{"id":276,"date":"2025-10-13T17:50:06","date_gmt":"2025-10-13T17:50:06","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.mssqlguide.com\/?p=276"},"modified":"2026-01-22T09:53:45","modified_gmt":"2026-01-22T09:53:45","slug":"looking-for-a-new-way-to-approach-professional-learning-try-this-opinion","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"http:\/\/www.mssqlguide.com\/index.php\/2025\/10\/13\/looking-for-a-new-way-to-approach-professional-learning-try-this-opinion\/","title":{"rendered":"Looking for a New Way to Approach Professional Learning? Try This (Opinion)"},"content":{"rendered":"
We\u2019ve all been in meetings where leaders are asked to collaborate, yet the room doesn\u2019t feel collaborative at all. Andy Hargreaves<\/a> once called this contrived collaboration, which occurs when collaboration is required but rarely transformative. Lately, the two of us have developed instructional leadership collectives (ILCs) at the provincial, regional, and state levels in the United States and Canada. Instructional leadership collectives are grounded in collective leader efficacy, which is the belief that leaders and teachers who develop a shared understanding, engage in joint work, and collect evidence of impact can positively affect student and adult learning. They are guided, facilitated groups of educational leaders who engage in collaborative inquiry using structured protocols.<\/p>\n ILCs are not a new name for professional learning communities or communities of practice. For the last three decades, those two approaches have shaped how we think about professional collaboration. <\/p>\n Professional learning communities give us data-driven collaboration, but in practice, they can become compliance-driven. Communities of practice, meanwhile, offer authentic identity-based learning but tend to be more organic and free-flowing. ILCs, in contrast, are a new way of organizing professional learning for leaders, teacher leaders, and such educators as school psychologists in leadership positions. They blend structure with flexibility and create improvement within and across systems.<\/p>\n Three elements set ILCs apart from other forms of professional learning.<\/p>\n They are guided and intentional. <\/b>ILCs aren\u2019t free-floating conversations or compliance-driven meetings. They are facilitated learning collectives that move through a six-phase cycle of collaborative inquiry: gathering and identifying themes, forming collectives, designing inquiry, implementing and collecting evidence, reviewing progress, and sharing knowledge across groups. Tools like the Collaborative Inquiry Placemat<\/a> help leaders frame problems of practice, set priorities, and build theories of action supported by both leading and lagging indicators.<\/p>\n They include educators from different roles and different districts. <\/b>In many systems, teacher leaders, coaches, mid-level administrators, and superintendents operate in isolation. ILCs bring them together. A principal in a rural district can learn alongside a central-office leader from a larger system. Instructional coaches can contribute insights that inform district strategy. This design ensures leaders at all levels see themselves as part of a coherent improvement effort.<\/p>\n They are focused on evidence and impact. <\/b>Too often, professional learning is disconnected from outcomes. ILCs are purpose-driven: Themes emerge from real data, such as equity and belonging, Tier 1 instruction, grading practices, or persistent absenteeism. Leaders gather and analyze evidence throughout the cycle, using data not as a compliance tool but as a flashlight to illuminate what\u2019s working, what isn\u2019t, and where adjustments are needed.<\/p>\n How do you start them?<\/b>What Makes Instructional Leadership Collectives Different?<\/h2>\n
In our work, we use collaborative inquiry, which focuses on four stages: 1) developing a problem of practice; 2) creating a theory of action; 3) collecting four types of evidence, as laid out by Victoria Bernhardt<\/a> (demographic, perceptions, student learning, and school processes) around the problem they are solving; and then 4) reflecting on what went well and what didn\u2019t. <\/p>\n