At the end of each school year, I like to ask questions to create a “pause and reflect” moment as my children and I eat around the dinner table together. This year, my two oldest children finished their junior and sophomore years in college, and my son finished his sophomore year in high school. The questions ask (1) what they did during the school year that they were most proud of, (2) some areas that they are still working on, and (3) one specific action they need to fix before they head back to school next year. Listening to my adult children this year was amazing, as I witnessed how well they are in tune with plausible growth and stretch areas for the upcoming school year.
This same thought process applies to mathematics collaborative teams and has become a tradition for the teachers I support. In a professional learning community culture, there is a “cycle of inquiry and action research” embedded in a collaborative culture (DuFour, R. et al, 2016). However, in the rush of the end-of-the teaching-season events, like cleaning up the rooms for summer painting projects, grading finals, getting ready for summer school, or end-of-the-year celebrations, collaborative teams too often bypass this learning exercise. There is a need to make time for “pause and reflect” moments, to engage in action research around the high-leverage team actions and the successes or challenges that continue to persist as a collaborative team.
A reflection activity I have used to facilitate reflection conversation is called Rose, Bud, and Thorn. (To create your own copy, click HERE)
Below are the questions teams consider as they are engaging in the conversation. The individual team members complete the reflection on their own (3–5 minutes), and then they take turns sharing their responses as a team.
Areas of Reflection | Questions to Consider |
Rose
(Team strengths) |
|
Bud
(Team areas of growth) |
|
Thorn
(Team areas where we still need to grow) |
|
I hope you take time as a team to celebrate your team strengths, just as my children celebrated what they have accomplished during this past school year. What is your team’s rose, something you and your team are proud to share that you have accomplished? What is the one area in which you and your team grew? And what is one area in which you still need to grow? Inspiration for continuing our efforts and engaging in the right work is derived from knowing that the work we did this year made an impact in the lives of our students.
References:
DuFour, R., DuFour, R., Eaker, R., Many, T., & Mattos, M. (2006, 2010, 2016). Learning by Doing: A Handbook for Professional Learning Communities at Work. Bloomington, IN: Solution Tree.
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Really like these questions! Wish I read this in June! As I save this exercise, what suggestions do you have for a reflective piece that helps set new goals to kick off this school year?