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Six Ways Instructional Leaders Can Support Curriculum Implementation

By: Claire Cunliffe on February 7th, 2023

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Six Ways Instructional Leaders Can Support Curriculum Implementation

Teachers  |  Education Elements  |  Organizational Leadership & Change Management  |  Teacher Retention

As we start the calendar year, many of us have the desire to set ambitious goals to change how we work to make it more fulfilling and sustainable. As an Instructional Leader, I remember sitting at my desk before the start of each semester, turning my wheels about how to make each day longer so I could prioritize the competing needs of my dozens of teachers and maybe have time for lunch. I supported five new teachers, all in different content areas with different curricula (or none) which added to this stress. I began to shift my mindset to discover that these natural breaks in the year created an opportunity for a mini-reset to reimagine and prioritize our work. Here are six tips for leaders looking to adopt a new curriculum:

1. Reground in the instructional vision

So often, we can lose sight of our overall purpose when we’re in the midst of our work. Before you build out your goals, remind yourself of where your team is headed to make sure you are building towards the same goal. If you did not have the opportunity to set a vision at the beginning of the year, I invite you to check out these resources on how to create an instructional vision. When I remind myself of our instructional vision, it allowed me the freedom to make hard decisions about how to spend my time to align with this vision and goals. 

2. Define your role within the instructional implementation

Whether you’re an Assistant Principal, an Instructional Coach, a Director of Curriculum, or hold a different instructional role, it’s critical to understand your unique position in supporting curriculum implementation. Do you develop the strategy for implementation? Are you focused on growing teacher capacity to plan or adopt curriculum? Do you plan and lead professional development at your site? By determining what is in your focus of control for the remainder of the school year to support curriculum implementation, you can focus and prioritize your efforts. While supporting the instructional vision through the lens of professional learning is connected to internalization and practice, the scale, audience, and aims of these efforts can be different so it is helpful to unpack them separately. 

how to implement curriculum effectively

3. Consider Different Professional Learning Structures

If your work emphasizes professional learning, consider different structures that work with your unique constraints. The Aspen Institute offers real-world models that combine learning, implementation, and reflection in different cadences based on goals and staffing capacity. Your goals might include building out a new learning model to pilot with a specific department or grade level or growing your capacity to understand best practices in adult facilitation. As you design or refine these new support structures, consider what learning and development do you need as a leader. When considering my cohort, I realized I needed to differentiate learning experiences based on curricular supports, rather than tenure, in order to reach our instructional vision. 

 

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4. Internalization and Practice: Assess Your Current Expertise

If your work focuses on supporting teacher internalization and practice, begin with an assessment of your current expertise. Are you adept at navigating the curriculum and able to support teachers with this? What are the negotiables and non-negotiables for teachers in terms of curriculum use? Are teachers clear on these expectations? Have teachers attempted to implement the materials in the past but given up after finding the new routines difficult? Choose a goal that is aligned with your current reality. If teachers need more support navigating and implementing the curriculum, consider providing individualized feedback to teachers on internalization through lesson plan submission. If teachers are struggling with trying new learning protocols, create a space for teachers to practice new routines with colleagues or leaders. This will enable them to receive feedback before using the protocol with students and build their self-confidence. As a Coach, this was my favorite part of the work, but also where I wanted to spend the most time. I discovered that I was able to target the personalized support I offered teachers by grounding in the evidence I gathered from lesson plan review and beginning of the week walkthroughs.  

5. Define your metrics

Another important piece of a mid-year reset is to revisit your metrics. How will you measure and understand the impact of the curriculum on teachers and students? This might include obvious measures like student test scores or teacher evaluations. It might also include walkthroughs to determine if teachers are on pace or using provided resources or engaging in PLCs around student work analysis. Consider both program-wide and teacher-specific metrics to build buy-in with staff, and measure the impact of curriculum implementation program-wide. Defining metrics can be a vulnerable process. As an Instructional Leader, my teachers’ data was a reflection of my support in professional learning and internalization in practice. By ensuring that my goals were personalized to my team and were challenging and meaningful, it created buy-in with my teachers and supported us in achieving our vision. 

6. Celebrate Growth and Success

As we ask teachers to engage in the vulnerable work of receiving feedback, refining their practices, and implementing new high-quality instructional materials (HQIM), we must regularly celebrate their growth and success. Watching the teachers I worked with implement a high-quality lesson that impacted students gave me immense joy. Yet, so often during a debrief of these lessons, teachers came in worn down from the day, unable to recognize the impact and growth they had on their students. I began asking at the beginning of every coaching conversation, “What is something great that happened today and what teacher action made it happen?” This simple act of celebration and reflection allowed my teachers to recognize their growth and see the momentum in their work. James Clear notes in Atomic Habits, “The purpose of setting goals is to win the game. The purpose of building systems is to continue playing the game.” What systems can you create to recognize the work of your teachers and help them to continue playing the game?

 

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