Leadership magazine Jan/Feb 2016 V45 No 3 | Page 21

First, good ILTs include the principal and a core group of other stakeholders committed to improving instruction and student learning. Among those stakeholders should be a teacher leader from each grade, grade span or department. Teams also benefit from having resource and specialist teachers involved. Although high-performing staff members who model the school’s culture are ideal members, an ILT is most effective when it includes people with a range of perspectives and backgrounds. Having diverse viewpoints represented in the planning of schoolwide strategies will foster smoother implementation when programs roll out to the whole staff. Strong ILTs also agree upon their mission and ways of working and document those agreements. All members of an ILT need to be clear about the team’s purpose, goals, method and frequency of communication, decision-making protocols, and means of holding each other accountable. To provide appropriate support and leadership for the school staff, an ILT needs pro- tected time to meet regularly. Although the principal may be a leading voice on the team, all members of the ILT should play a role in planning and facilitating ILT meetings. However, the school’s key reform strategies should be standing items on the agenda to ensure that the ILT gives sustained attention to those strategies. That attention needs to be focused like a laser on instructional matters, such as trends observed in classroom walk-throughs, the design of professional development offerings, and patterns in academic performance data. Ideally, schools already have strong grade-level or departmental teams, which means that ILTs concentrate on schoolwide issues. If those grade-level or departmental teams do not exist, the ILT will want to make it a priority to establish them. Finally, members of an effective Instructional Leadership Team recognize that their decisions have consequences for others in the school and understand that they need to be strong in implementing their decisions, but also supportive of fellow staff members. Fostering professional growth As ILT members contribute their ideas, perspectives and energy to improving their school, they grow as professionals. For example, an instructional coach who spends most of his day providing individualized guidance to teachers or leading gradelevel professional development will, as part of an ILT, need to do deeper analyses of data and apply his expertise in new ways to solve schoolwide issues. As the coach builds his skills, he becomes more able to help the school sharpen its focus and tighten alignment across grades. Similarly, teachers grow professionally because ILT activities require members to think beyond a single classroom and work from a systems perspective. This broader vision rounds out the planning and facilitation skills that ILT members may have gained from being a departmental chair or leader of a grade-level team. Taking part in an ILT also helps a teacher become a leader who is invested in the success of the school without leaving the class- January | February 2016 21