Professional Inquiry: research engaged schools
Why is professional inquiry so important?
Inquiry is central to professional learning communities. It is also at the heart of the IB approach to pedagogy and is becoming a key aspect in the IB evaluation self-study from 2020 onwards. To professionally inquire is to be curious, to ask questions, to examine, to consult and investigate ideas. It is also to carry out research where your classrooms are your laboratories of learning.
How do we lead a community of lifelong independent learners committed to inquiry?
This page provides an introdution to what a research-engaged school looks like - a school that puts professional inquiry centre-stage.
Having an Inquiry Mindset
"The knowledge we need to solve problems (in schools) often doesn't reside close at hand; it has to be found through active inquiry and analysis." (Elmore.R.,Building a new structure for school leadership, Washington 2000)
In The Adaptive School: A sourcebook for developing collaborative groups, Garmston.R.J., & Wellman B.M suggest three helpful questions as the source of all professional inquiry:
- Who are we? Two related questions are 'About what do we care?' and 'How much do we dare?'
- Why are we doing this? which draws attention and choice to the habits and practices we have become accustomed to. Are these practices continuing to have the desired outcomes? Are they effective? Is there better practice elsewhere? How do we know?
- Why are we doing this this way? This third question focuses on the 'how' we do things. Who is benefiting from the way we are doing things?
Activity: Our professional inquiry
- As a school leadership team try answering these three questions:
Who are we?
Why are we doing this?
Why are we doing this this way?
- What are the key professional inquiry questions you are currently asking? To what extent are these central to your school action plan?
Activity: Inquiry Questions Bank
- Generate good thought-provoking and discussion generating inquiry questions on the following IB topics. This is a good way for staff to frame the things they wish to know and explore.
International Mindedness
Learner Profile
CAS
Service Learning
Inquiry-based learning
Concept-based teaching and instruction
Global engagement
Collaborative Learning
Differentiation
Formative assessment
Communication
Mother tongue
Academic honesty
Culture and identity
Risk taker - Use the Genius Hour protocol to allow colleagues to research and report back on their inquiry question.
Teachers and leaders require time and opportunities to adopt enquiry as a regular practice. This approach involves constantly reflecting on and evaluating the best strategies to meet learners' needs in specific contexts.
“Enquiry as a way of being – can be understood as a habit or muscle that needs to be developed and exercised on a day-to-day basis, in every interaction, all of the time.
It needs to be worked on, strengthened and demands:
- vigilance, really taking notice and being alert to what is going on
- privileging questioning and thinking
- authentically listening to learners
- always seeking to understand things better
- having rationales for action, and always being prepared to develop them
- taking the time to draw on external/alternate viewpoints and ideas to challenge your own thinking and ways of working
- a willingness to see afresh what is really going on for all learners as a result of your practice
- being prepared and proactive in taking contingent action.”
Working with staff to support them to develop and maintain enquiry as a way of being can be a paradigm shift, and while it is of value, it is not a quick fix or an easy thing to do.
(Milton E and Morgan A (2023) Enquiry as a way of being: A practical framework to support leaders in both embracing the complexity of and creating the conditions for meaningful professional learning. Professional Development in Education 49(6): 1072–1086.)
Christopher Bartlett, the MYP coordinator at Mercedes College, Adelaide, Australia,produces a fornightly MYP newsletter which encourages colleagues to engage in research and professional inquiry. I am very grateful for his permission to publish an example.
The Education Endowment Foundation’s Guidance reports offer practical, evidence-based advice to schools on a wide range of topics. They include clear recommendations, and are accompanied by tools, resources, and training to support their implementation. Reports on:
- Leadership
- Literacy
- Assessment and feedback
- Learning behaviours
- Life skills
They can be found HERE.
Resources
The Centre for Educational Research and Innovation (CERI) provides and promotes international comparative research, innovation and key indicators, explores forward-looking and innovative approaches to education and learning, and facilitates bridges between educational research, innovation and policy development.
- Empowering teachers!...Through practitioner research, Graham Handscomb, Education Today Vol 63:3: a clear introduction to the distinctive nature of a research-engaged school, written by the pioneer of the concept.
- Creating a research culture - lessons from other schools is a short article summarizing research carried out in the UK. It contains useful hints on how to develop and sustain a research culture. Click here to access the article.
- Leading a Research-engaged school is a useful handbook to the subject.
- Teaching as a research-engaged profession: problems and possibilities makes the case for teachers being action researchers but also plots the pitfalls as well as possibilities. Click here to access this report by McAleavy, T, Education Development Trust, 2016.
- Teacher professional learning and development is a research report that looks at the link between professional and organizational learning in schools an the improvement of student learning Click here to access the report by Timperley.H., Educational Practices Series-18, international Academy of Education & International Bureau of Education, 2008. The report is published and used as a thought piece when we discuss Professional Development.
Helen Timperley, Linda Kaser and Judy Halbert, A framework for transforming learning in schools: Innovation and the spiral of inquiry, CSE, 2014.
- The Principal's Role in Supporting Learning Communities, Hord.S.M., & Hirsch S.A., Educational Leadership (2009), 66:5, is a useful short article.
- The Principal as Professional Learning Community Leader by Ontario Principals' Council (2009) is designed to provide principals with hands-on, practical support as they build professional learning communities (PLCs) in their schools in order to improve student achievement. With an emphasis on creating a collaborative culture for action, this book offers step-by-step plans, along with practical strategies, to use with staff to create the conditions within which PLCs thrive. The book leads principals through the process of building a PLC by defining the key attributes of PLCs; explaining the principal’s role in leading the process; and then showing how to create a steering team, introduce the concept to staff, develop teacher learning teams, and create mission, vision and goal statements as the foundation of PLCs.
All Things PLC is a website which you can create a free account and find many tools for running collaborative inquiry staff groups.