Steel Sharpens Steel

On July 7, 2009, in Lessons, Personal Stories, by Jovan

steel sharpens steel
As steel sharpens steel, so one man sharpens another

I’ve been teaching middle grades mathematics for four years and one of the greatest and longest lasting lessons I’ve learned is to rely on the collective knowledge of others to make me a better teacher. Arguing, disagreeing, and bitterly coming to a consensus (or not) with my colleagues has resulted in the creation of some of the most engaging, innovative, and hands on lessons of my career.

I began my teaching career, like many of us, in isolation. I planned alone, assessed alone, and the only people to ever see the results of my work were my students and administrators. As long as I got passing scores on my annual evaluations and my students passed the requisite standardized tests I thought everything was fine. I worked like this for the entire first year of my career. However, during my second year I began working with another teacher who shared my pedagogical style. Even so, our collaboration simply amounted to informal conversations in the hall away about what the other was doing to ensure that we kept the same pace while moving through the content. We each did well separately, as did our students, but we could have all performed at a much higher level.

Collaborative planning was a new idea during my first years of teaching and it took the efforts of a young, new Principal to break my colleagues and me out of our comfort zones. She forced us to plan our lessons, assessments, and performance tasks collaboratively. What we initially perceived as an encroachment on the autonomy to use our planning time as we saw fit turned into raucous mid-day meetings where arguing over content, delivery, student practice, homework, and assessment tools resulted in better lessons than any of us could have created in isolation. We were better together than we ever were separately.

We saw gains in student achievement and interest almost immediately. We lightened our individual work load by working together. We became our own professional development. We began sharing articles, blog posts, and other tangible resources in the building. As our individual knowledge base grew, so too, did the knowledge of the group. Many of us have left that school and moved on to other opportunities in education. However, all of us from those original forced collaborative planning sessions still stay in touch; we still share what we know; we’re still helping to make one another better.

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4 Responses to “Steel Sharpens Steel”

  1. Marcy Webb says:

    Mad props to you. The sad thing is, many teachers never learn to collaborate effectively, despite the fact that professionals in other career areas do it. Which is one of the aspects I really enjoy and appreciate about my place of employ: Students are taught how to collaborate, and do so without much effort.

  2. Jovan says:

    Teachers are so secretive! I do not understand that.

  3. Niomi Henry says:

    It is interesting that I came across this blog post today. We are going to collaborative planning for the first time since I’ve been teaching at my school. I see the potential to do the things you described but I am afraid my colleagues will view this as another directive with yet another hoop to jump through. What was it like for you guys when you started collaborating and how did you get pass the initial reactions? Was there one teacher who helped guide the group towards true collaboration or did it happen naturally?

  4. Jovan says:

    It wasn’t easy to plan collaboratively at first. The “old heads” were not as willing to plan and share their tips, tricks, and instructional practices but I found that those individuals who did choose to collaborate all benefited. At times I found myself taking the lead during these planning sessions until others were comfortable doing so.

    The process grew organically and now I’m doing it all over again at my new school.

    Good luck with that!

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