Thursday, May 19, 2016
Survey Tool: Teachers' Perceptions of the Feedback They Receive
The Examining Evaluator Feedback Survey is a tool for administrators to gather information on teachers' perceptions of the feedback they receive, and on teachers' self-reported responses to that feedback. This report, published by the Regional Educational Laboratory at Marzano Research, contains the survey questions, and information about how the survey was developed, and how it can be used.
How Selective Colleges and Universities Evaluate Proficiency-Based High School Transcripts
How Selective Colleges and Universities Evaluate
Proficiency-Based High School Transcripts
Tuesday, May 10, 2016
Charlotte Danielson on the Best Way to Improve Teaching
Communities of Practice
In
this Educational Leadership article,
evaluation expert Charlotte Danielson says the time-consuming, top-down,
bureaucratic nature of teacher evaluation in many schools is “undermining the
very professionalism that’s essential to creating positive learning
environments for students.” Of course evaluating teachers is essential to
quality assurance, she says, but if only about six percent of teachers aren’t
meeting basic standards, what about the other 94 percent? To answer this
question, we need to acknowledge three basic realities in schools:
-
Teaching
is complex work. “The impossibility of reaching perfection is in the very
nature of creative, professional work,” she says.
-
Current
evaluation systems are underperforming. “In many schools and districts,” says
Danielson, “teacher evaluation has become simply a matter of numbers, ratings,
and rankings… I receive frequent e-mails from teachers expressing their dismay
over what they perceive as a serious distortion of their mission to engage
students in meaningful learning.”
-
Even if
they’re conducted well, evaluations “are not the best approach to stimulate
teachers’ learning about their complex and important work,” she says. In other
words, evaluations might be able to describe
a teacher’s work, but they seldom improve
it.
The bottom line: “Schools should not rely on
evaluation as their main engine of teaching improvement,” says Danielson. “[I]t’s
time to shift from an emphasis on high-stakes accountability for individual
teachers to an emphasis on schoolwide communities of professional inquiry in
which educators learn from one another.”
One of principals’ key jobs is
orchestrating this process. And indeed, a symphony orchestra is a good metaphor,
says Danielson: conductors lead individual players toward the goal of making
beautiful music, and principals lead teachers toward the effective education of
all children. Some essentials for good orchestrating in schools:
•
Create an environment that’s safe and
challenging. Teachers must be able to express themselves and take risks,
constantly seeking new and better approaches. Danielson suggests encouraging
teacher teams to identify and share “high-quality mistakes” – approaches that
didn’t work out but from which valuable lessons emerged. Principals might do the
same.
•
Establish the expectation of collegial
learning. “We know that teachers learn more from their colleagues than from
their supervisors,” says Danielson. This may be an issue of principals’ limited
subject-area expertise, but teachers also worry that admitting uncertainty or
lack of mastery might end up as a negative evaluation. Principals need to
affirm the key role of learning from colleagues and model openness about their
own imperfections and struggles.
•
Flip the classroom observation process.
Principals should encourage teachers to visit a specific number of colleagues’
classrooms, not to give feedback, but to learn. The principal might offer to
cover teachers’ classes during these visits.
•
Schedule and guide team meetings.
Common planning time for key groups, clear expectations for what teams should
accomplish, and skilled facilitation can produce remarkable results, says
Danielson.
•
Support teacher leadership. Many colleagues
are ready to take on the role of mentor, instructional coach, department chair,
or team leader. It’s the principal’s job to spot talent, delegate
responsibility, and provide training and support. Some key skills: active
listening, summarizing a discussion, acknowledging and building on others’
ideas, problem-solving, and problem identification. Principals also need to
know when outside expertise is required.
(The article summary above comes from Issue #635 of The Marshall Memo, an EXCELLENT resource for educators.)
Thursday, May 5, 2016
What's the Story? The Vermont Young People Social Action Team
Check out What's the Story?, a dynamic learning experience for Vermont secondary students sponsored by the Middlebury College Breadloaf School of English. What's the Story? provides Vermont secondary students with the tools, resources and expertise they need to pursue their questions, collaborate with peers and create compelling multi-media narratives that provoke positive change in their communities.
- The website includes links to the What's the Story? Facebook page and YouTube channel where you can see student products from this amazing program.
What's the Story? has begun accepting applications for next year's cohort, through a rolling admissions process. Here is the application to join the 2016-2017 cohort for this learning experience.
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