This process will help districts create frequent opportunities for staff to build supportive professional relationships and a sense of shared purpose, decision-making and efficacy. This includes establishing staff norms or shared agreements, providing dedicated time for collaborating and building community, and using data on staff perceptions to improve work climate. Use the Rubric to assess your current level of implementation.
Begin by collecting and reviewing data about the level of trust and connection between the SEL department and support team and the schools and individuals they serve. This data can provide insight …More
Begin by collecting and reviewing data about the level of trust and connection between the SEL department and support team and the schools and individuals they serve. This data can provide insight into implementation challenges and potential inequities in how schools are served, and can also help to identify the team’s most successful engagement practices. Consider using a range of data sources to access diverse perspectives. To gather and assess this data, you may wish to:
You may also want to collect and review data about the level of trust, connection, and collective efficacy within central office and within individual school communities. Since a strong staff culture is an important prerequisite for any school improvement initiative, this information can help a district team determine which schools are ready to learn and implement a new SEL practice right away, and which schools would benefit from support to build adult community first.
This data may come from school climate surveys, which often include measures of staff relationships, or other staff surveys. Here are a few examples:
Beyond direct surveys, these other data sources can be indicators of the strength of the adult community within a school:
When reviewing these data sources, it is important to probe for root causes of any potential disconnection and nonparticipation. Look for patterns (consider race, age, grade band, hire date, social networks, or other relevant factors) that can help the team take a step back from their ideas about the individual people who make up the adult community, and instead think more deeply about the structures and patterns of interaction that are leading to disconnection. Teams should seek to learn more, particularly from those who seem disconnected, through low-threat means such as anonymous surveys, informal one-on-one conversation with a trusted leadership team member, and exit interviews with those who choose to transfer.
A district team’s cohesion is visible at trainings, events, and meetings and can serve as a model for schools that are working on their own community development.
As a starting point, it’s h…More
A district team’s cohesion is visible at trainings, events, and meetings and can serve as a model for schools that are working on their own community development.
As a starting point, it’s helpful to bring central office staff together to develop shared agreements that help set the context for how staff will interact to foster a supportive work environment. If you work in a smaller district, this may involve bringing a representative from each department together as a group. In larger districts, each department may wish to develop its own shared agreements, or you may wish to begin with the SEL team or a subset of departments that work closely on SEL-related work. As a group, you’ll want to consider setting shared agreements that address:
Once shared staff agreements are developed, you’ll want to reflect and review these throughout your work, including during routine staff meetings. Here are some examples of shared agreements and processes for creating them:
Building staff trust, community, and collective efficacy is not a simple matter of having more social events or staff appreciation days. A group of adults can enjoy each other and feel appreciated …More
Building staff trust, community, and collective efficacy is not a simple matter of having more social events or staff appreciation days. A group of adults can enjoy each other and feel appreciated without doing the hard collaborative work of learning something new, changing their practices, sharing and accepting professional feedback, making important decisions, and following through on commitments. While a staff retreat or community-building workshop can help, a trusting, collaborative community is built through the accumulated day-to-day interactions, shared reflection and decision-making, and group successes that continually validate trust and collective efficacy (Bryk & Schneider, 2003).
Beyond developing and committing to shared agreements, district teams can set up a variety of opportunities and structures to enable the interactions that develop trust, community, and collective efficacy. For example:
As you develop a district plan for SEL rollout across schools (See Focus Area 1, Key Activity: …More
As you develop a district plan for SEL rollout across schools (See Focus Area 1, Key Activity: Shared Vision and Plan), it’s important to include adult community-building as a component of the work. You can support school staff communities in engaging in processes similar to the district process, including developing shared agreements for interaction, establishing regular structures for connection and open communication, creating opportunities for leadership, and addressing conflicts restoratively.
CASEL’s Guide to Schoolwide SEL provides additional resources for staff collaboration and community building (including tools for school staff to create shared agreements, form professional learning communities and mentoring relationships, integrate SEL practices into meetings, mindfully model SEL practices in their interactions, and engage in collaborative problem-solving.)
In addition to including staff trust and community as a component of a schoolwide SEL rollout plan and sharing resources, a trusted district staff member (such as a district SEL coach) can provide personalized support for targeted schools in a number of ways:
Once new practices have been put in place to strengthen trust, community, and collective efficacy, determine when and how you will check in on progress. District SEL staff should plan to monitor progress for their own district teams and coach schools to do the same. For more on continuous improvement, see Focus Area 4: Practice Continuous Improvement.