This week, we’re beginning a new focus: Providing Targeted Professional Development and Growth.
After building stronger listening and follow-through habits, the next step is to think about how those insights show up in the learning opportunities we design for teachers.
Why This Matters
Professional development is one of the clearest signals we send about what we value.
When PD feels disconnected from teachers’ real challenges, it can feel like something to get through.
When it’s aligned, relevant, and responsive, it becomes something teachers can actually use and grow from.
The difference is often not the amount of PD, but how closely it connects to teachers’ lived experiences.
Try This: Map One Need to One Opportunity
Think about something you’ve heard from teachers recently. A challenge, a question, or a point of friction.
Then ask yourself:
- Is there a current PD opportunity that directly connects to this?
- If yes, is that connection clear to teachers?
- If not, what might a more targeted, low-lift learning opportunity look like?
This could be as simple as:
- A short, optional session
- A peer share or walkthrough
- A resource or example connected to their context
The goal is not to redesign your entire PD system. Just to make one connection more intentional.
Optional AI Boost
If you want support brainstorming targeted PD ideas, try this prompt:
“Based on this teacher need: [insert need], suggest 3 practical, low-lift professional learning experiences that could support teachers in a school setting. Keep them realistic and relevant to everyday classroom practice.”
You can refine the ideas to fit your context and constraints.
Optional Deeper Dive
If you’d like to explore what makes professional development effective, this resource provides a helpful overview grounded in research:
🔗 Effective Teacher Professional Development (Learning Policy Institute)
Share
After trying this, reflect:
What did you notice when you tried to connect a real teacher need to a learning opportunity?
If you’re open to sharing, reply in the comments with one connection you made or one gap you’re starting to think more about.