Thematic Group Sessions & Harvest

Leading Professional Learning: Revisiting and Reimagining Moral Purpose


Three-Day Protocol

Overview

Days 1 & 2 — Building Toward Shared Themes

Participants remain in the same home groups of 6–8 people across three 90-minute dialogue sessions: one on Day 1 and two on Day 2. Each session follows a structured protocol in which a rotating Host brings a question or challenge from their professional context, and the rest of the group engages as consultants. A rotating Scribe documents key themes, insights, and emerging questions throughout each session.

The university in Chile

At the end of each day, groups engage in a 15-minute synthesis process, narrowing their collective insights into 3–5 priority questions or themes. These are recorded on Post-its and submitted to a shared Google Doc. By the close of Day 2, facilitators and/or the steering committee/advisory group review the submitted questions and identify overarching themes to structure Day 3.

Key Roles

All roles rotate each dialogue session so that different group members have the opportunity to engage with and across different responsibilities.

Host

  • Brings a reflection, question, or challenge from their school site or professional context
  • Provides context, focus, and goals during the first 5 minutes of each dialogue
  • Poses reflective question(s)
  • Closes each dialogue with a 4-minute spoken reflection on what was learned

Facilitator

These are members from the Steering Committee & Advisory Board

  • Keeps time and ensures adherence to the 40-minute Dialogue Protocol each session
  • Guides transitions between protocol steps
  • Supports equal participation; participates as a Consultant
  • Coordinates with the group Scribe/Synthesizer at the end of each session
  • Steers dialogue toward the symposium’s overarching theme of revisiting and reimagining moral purpose in relation to leadership and professional learning

Consultants

All other participants

  • Actively listen during the Host’s context-sharing (Step 1)
  • Ask clarifying questions
  • Engage in focused discussion, helping the Host toward their goals
  • Contribute 1–2 emerging themes or questions at the end of each session

Scribe / Synthesizer

  • Takes rich notes throughout each dialogue session; participates as a Consultant during the dialogue itself
  • After each dialogue, identifies 1–2 themes to carry forward
  • At the end of Day 1 and Day 2, consolidates group notes into 3–5 overarching questions/themes
  • Writes each question on a Post-it to be entered into the shared Google Doc/Form
  • At the end of Day 2, participates in the Theme Harvest to inform dialogue topics for Day 3

Day 3 — Regrouping Around Chosen Themes

On Day 3, participants break from their home groups and self-select into new theme-based groups of approximately 8–10 people. These groups are organized around the themes that emerged from Days 1 and 2. Participants engage in deeper dialogue around their chosen theme, prepare a final synthesis, and share key reflections, questions, and outcomes with the full group during the Closing Session.

Symposium Logistics

Activities & Workflow

Dialogue & Reflection:

Each participant takes a turn hosting a dialogue. After each dialogue session, the group takes a moment to reflect on major themes, takeaways, or implications. For example, if two people host the dialogue on Day 1, different members of the same group will host on Day 2.

Documentation:

All insights, learning, and research questions are documented in a Google Doc.

Thematic Mapping:

Groups use a “sticky note” method — writing one theme per note — to allow them to move ideas around and organize their thoughts.

Content Focus:

The groups are “honing it down” by navigating school visit experiences, negotiating tensions, and identifying “threads” that warrant further exploration within the context of the theme: Revisiting and Reimagining Moral Purpose.

Group Structure & Timing

Session Breakdown

There are three small-group sessions totaling 4.5 hours:

Day 1:

One session from 2:30 PM to 4:00 PM (90 minutes)

Day 2:

Two sessions — one from 10:30 AM to 12:00 PM and another from 1:00 PM to 2:30 PM (90 minutes each)

Dialogue Pacing

Within each session, dialogues are structured into two roughly 45-minute blocks.

45-Minute Dialogue Protocol

Each dialogue session follows the LFPL Symposium’s modified School Reform Initiative protocol (lfplsymposium.org/dialogue-protocol/). The five steps below total 25 minutes; the remaining time allows for organic discussion, transitions, and group reflection. (Note: Confirm intended use of remaining time.)

StepPhaseTimeDescription
1Context, Focus & Goals10 minHost provides an overview of context, focus, and goals. Draws on research, evidence, theory, or professional experience. Consultants listen actively.
2Clarifying Questions5 minConsultants ask clarifying questions to gain sufficient understanding for meaningful feedback.
3Reflective Questions5 minHost shares additional context and poses reflective question(s). Pause for consultants to examine materials. Consultants consider: What have we heard? What questions arise?
4Discussion15 minConsultants review and discuss what was shared. The group defines a plan, reframes issues, and offers alternative strategies. All gain new insights.
5Host Reflection10 minHost verbally reviews key learnings from the session, notes anything that resonated, and explores new ideas that arose.

Required Materials

  • Index card-sized Post-it notes (two colors: one for themes, one for questions)
  • Chart paper — one sheet per thematic group, labeled with theme name
  • Markers (thick, dark)
  • Shared Google Form (auto-populates spreadsheet) for theme/question submission
  • Shared Google Doc — one per group for Scribe notes
  • Role cards (Host, Facilitator, Consultant, Scribe) — one set per group
  • Timer visible to each group (phone, tablet, or shared screen)

Staffing Recommendations

  • 1 Lead Facilitator per group (13–16 facilitators total); roles can be rotated within groups
  • 1 Scribe/Synthesizer per group
  • 2–3 Lead Facilitators for whole-group and Harvest sessions (e.g., Janet, Phil)
  • 1–2 Floating Coordinators to support logistics between spaces

Group Structure and Timing

Days 1 & 2

Synthesizing Activity: Detailed Guide

After the dialogue sessions, each group’s Synthesizer leads a 15-minute consolidation process:

Review


Cluster


Draft Questions


Submit


Guided Reflection Questions (for Non-Synthesizer Participants)

While Synthesizers prepare Harvest materials, remaining participants engage in a facilitated whole-group reflection:

Noticing


Meaning-Making


Forward-Looking


Day 1 Discussion Schedule

The Goal of Day 2

By the end of Day 2, the home groups transition into a Whole Group Harvest. This dialogue aims to make sense of what emerged across all rooms re Leading Professional Learning: Revisiting and Reimagining Moral Purpose.

Finding Connections: The facilitator helps find connections between different rooms (e.g., “Theme 3” in one room might be “Theme 1” in another).

Day 2 Discussion Schedule

TimeActivityNotes
10:30 AM–12:00 PM (90 min)Small Group Session 2 (40 min × 2)Small groups (6–8 people). Host shares context & goals → Clarifying Qs → Host poses reflective question(s) → Discussion (host listens) → Host reflection.
Scribe Notes (10 min)
1:00–2:30 PM (90 min)Small Group Session 3 (40 min × 2)Each group selects a Scribe/Synthesizer team. Roles may rotate each session or be shared by two group members. The Scribe records key themes, emerging questions, and updates to the running theme list during the session. Afterward, the Scribe and Synthesizer(s) review the notes together. The Synthesizer(s) lead the group in narrowing themes into 3–5 priority questions, writing each on a Post-it, and entering them into the shared Google Form or Google Doc.
Small Group Synthesis (10 min)Note: Schedule continues per full symposium agenda.
End of Day 2 Discussion BlockAffinity mapping and regrouping for Day 3. Themes will be submitted to a Google Form, but also brought to the Whole Group Harvest on sticky notes.
3:00-4:00 PMWhole Group HarvestThroughout the small group dialogues, participants synthesize themes, questions or wonderings from the dialogues, which are used to inform new dialogue topics for the final day of the symposium.

Organizing Day 3

Following discussion with the steering committee/advisory group, key themes will be identified from the Post-its. These themes serve as the organizing principle for Day 3, when participants leave their original home groups and join new sessions based on the theme they are most motivated to pursue.

Teacher writing at an LfPL session

Day 3

Thematic Small Group Dialogues

Day 3 reorganizes participants into new groupings based on chosen themes drawn from Days 1 and 2. Groups engage in a deeper, extended small-group session, then conduct a final synthesis to prepare materials for the Day 3 Closing Session.

Day 3 Discussion Schedule

TimeActivityNotes
TimeActivityNotes
9:00-10:00 AMDay 3 Welcome & Re-groupingFull group. Facilitators announce the themes. Participants self-select into theme groups of 8–10 people. Roles are reassigned within each group, including new Hosts, Facilitators, and Scribes.
11:00 AM–2:00 PMTheme-Based DialogueGroups explore the chosen theme. The Host grounds the conversation using field context from a specific school site or work environment.
2:00–2:30 PMBreak / Networking (30 min)
2:30–4:00 PMThematic Groups Report Out & Closing SessionThe full group reconvenes. Facilitators briefly share 3–5 questions from each group. Participants begin an affinity mapping activity, organizing Post-its on chart paper by theme. Synthesizers or group representatives prepare brief reflections and outcomes for a final share-out.

Closing Session

Day 3 concludes with all participants coming together for the Closing Session from 2:30–4:00 PM. This session includes a structured share-out of themes, insights, and questions gathered across Days 1, 2, and 3, a whole-group response, and a closing. Depending on the number of thematic groups, each group will have a designated amount of time to present key reflections and outcomes. The session may also include affinity mapping, whole-group synthesis, closing reflections, and a call to action.

A group of participants at the 2024 Leadership for Professional Learning Symposium smiling and chatting in a lecture hall.
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