Phil Poekert
Professor/Director
- Gainesville FL UNITED STATES
- College of Education
Phil Poekert leads the Lastinger Center for Learning to educational innovations through partnerships, research, development, and advocacy.
Contact More Open optionsBiography
Phil Poekert is a clinical professor and director of the University of Florida Lastinger Center for Learning. Since being appointed in 2018, Phil has led the center through exponential growth in products, projects and staff while streamlining the center’s focus on three educational milestones: kindergarten readiness, third grade reading, and algebra.
Areas of Expertise
Media Appearances
UF launches listening tour to boost K-12 math achievement
Florida Politics online
2023-09-14
The University of Florida (UF) Lastinger Center for Learning has launched its 2023 Listening Tour aimed at gathering stakeholder input on education needs and identifying ways to substantially improve K-12 mathematics education and achievement in Florida. “At the Lastinger Center, we always strive to serve communities, educators, students and their families in the ways that work best and make the biggest difference in their future,” Center Director Phil Poekert said.
Florida will begin delivering free books to students reading below grade level
WPTV tv
2021-11-19
Florida is aiming to improve childhood literacy among students who are struggling to read. This December, the state will start delivering free, high-quality books to the homes of K-5 students who are below their expected reading level. Known officially as the "New Worlds Reading Initiative," the book deliveries will start before Dec. 31 for the 2021/22 academic year.
UF study: Mental health a priority for students this school year
The Gainesville Sun online
2020-08-05
While debate roils over how K-12 students will resume their studies this fall, education experts are advising one thing must be addressed before classes begin again: student’s lingering mental health needs from the onset of the pandemic. In a new policy brief by the University of Florida’s education research hub the Lastinger Center for Learning, researchers analyzed interviews and surveys with students, parents, teachers and school administrators about the approaches taken by education programs, from birth to 12th grade, during the COVID-19 pandemic.
Social
Articles
A pragmatic meta-model to navigate complexity in teachers’ professional Learning
Professional Development in EducationFiona King, et. al
2023-08-21
The voluminous literature on teacher professional learning and development presents varied definitions and perspectives on what constitutes professional learning and development. Several terms have been used in the literature in recent decades to describe teachers’ learning, most notably, in-service, continuing professional development, professional development, and more recently professional learning. These are often used interchangeably without critique.
‘The Cookie’: a recipe for effective collaboration through communities of practice
Contemporary Issues in Practitioner EducationRaquel M. Diaz
2021-03-14
Communities of Practice (CoP) have the potential to transform the workplace into learning organisations that prioritise each and every child’s learning and foster collective responsibility, encouraging teachers to see themselves as change agents beyond their classrooms. Previous manifestations of collaborative teaming approaches have met with mixed success for reasons explored within this article. Still, these kinds of work spaces, when sustained over time, can transform the organisational culture of a school.
Leadership for professional learning towards educational equity: a systematic literature review
Professional Development in EducationPhil E. Poekert, et. al
2020-06-30
This systematic review of recent research explored the uncharted intersection of literature on educational leadership, professional learning, and educational equity. It investigated leadership approaches to shaping the professional development and ongoing learning of educators which supports more equitable outcomes for students.