Thoughts on Collaboration
for 21st Century School Professionals…
Moving Forward or Lost in Space?
Marilyn Friend, Ph.D.
Professor and Chair
Department of Specialized Education Services
University of North Carolina Greensboro
Recently on the news, a NASA official
was being interviewed about the progress being made on the construction
of the International Space Station, including the opportunities
it will present and the problems being encountered. One of the most
remarkable comments he made went something like this: “It’s
a lot more complicated than we realized working with 16 other nations
on a project of this magnitude. It’s going to take longer,
cost more, and require a lot of patience on everybody’s part,
but eventually we will be successful.” What the official did
not say is equally enlightening: He did not say that the effort
wasn’t worth it, or that NASA wanted to quit because of the
complexities; he did not say that the United States scientists,
with their technological and financial edge, would just take over
the project and do it the way they wanted; and he did not say that
it wasn’t fair that the level of commitment and contribution
of resources on the various countries’ part varied widely.
The official’s remarks and
omissions could easily have been referring to efforts by school
professionals to work with one another in educating their students.
Certainly over the past decade as emphasis on collaboration in schools
has increased, we have learned that creating a collaborative culture
is a lot more complicated that it would, at a glance, seem. Many
administrators, teachers, specialists, and others have discovered
that it takes a long time to foster professional collaboration,
and it requires ongoing attention to sustain it. A cost is invariably
involved: There is the financial cost of offering professional development
on topics related to adults in schools working intensely with one
another. There is the systemic cost of arranging opportunities for
school professionals to interact as they plan, carry out, and evaluate
teaching/learning activities for students. There is the professional
cost of re-defining professional roles and relationships with fuzzier
boundaries, less control, and more uncertainty. And certainly patience
is a key. In attempting to move a group of professionals who typically
have been prepared to function as loyal but essentially independent
agents of instruction, remediation, or therapy to not just shared
visions and goals, but truly shared responsibility, implementation,
and accountability, the effort sometimes seems too great, the barriers
insurmountable.
Given the challenges and frustrations
of collaboration and the set of pressures operating on school professionals,
it might seem preferable to retreat to the more comfortable, apparently
successful approaches of times past. After all, the United States
was the first country to place a man on the moon—and
did it alone. But if NASA officials are not backing away from the
difficulties of the International Space Station project, the largest
international scientific project ever undertaken, perhaps there
is a lesson to be learned for those of us in the business of education.
Maybe the United States is persisting with the project because the
potential scientific and economic gains are not just worth the effort,
but may enormously and positively affect its citizens. Perhaps the
American scientists are not bullying others or arguing about who
owns the project because there is room at the table for all the
players, because each one has a contribution to make, because there
is too much to know and too much to learn for a single country to
horde the project, and because the diversity of the participants
not only enriches the project but increases the quality of the outcomes.
Fairness is not even an issue. In the context of a global society,
this collaboration is imperative.
For schools, too, collaboration
is no longer a choice; it is a necessity. Working together is not
just rhetoric—it is essential in order to address the increasingly
diverse and sometimes daunting needs of students, students with
IEPs, students for whom English is not their first language, students
whose lives outside school may be chaotic and unsafe, students who
need structure and stability in a rigorous learning environment.
If we work together, both when it is easy and when it is difficult,
we can meet these needs. No single educator can possibly hope to
know all that is necessary to effectively reach today’s students,
and only by pooling expertise—sharing it without losing its
focus, respecting and drawing upon the differences in perspectives
to create new options, can those professionals succeed at their
task. Each individual makes a contribution, and the fairness of
working with diverse learners, of dividing the tremendous labor
educating children has become, and of being accountable for the
outcomes of instruction should not be an issue.
Collaboration is the reality of the twenty-first
century in business, in industry, in health care, in science, in
social services, and, emphatically, in education. The goal of providing
students a high quality education is as clear as the goal of creating
a space station. What does not seem as apparent is the level of
commitment to working together through both celebration and tribulations.
To the extent that educators are dedicated to fostering collaboration
as the norm in public schools, they will have a guide for an unknown
but increasingly complex future. To the extent that they dismiss
collaboration as an unneeded luxury, they will be lost in space.
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