Zoe Enser was a classroom teacher for 20 years, during which time she was also a head of English and a senior leader with a responsibility for staff development and school improvement. Mark Enser has been teaching geography for fourteen years and is currently a head of department at Heathfield Community College. He contributes articles to TES and to the Guardian Teacher Network and often speaks at education conferences. Mark also writes a blog called Teaching It Real and tweets @EnserMark. The rest of the time he spends reading, drinking coffee and running in the hills.
From the moment I read the dedication to this brilliant book I was
hooked. It was as if Zoe and Mark could see into my memories of the
endless hours of pointless CPD I'd endured over the last 15 years.
For years, teachers have been crying out for more teacher-centred
development - and this book definitely answers that call. Packed
full of research and musings on teacher development from the great
and good in education, it is a thorough and robust exploration of
the "why" of CPD and the reasons why schools sometimes don't get it
right. As the authors state, great teacher development should be
part of a bigger picture and a shared vision that all teachers are
working towards and in which each teacher is an essential component
to complete the picture. If more teachers felt this sense of
importance and autonomy, then surely we could help to solve the
retention crisis? The CPD Curriculum is not just an essential book
for those in charge of staff development in schools, it is a
must-read for all teachers who feel anchorless and adrift on the
vast ocean of CPD. It will be your stay.Haili Hughes
In The CPD Curriculum, Zoe and Mark Enser model a road to a CPD
utopia and carefully detail how to put this into place in our
schools. We are shown that the typical CPD course, with its deluge
of information thrown at teachers, rarely has meaningful impact.
Instead, in this book we are introduced to a new model of CPD which
integrates experience and theory, and always has its end goal in
sight. We are scaffolded with strategies to ensure we nurture
teachers who are active rather than passive participants in the
process. The CPD Curriculum explores a holistic approach to our
aims to improve, where motivation of our teachers is key.The cycle
utilised to ensure vision is translated into reality is key -
involving theory, exploration, experience and reflection. We are
guided to make the move from instruction to induction, trusting and
valuing the role of teachers in their development.The CPD
Curriculum takes you to the very heart of just how fantastic CPD
has the potential to be a game changer for your school, when
developed within the right culture. As described by the authors,
this book is a call to revolution - and every brave school leader
should be answering the call. I certainly will be. Essential
readingChris Dyson
When Viviane Robinson was asked by the New Zealand government to
conduct a review of school leadership research into what school
leaders did that made the biggest difference to pupil outcomes, her
team identified five key factors. The most important of these, at
least twice as impactful as any of the other factors, was
effectively about supporting teachers to become better teachers.
Yet this research also suggested that school leaders spend as
little as 16% of their time on this important work. In this timely
book, Zoe and Mark Enser not only make a compelling case for why
CPD matters and what great CPD looks like, they crucially identify
the difference between learning and development. Only the latter
will make a long-term and sustained impact on teacher professional
practice and pupil outcomes. Superbly evidenced and elegantly
structured, this book is a manifesto for what great CPD can be and
yet so often isn't. Backed up by powerful case studies from an
impressive array of contributors, it brings alive what the very
best of our schools are already doing. As they candidly acknowledge
themselves, reading this book won't make any difference in itself,
but if every head and senior leader had access to the excellent
thinking and analysis in this text, we would at least have a
fighting chance of making CPD something teachers and support staff
up and down the land will both look forward to and value. Our
profession deserves nothing less.Andy Buck
The CPD Curriculum grabbed my attention right from the dedication:
"to every teacher who has ever sat in a hall after school and
thought 'there must be a better way'". Sadly, I suspect there are
more of us who have felt like this than those who have not.
Research tells us that, despite very well-intentioned efforts,
teachers' CPD is still yet to bear the fruits of our labour in
terms of the positive impact on student outcomes, the financial
cost of resources and, most importantly, the take-up of people's
time. There has to be a better way - and Zoe and Mark Enser show us
how in The CPD Curriculum, taking the time to consider what
teachers need to know and how best to teach it, all with the same
level of care and thought we would apply to our students'
curriculum design and implementation. With a powerful blend of
synthesised evidence-informed ideas and pragmatic insights from
their own experiences and those offered in the case studies, this
book acts as a highly effective tool to ensure that more CPD in
schools leaves teachers energised and with a greater sense of
efficacy, satisfaction and agency.Kathryn Morgan
If we are serious about creating the conditions for growth, as the
subtitle of this book proposes, then we need to get our heads
around some knotty problems. One example: why does so much CPD
treat all teachers as novices and so concentrates on training them
in certain techniques? What about the paradox of talking about
encouraging a culture of celebration and learning from errors in
classrooms and yet discouraging this approach for staff? The CPD
Curriculum provides insights into these tensions and, owing to
their trawl through the literature and some impressive case
studies, Zoe and Mark provide a template for more intentional,
thoughtful practice. Highly recommended.Mary Myatt
So much of the CPD that is offered to teachers, or even imposed
upon them, fails to take account of two simple but vital elements:
teacher autonomy and career-stage relevance. In The CPD Curriculum,
Zoe and Mark not only highlight these issues (among many others)
but they ask the pertinent questions needed to help the reader
re-evaluate and redesign the CPD offering in their own school.
Excellent CPD can take many forms and this is reflected by the
authors' selection of highly useful case studies, each of which
approach the CPD conundrum from different directions. The long-term
and personalised CPD approach advocated is a refreshing change from
some of the top-down efforts of Whitehall, Ofsted and some MATs, in
that Zoe and Mark recognise that effective development of staff
cannot be achieved solely through one-off sessions or from telling
staff what they need to work on. Instead, this book provides the
inspiration needed for taking action and a highly practical
blueprint for becoming better teachers over time. After all, CPD
isn't a thing you complete on Thursday afternoon, but rather is a
lifelong journey of growth towards expertise. To this end, The CPD
Curriculum is the perfect travel companion for the way ahead.Andy
McHugh
The CPD Curriculum provides a really good overview of current
issues and related research around teachers' professional learning
and will certainly spur leaders on, encouraging them to focus on
this all-important aspect of school life. The wide range of case
studies is the book's great strength, in which experienced
practitioners such as Chris Moyse, Kat Howard, Jack Tavassoly-Marsh
and Becka Lynch share insightful perspectives on professional
learning.Tom Sherrington
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