have to do.
I think our country is ready for a new conversation. If we could get 50 states to take a look, to breathe deeply for a year or two, and say let’s look comprehensively at what works and what doesn’t. To listen to all the voices and say okay, what do we know from research-based practice and what do we know teachers are doing every day.
We must move the focus from doing things to teachers that have no effect, or worse, make their jobs more difficult, to providing support that is research-based, consistent, and focused, and that fully engages teachers in designing the support they need and deserve.
Learn more here, or view the executive summary and full “What Matters Now” reports on the NCTAF website.
Two Neag School faculty members in the Department of Educational Leadership have recently received funding — totaling more than $2 million — from the U.S. Department of Education’s Institute of Education Sciences (IES), as part of the latest round of grants issued by the National Center for Education Research (NCER)’s Education Research Grants Program.
“In the past five years, the great majority of states have approved legislation mandating that public school principals be evaluated annually using formulas that incorporate students’ academic growth,” state the researchers. “However, scant research examines how school district policies are related to leadership practices that are associated with improved student outcomes.”
The project aims to study 25 school districts in Connecticut, Michigan, and North Carolina, exploring associations between school district policies related to principal evaluation, principals’ enactment of learning-centered leadership practices, and student reading and mathematics achievement. This project was the only education leadership grant funded by NCER in the 2016 competition.
The research team — which includes Dougherty’s co-principal investigators and UConn colleagues Eric J. Brunner, associate professor of economics, and Stephen L. Ross, professor of economics — will focus on examining the impact of attending a CTE high school — in which all students who enroll participate in some form or career or technical educational training — on students’ achievement, high school graduation, and college enrollment. The project involves a partnership with the Connecticut State Department of Education and will use data from the Connecticut Technical High School System. Dougherty’s is one of eight recent NCER grants being led by early-career researchers.