Title: P1252428578PHjpD
1Life can only be understood backwards but it must
be lived forwards.
Soren Kierkegaard
2Throughout history, we have always had
supervision and evaluation of some form.
31700s Inspectors were the earliest instructional
supervisors. They tended to be male, ministers,
schoolmasters or distinguished citizens.
Mid to late 1800s Supervision as a function was
performed by specifically trained professionals.
Methods stressed strict control and close
inspection of school facilities.
4Mid to late 1800s (continued)
The overall aim was to describe the behavioral
characteristics of the best teachers and to
establish a benchmark against which all teachers
might be judged. Helpfulness" was deemed to be
the most important teacher characteristic. But
the second most influential factor was.
5Personal Appearance"
61900s
Industrial influence on Education
In the early 1920s time and motion study results
were applied to educational supervision of
teachers.
71900s
- Efficiency movement prevalent in the early
Twentieth Century became one of the major forces
driving school supervision.
- Rating instruments developed for categories
included physical, moral and social efficiencies.
needs improvement satisfactory outstanding
seldom frequently always
How were these to be translated?
8 TRANSLATION?
I love you
91930s
- John Dewey and Progressives believed in a
supervisory process that was helpful, improvement
oriented and collaborative. This was in marked
contrast to the social efficiency model.
- Thus began the conflict of supervisor as teacher
evaluator and as helpful colleague.
10 1940 - 1960 Inferring Teacher Quality from
Student Learning
- Educators and researchers emphasized the presage
variables. This took the form of teacher traits
such as appearance, voice, emotions, warmth and
enthusiasm. These traits became the centerpiece
items in local teacher evaluation criteria. There
was no evidence to link teacher traits to good
teaching or student learning.
11- The launch of the Sputnik satellite in 1957 lead
to a focus on improving science and math skills.
Researchers began to consider what teachers did
and could do to improve basic skills acquisition.
- Supervisors were seen as instruments of school
change whose role was to guide innovations into
practice. Collaboration and cooperation were
considered less important than putting
innovations into practice.
12 1960s
Teaching Performance/ Teacher
Effectiveness Research
- Significant advances in supervision skills and
classroom observation techniques. - Researchers developed clinical supervision as a
way of enhancing instruction, emphasizing
supervisor as colleague who developed a trusting
relationship with the teacher.
13 1960s Teaching
Performance/ Teacher Effectiveness Research
- Others designed observation instruments which
enabled them to identify effective teaching
behaviors linked to student achievement. The aim
was to describe clearly and precisely teaching
behaviors and relate them to student learningas
measured most often by standardized achievement
test scores. - This was known as teacher effectiveness research.
141970 -1990
- Madeline Hunter developed prescriptive teaching
practices designed to improve teacher decision
making and thus student learning.
Madeline Hunter's Lesson Design
Standards Guided Practice
Setting the Stage Closure
Instruction Independent Practice
Sample checklist
- Both Hunter and Teacher Effectiveness Research
emphasized teacher centered/ structured
classrooms.
15- Although Hunter called her model clinical
supervision, it really turned into a
teacher-rating checklist. - The result was a single, simplistic view of
teaching which promoted a summative evaluation
that persisted into the 1980s. - The mislabeling of her model deepened the
confusion between teacher supervision and
evaluation for many
educators.
161980s and 90s
- Student outcomes became more complex
- brain research
- cooperative learning
- effective schools movement
- collaborative learning
- problem-solving
- critical thinking
- lifelong learning
- multiple intelligences
- constructivist classrooms
- outcomes based education
- alternative assessment
17How did teacher supervision change during this
period?
- A reappraisal of traditional supervision
practices resulted. - Traditional model of teacher evaluation based on
scheduled observations of a handful of lessons
began to be questioned. - Collegial methods such as developmental and
reflective supervision emerged. - The idea of giving teachers options within
supervision and evaluation systems received
recognition.
18Currently
- Most boards are evaluating teachers as
professionals who author their own professional
growth plans and are evaluated using these plans.
Our new HRSB policy will do likewise.
19Today
- How will our new job appraisal policy affect the
teaching staff? Teachers will be involved in - self assessment
- reflecting on practice
- goal setting
- creating plans to attain goals
- differentiated supervision
- collaborative or individual decision making
- school improvement teams
- helping colleagues reflect on practice and
attain goals
20We must take ownership
In the history of the world, no one has ever
washed a rented car.
21Challenges
- Danielson and McGreal (2000) remind designers of
evaluation systems that they must (1) encourage
professional learning while (2) ensuring the
quality of teaching. - Job appraisal should utilize formative
techniques that produce thoughtful and reflective
practice. This will result in satisfaction to
both teachers and administration, as well as
satisfying accountability to the public.