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Overview

We are finding clear patterns in the ways transformational teachers make meaning of their experiences. These patterns show up in how they interpret and make sense of their students, their own role as teachers, their communities, and the challenges we all face.

The part of the TACL framework with tilted, vertical rectangles is in blue, while the rest is in grayscale. The text inside each rectangle says in black in order from left to right, "students as leaders,” “teachers as learners,” “community as power,” and “our work as systemic.”

Discover

Experience many voices bringing these lenses to life. To start, check out this compilation of student, teacher, and family perspectives.

Learn and do

When we commit to growing students as leaders, that purpose shifts our perspectives. And perspectives shift our actions.

These lens shifts are critical because they help teachers navigate the complex and dynamic challenges of teaching, help us see misalignment between our aims and our actions, and surface assumptions about our students, ourselves, our community, and our work that we might not realize we carry.

Four ways of seeing and making meaning consistently surface in transformational classrooms:

 

Students as leaders

We see our students as whole and intelligent people who are capable of shaping their own lives and the world around them 

. . . instead of as passive “vessels” to be filled with knowledge.

Teachers as learners

We see ourselves as lifelong learners who respond to challenges with curiosity, humility, and creativity

. . . instead of as the sole source of knowledge and skills that students need.

Community as power

We see communities as sources of power and wisdom and recognize that lasting change requires authentic partnership with students, families, and other educators

. . . instead of as places with difficult challenges and unaddressed needs.

Our work as systemic

We see our work as challenging the root causes of injustices that inhibit students’ potential—systemic barriers around us and limiting beliefs inside us

. . . instead of teaching students to work extra hard to adapt to injustices around them.

 

Lenses have profound implications for teacher development. Learning new knowledge can come through exposure and practice, while developing new ways of seeing and interpreting the world comes through disorienting experiences and reflection.

We have gathered tools to provoke reflections that help shift lenses.

“Lenses give not only a language but a perspective that we can bring into reflection, to coaching, to training—to all that we do. A unifying language that is more aligned with our vision.”

— Maria Azevedo, Co-founder and Head of Program at Teach For Portugal

Image
Portrait shot of Maria Azevedo, a woman with long, dark hair and dark eyes. She is smiling and wearing a sleeveless top.

“Lenses give not only a language but a perspective that we can bring into reflection, to coaching, to training–to all that we do. A unifying language that is more aligned with our vision.”

— Maria Azevedo, Co-founder and Head of Program at Teach For Portugal

Image
Portrait shot of Maria Azevedo, a woman with long, dark hair and dark eyes. She is smiling and wearing a sleeveless top.

 

“Lenses give not only a language but a perspective that we can bring into reflection, to coaching, to training–to all that we do. A unifying language that is more aligned with our vision.”

— Maria Azevedo, Co-founder and Head of Program at Teach For Portugal

Image
Portrait shot of Maria Azevedo, a woman with long, dark hair and dark eyes. She is smiling and wearing a sleeveless top that is dark blue with small, white polka dots.

Do and reflect

Explore a wide variety of reflection exercises designed to help you (or to help you help others) become more aware of your own perspectives, as well as other recommended resources about Lenses:

57 resource(s)
TACL
Comunidad como Poder, Ejercicio Reflexivo: Beneficios y Costos
Teacher Coaching Lens Community as Power

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Our Glossary

In our attempt to capture the real spirit of the classrooms we have studied, we have sometimes intentionally used words and phrases in a slightly unusual way. 

We invite you to learn more about our language choices by exploring our Glossary