making the most of teacher evaluation, charlotte danielson 1 making the most of teacher evaluation...

21
Making the Most of Teacher Evalu ation, Charlotte Danielson 1 Making the Most of Teacher Evaluation Charlotte Danielson [email protected]

Upload: kelley-mcdonald

Post on 17-Dec-2015

221 views

Category:

Documents


0 download

TRANSCRIPT

Making the Most of Teacher Evaluation, Charlotte Danielson

1

Making the Most of Teacher Evaluation

Charlotte Danielson

[email protected]

Making the Most of Teacher Evaluation, Charlotte Danielson

2

Purposes of Teacher Evaluation

Quality Assurance

Professional Learning

Making the Most of Teacher Evaluation, Charlotte Danielson

3

A Flawed System

Outdated, limited, evaluative criteria Few shared beliefs about good teaching Inconsistency among evaluators Hierarchical, one-way communication Same procedures for novices and

experienced professionals Limited evaluator expertise Based only on classroom observation Requires lots of time Negative culture surrounding evaluation

Making the Most of Teacher Evaluation, Charlotte Danielson

4

What Evaluative Criteria

Levels of Performance

Weighting

Score Combining

Standard Setting

Teacher Evaluation SystemTeacher Evaluation System

How Procedures

Instruments

Personnel

Timelines

Due Process

Process for DecidingTraining for EvaluatorsProfessional Development for Teachers

Making the Most of Teacher Evaluation, Charlotte Danielson

5

A Blueprint for Teacher Evaluation

Clear definition of teaching (the “what”)

Instruments and procedures that provide evidence of teaching (the “how”)

Trained evaluators who can make consistent judgments based on evidence

Process for teachers to understand the evaluative criteria

Process for making final judgment

Making the Most of Teacher Evaluation, Charlotte Danielson

6

Hallmarks of a Genuine Profession

Knowledge base, grounded in research Knowledge shared by a community of

professionals Professional knowledge is implemented at the

intersection of theory and practice Professionals exercise autonomy and

judgment Practice is influenced by both technical and

moral judgment

Making the Most of Teacher Evaluation, Charlotte Danielson

7

The Nature of Professional Learning

Trust

Self-assessment and self-directed inquiry

Reflection on practice

Collaboration and conversation

A community of learners

Making the Most of Teacher Evaluation, Charlotte Danielson

8

Judgment

Evidence

•Accurate and unbiased

•Relevant

•Representative of the total

Respect and

Rapport

Questioning and Discussion

Interpretation

What is the evidence?

Making the Most of Teacher Evaluation, Charlotte Danielson

9

Domain 2:The Classroom Environment2a: Creating an Environment of Respect and Rapport

L E V E L O F P E R F O R M A N C E

ELEMENT UNSATISFACTORY BASIC PROFICIENT DISTINGUISHED

Teacher Interaction with Students

Teacher interaction with at least some students is negative, demeaning, sarcastic, or inappropriate to the age or culture of the students. Students exhibit disrespect for the teacher.

Teacher-student interactions are generally appropriate but may reflect occasional inconsistencies, favoritism, or disregard for students’ cultures. Students exhibit only minimal respect for the teacher.

Teacher-student interactions are friendly and demonstrate general caring and respect. Such interactions are appropriate to the age and cultures of the students. Students exhibit respect for the teacher.

Teacher’s interactions with students reflect genuine respect and caring, for individuals as well as groups of students. Students appear to trust the teacher with sensitive information.

Student Interactions with one another

Student interactions are characterized by conflict, sarcasm, or put-downs.

Students do not demonstrate disrespect for one another.

Student interactions are generally polite and respectful.

Students demonstrate genuine caring for one another and monitor one another’s treatment of peers, correcting classmates respectfully when needed.

DOMAIN 2: THE CLASSROOM ENVIRONMENT COMPONENT 2A: CREATING AN ENVIRONMENT OF RESPECT AND RAPPORT

Elements: Teacher interaction with students Student interaction with one another

Figure 4.2b

Making the Most of Teacher Evaluation, Charlotte Danielson

10

General Evaluation Procedures

Observations of practice

Conferences

Samples of student work, with analysis

Teacher artifacts

Making the Most of Teacher Evaluation, Charlotte Danielson

11

The Evaluation System

Track 1: Probationary or non-tenured teachers

Track 2: Experienced teachers, with continuing status

Track 3: Experienced teachers encountering difficulty

Making the Most of Teacher Evaluation, Charlotte Danielson

12

Track 1: Probationary Teacher Evaluation

A critical decision, for both the teacher and the district

Should be consistent with, but separate from, the mentoring program

Making the Most of Teacher Evaluation, Charlotte Danielson

13

Probationary Teacher Procedures

The same each year, or progressive?

Observations of teaching- how many?- announced or unannounced?- conferences before and after observations- consider “extended” observations

Examination of artifacts- to provide evidence of skill in non-observed areas

Evaluation decision

Making the Most of Teacher Evaluation, Charlotte Danielson

14

Track 2: Experienced Teacher Evaluation

Designed as a professional model

Teachers demonstrate their skill in all the evaluative criteria

Making the Most of Teacher Evaluation, Charlotte Danielson

15

The Two Presumptions

The presumption of competence

The presumption of continuing learning

Making the Most of Teacher Evaluation, Charlotte Danielson

16

Experienced Teacher System

Multi-year cycle

Comprehensive evaluation- every 2-4 years

Self-directed professional inquiry in the “other” years

Making the Most of Teacher Evaluation, Charlotte Danielson

17

Experienced Teacher Procedures (Comprehensive Evaluation)

Initial conference, if possible

Observations of practice

Artifact conference

Evaluation decision

Making the Most of Teacher Evaluation, Charlotte Danielson

18

Recommended Artifacts for Experienced Teachers

Unit plan, including student assessment Instructional artifact or assignment from the unit Samples of student work, with teacher comments Commentary Examples of record-keeping Examples of communication with families Evidence of contributions to school, profession Evidence of professional growth Evidence of student learning

Making the Most of Teacher Evaluation, Charlotte Danielson

19

Experienced Teacher Procedures (Self-directed Professional Inquiry)

Conduct self-assessment Set a professional goal, with evaluator, reflecting

own learning and application to practice Prepare a professional growth plan Work on plan, in study groups if possible Participate in interim conference with evaluator Participate in reflection/closure conference with

evaluator Share findings with colleagues

Making the Most of Teacher Evaluation, Charlotte Danielson

20

The Instruments and Procedures

Taken together, they document all the evaluative criteria

They represent a “natural harvest” of a teacher’s work

The timelines and workload are reasonable, for teachers and evaluators

They promote professional learning

Making the Most of Teacher Evaluation, Charlotte Danielson

21

Track 3: Experienced Teachers: Intensive Assistance

Signifies performance below standard: a “heads up”

Must determine what “triggers” in and out

Flexible duration

Designed for support and assistance

Customized to the situation

Three phases: awareness, assistance, disciplinary