McCormick Institute for Early Childhood

BY Dr. Jill Bella | February 19, 2019

This document may be printed, photocopied, and disseminated freely with attribution. All content is the property of the McCormick Center for Early Childhood Leadership.

Note: This resource is part of a self-reflection series focused on professional development. Read the rest of the series here.


In the resource shared in the previous Points to Ponder, “Getting a Return on Your Investment in Professional Development: Putting Practices in Place that Yield Results,” you reflected on both administrative and pedagogical practices that support professional growth. Having practices in place is a critical step that makes it more likely that professional growth will occur and be sustained.


Another important step is setting the tone for professional growth among staff. The tone you set emphasizes the value placed on professional growth and may impact attitudes and actions.


How are staff introduced to professional growth in your organization? What do you say that demonstrates you support staff in their growth and development along a career path? Do your words express encouragement for professional growth? Or, do your words and tone tend to discourage it?


One of the ways you can set the tone for professional growth in your program is through your spoken words, another is in writing. I often find policies supporting professional growth in employee handbooks. Having a section dedicated to professional growth in the employee handbook indicates that this is an important practice and holds the program accountable for embedding professional growth within the organization. In addition, the specific written words used can make a difference in how professional growth is perceived by staff. Take a look at the following example:


Professional growth is fundamental to our success and begins during the hiring process. During hiring, you observe the program, receive information about our philosophy and mission, and learn about the responsibilities of the job you are interested in. You are encouraged to ask questions and discuss ideas. This is the first step in the professional growth process. Once hired, your orientation begins. Orientation is the second step in the professional growth process and includes spending time observing in several classrooms. Staff also spend time observing in the specific classroom or other location to which they are assigned. Orientation also includes a review of the employee handbook, viewing training videos, completing activities, and practicing job responsibilities. During this time, you are encouraged to learn current practices and procedures, reflect on ideas for improvement, ask questions, and discuss particulars of the job responsibilities. You will also participate in regularly scheduled weekly meetings with your supervisor to discuss practices, ask questions, receive feedback, and develop action steps. The weekly meetings last beyond the orientation phase into the third step in the professional growth process, job-embedded learning, which continues throughout your employment. During this phase you will continue to build your knowledge and skills through training activities, reading, and reflective practice as well as participate in bi-weekly peer learning groups. These groups are designed to encourage support and generate ideas that will help everyone in their work.


Twice a year, there are two-day center-wide staff meetings. These occur when the center is closed and they both include a full-day (6 hour) training on a topic that has been predetermined with staff input. Each staff member is required to attend at least 20 hours of professional development training each year that is approved by the statewide registry.


Professional development funds are available to each staff member in the amount of $100 per year and all staff must use their allotted funds. Additional funding may be requested. Staff complete a Professional Development Request Form (Appendix A) and submit it to their supervisor for approval. You can find information on upcoming trainings on the staff bulletin board and in the staff newsletter, in addition to seeking out opportunities on your own. When deciding on trainings to attend, work with your supervisor to select job-specific experiences that relate to your learning plan objectives. Professional development funds may be used for conference/training registration fees, mileage to and from such events, books, journals, training materials, membership fees to professional organizations, and paid time to observe other programs. During or after participating in a professional development experience, please complete the appropriate form (Appendices B-F) to extend your learning and improve your practice (e.g., Classroom Observation Form, Peer Observation Form, Professional Development Feedback Form, Learning Team Reflection Form, Request to Present on “What I Learned from My Professional Development Experience” Form).


Individual Learning Plans (Appendix G) are completed by each staff member at the beginning of the school year and reviewed in December and May. They include self-reflection on job responsibilities, strengths, growth areas, goal setting, and action steps. The goals on this form are aligned with individualized performance appraisal goals. In addition, the teaching staff for each age group work together to develop a strategic plan each year and these goals are considered when completing the Individual Learning Plans.


More information on professional growth may be found in the performance appraisal section of the employee handbook.


Points to Ponder


After reading the example from an employee handbook above, what resonated with you? What words and phrases stood out and why?


Review your own employee handbook section on professional growth with the following questions in mind:

  • What is the tone? Does the section emphasize that professional growth is a value?
  • Is it clear when professional growth begins for a staff member?
  • Are there a required set of staff development hours? Do these hours go beyond the state requirement?
  • Is staff development provided on-site or paid for off-site?
  • Is there a specific dollar amount available to each staff member for professional development experiences? Are there eligibility requirements?
  • Is supervisor approval required prior to registering for professional development training or purchasing resources or memberships?
  • Is it clear professional growth is defined as more than attending a required amount of staff development hours?
  • Are staff required to receive job-specific staff development (as opposed to requiring all staff to attend a training that may or may not apply to their role)?
  • Does the professional growth section in the employee handbook include information about where staff can learn about available professional growth opportunities?
  • Are opportunities for learning within the program mentioned (i.e., observing other classrooms, peer learning groups)?
  • Is it evident that meetings between staff and supervisor are designed as opportunities to grow professionally?
  • Is there a connection between professional growth experiences and individual goals?

 

Do you want to learn about early childhood leadership topics in person? Let us bring the learning to you. Contact us about traveling training options.


Jill Bella, Ed.D., is Director of Professional Learning for the McCormick Center for Early Childhood Leadership and Assistant Professor of Early Childhood Education at National Louis University (NLU). In these roles, she oversees professional learning, conducts research, and consults for local and state initiatives on the Early Childhood Work Environment Survey (ECWES), the Program Administration Scale (PAS), the Business Administration Scale for Family Child Care (BAS) and leadership topics in early care and education. Dr. Bella is also the co-author of several books and trainer’s guides including A Great Place to Work and Inspiring Peak Performance.

By Dr. Neal Green February 8, 2026
Tools: Gemini Gems, NotebookLM, Perplexity Spaces Overview The evidence is clear that early childhood professionals' most significant challenge is a lack of time. Artificial Intelligence (AI) tools, when used strategically, can give administrators some of the time they desperately need, allowing them to focus more on their staff and the children and families in their care. This approach aligns with the foundational goal of strengthening leadership effectiveness and program impact (Abel, Talan, & Masterson, 2023). When I scan the AI landscape of available products and platforms, it becomes overwhelming. There are so many options that it is impossible to keep up with every new development. Focusing on a limited number of AI tools backed by organizations with strong infrastructure and fiscal stability is a wise place to start your AI journey. McCormick Institute for Early Childhood’s (MIEC’s) upcoming professional development sessions will focus on three AI tools. These include Gemini Gems, NotebookLM, and Perplexity Spaces. Think of Gemini Gems as your customized AI assistant that you "train" to follow your rules and meet your goals. Gemini Gems are the right tool to tackle Internal Operations . NotebookLM is perfect for creating Family Support resources that stick. NotebookLM is a powerful AI tool that uses only the documents or other resources you add to generate specific, focused output. Perplexity Spaces is a fantastic choice to address Marketing demands. Like many AI tools, you can toggle back and forth between open web searches and focused documents that are specific to your work. Gemini Gems: The “Specialist Teammate” Gemini Gems allow you to create templates you can use repeatedly for agendas, HR policies, and more. If you have used AI in the past, you know that writing an effective prompt takes time, and they can easily get "lost" if you use AI often. Gems removes that challenge and lets you save your most effective prompts without having to rewrite them every time you use Gemini. It is up to you to decide if you want to create several smaller Gems to tackle common challenges you face or create larger Gems that encompass large swaths of your work. For our purposes, we will focus our Gem work on Internal Operations, addressing Program Administration Scale (PAS) Item 9: Internal Communications (Talan & Bloom, 2011). Imagine using a Gem to turn messy staff meeting notes into professional minutes with clear action plans in minutes or less! NotebookLM: The "Walled Garden" NotebookLM is an excellent tool for Family Support for your center, addressing PAS Item 17: Family Support and Involvement (Talan & Bloom, 2011). After uploading documents and resources, such as your parent handbook or community referral lists, to your Notebook, you can create several resources that parents/guardians of your center students will love. Just a few of the impressive features available with NotebookLM include audio (podcast) summaries, video summaries, and reporting functions with templates or the option to create your own report with metrics that matter most to you. Perplexity Spaces: The "Research Librarian" Perplexity Spaces is a perfect AI partner for Marketing your early childhood education (ECE) program, addressing PAS Item 18: External Communications (Talan & Bloom, 2011). You can build your own centralized repository, with control over branding to ensure consistency and present a professional, current image. Adding specific instructions to your space eliminates the need to format documents constantly and saves valuable time. The consistency that a Perplexity Space offers in this regard allows you to upload messages that are the "voice” of your brand. Your marketing efforts are not only more aesthetically pleasing but also enable you to track trends at similar centers in your area, helping you assess the competition. Strategies for Success: Audit your Internal Communications: Identify one repetitive task, such as creating staff meeting agendas (PAS Item 9), and automate it with a Gemini Gem. Curate your Family Resources: Gather three to five existing documents to "feed" a NotebookLM project for more responsive family support (PAS Item 17). Standardize your Brand: Use a Perplexity Space to ensure all public relations tools project a consistent, professional image (PAS Item 18). Reflection Questions: Which administrative task takes the most time away from your interactions with staff and families? How might centralizing marketing materials (branding) impact the professional image to prospective families? Table 1: AI Tools for ECE Professionals
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