mentor teacher training austin peay state university spring 2013 semester
TRANSCRIPT
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Mentor Teacher Training
Austin Peay State UniversitySpring 2013 Semester
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The Student Teaching Triad
University Supervisor
Mentor Teacher
TeacherCandidate
What role does each person play?
Communication
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Welcome Your Student Teacher
O Introduce him to fellow teachers, administrators, and students
O Introduction letter to parents
O Map of buildingO Location of adult
restroomsO School spirit items
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Be ClassyO Class listsO Class
schedule/calendarO Class rulesO Class procedures
and proceduresO Class drillsO Class grading
policies
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Start Off On the Right Foot
O What time to arrive/leave
O Faculty meetingsO Planning – as a
team? Individually? Co-Planning? Due?
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Make It WorkO Share ideas and
materialsO Model effective
teaching strategies and professional behavior
O Be flexible – let the student teacher try new ideas
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Make It WorkO Communicate
expectationsO Be encouragingO Be understanding
and patientO Maintain
consistency and accountability
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EvaluationsO 3 formative
evaluationsO 1 summative
evaluationO Should see growthO Communication is
importantO Signed by student –
give to Supervisor at end of placement
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Talk It Out
Conference with teacher candidate:O“How would you assess your lesson?”O“What could you have done to improve the
lesson?”O“How could you have handled that
situation differently?”O“How are you preparing for tomorrow?”O“How may I help you?”O“This is what I need you to know or do….”
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University SupervisorO Visits the first week for introductions,
distribute materials, and schedule evaluations
O Completes 3 formative evaluations and 1 summative
O Serves as a liaison between mentor teacher and APSU
O Gives encouragement, suggestions, and advice to mentor teacher and student teacher
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The Student TeacherO Weekly seminar
attendanceO Submit weekly
reflections to Supervisor
O Complete edTPA during 1st placement
O Attend school-related meetings
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The Student TeacherO May substitute 5
days during the 2 placements
O Must complete lesson plans – may be co-planned
O Should be professionally dressed
O Should be punctual
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CommunicationO University Mentor
O Office of Clinical Teaching
O Be positive, but be honestO We want to help if
there is a problem
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PaperworkO Use the postage-paid
envelope - return I-9 for stipend, data sheet and Supervisor evaluation
O Theresa Dezellem - 931.221.7441 or [email protected]
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Co-Teaching
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Co-Teaching
Defined as two teachers (mentor teacher and student teacher) working together with groups of students - sharing the planning, organization, delivery and assessment of instruction as well as the physical space.
Both teachers are actively involved and engaged
in all aspects of instructionCopyright 2011, St. Cloud State University,
Research Funded by a US Department of Education, Teacher Quality Enhancement Grant
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Why Co-Teach?
Reduce student/teacher ratio
Diversity and size of today’s classrooms
Enhance classroom management
Copyright 2011, St. Cloud State University,Research Funded by a US Department of Education, Teacher Quality Enhancement
Grant
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Why Co-Teach?
Greater student participation and engagement
Increase instructional options for all students
Enhanced collaboration skills
Copyright 2011, St. Cloud State University,Research Funded by a US Department of Education, Teacher Quality Enhancement
Grant
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Co-Teaching Findings
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Reading Proficiency
Co-Teaching Candidate
(N=318)
One Teacher (N=934)
Non Co-Teaching Candidate
(N=101)
0
20
40
60
80
10082.1
75.7
65.3
MCA Reading Proficiency2004-2005
Per
cen
t o
f S
tud
ents
Co-Teach-ing Can-didate
(N=484)
One Teacher (N=1597)
Non Co-Teaching Candidate
0
20
40
60
80
100
78.7 73.5
65
MCA Reading Proficiency2005-2006
Pe
rce
nt
of
Stu
de
nts
χ² (2 df, N=1353) = 12.79, p = .002 χ² (2 df, N=2241) = 12.54, p = 002
Copyright 2011, St. Cloud State University,Research Funded by a US Department of Education, Teacher Quality Enhancement
Grant
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Math Proficiency
Co-Teach-ing Can-didate
(N=317)
One Teacher (N=927)
Non Co-Teaching Candidate (N=105)
0
20
40
60
80
10082.3
75.870.5
MCA Math Proficiency2004-2005
Pe
rce
nt
of
Stu
de
nts
Co-Teaching Candidate
(N=524)
One Teacher (N=1660)
Non Co-Teaching Candidate
(N=171)
0
20
40
60
80
100
68.964.7
57.9
MCA Math Proficiency2005-2006
Per
cen
t o
f S
tud
ents
χ² (2 df, N=1349) = 8.31, p=.016χ² (2 df, N=2355) = 7.35, p=.025
Copyright 2011, St. Cloud State University,Research Funded by a US Department of Education, Teacher Quality Enhancement
Grant
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7-12 SurveyCumulative Data 2004-2008
(N=1,686)
No Benefits
More in-depth knowledge
Better discussions
More energy between teachers
Assignments graded & returned faster
More creative lessons
Teachers build off each other
Get 2 perspectives
More indiv attention
Different styles of teaching
More help with questions
0 10 20 30 40 50 60 70 80 90 100
4
43.1
45
46.1
50.9
51.2
60.3
65.8
66.4
68.9
79.7
Percent of Responses
Copyright 2011, St. Cloud State University,Research Funded by a US Department of Education, Teacher Quality Enhancement
Grant
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Benefits To Student Teachers
Improved classroom management skills (95.5%)
Increased collaboration skills (94.9%)
More teaching time (94.6%)
Increased confidence (89.9%)
Deeper understanding of the curriculum through co-planning (89.1%)
More opportunities to ask questions and reflect (88.6%)
Copyright 2011, St. Cloud State University,Research Funded by a US Department of Education, Teacher Quality Enhancement
Grant
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Benefits to Student Teachers
Being seen as a “real” teacher
Equal partnership
Sharing resources
Mutual support and learning
Copyright 2011, St. Cloud State University,Research Funded by a US Department of Education, Teacher Quality Enhancement
Grant
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Benefits to Mentor Teachers
Ability to reach more students, particularly those withhigh needs (93.5%)
Better relationship with their teacher candidate (91%)
Experienced professional growth (89.2%)
Enhanced energy for teaching (87.8%)
Hosting a candidate without giving up my classroom (87.1%)
Teacher candidate had a better experience than they would have through with a traditional model (81.7%)
Copyright 2011, St. Cloud State University,Research Funded by a US Department of Education, Teacher Quality Enhancement
Grant
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Benefits to Mentor Teachers
Ability to do projects more successfully
Class time is more productive
Modeling and participating in teamwork
Candidates become competent more quickly
Copyright 2011, St. Cloud State University,Research Funded by a US Department of Education, Teacher Quality Enhancement
Grant
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Creating an Environment for Co-Teaching
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Co-Teaching Strategies
O One Teach, One ObserveO One Teach, One AssistO Station TeachingO Parallel TeachingO Supplemental TeachingO Alternative (Differentiated) TeachingO Team Teaching
Copyright 2011, St. Cloud State University,Research Funded by a US Department of Education, Teacher Quality Enhancement
Grant
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Co-Teaching is not simply dividing the tasks and responsibilities between two
people.
Co-Teaching is an attitude an attitude of sharing theclassroom and students.
Co-Teachers must always be thinking
We’re Both Teaching!
Copyright 2011, St. Cloud State University,Research Funded by a US Department of Education, Teacher Quality Enhancement
Grant
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One Teach, One Observe
One teacher has primary instructional responsibility while the other gathers specific observational
information on students or the (instructing) teacher.
Copyright 2011, St. Cloud State University,Research Funded by a US Department of Education, Teacher Quality Enhancement
Grant
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One Teach, One Assist
One teacher has primary instructional responsibility while the other assists students’ with their work, monitors behaviors, or corrects
assignments.
Copyright 2011, St. Cloud State University,Research Funded by a US Department of Education, Teacher Quality Enhancement
Grant
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Station Teaching
The co-teaching pair divide the instructional content into parts.Each teacher instructs one of
the groups, groups then rotateor spend a designated amount
of time at each station.
Copyright 2011, St. Cloud State University,Research Funded by a US Department of Education, Teacher Quality Enhancement
Grant
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Parallel Teaching
In this approach, each teacher instructs half the students. The two teachers are addressing the
same instructional material using the same teaching strategies.
Copyright 2011, St. Cloud State University,Research Funded by a US Department of Education, Teacher Quality Enhancement
Grant
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Supplemental Teaching
This strategy allows one teacher to work with students at their expected grade level, while the other teacher works with those students who need
the information and/or materials extended or
remediated.Copyright 2011, St. Cloud State University,
Research Funded by a US Department of Education, Teacher Quality Enhancement Grant
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Alternative or Differentiated Teaching
Alternative teaching strategies provide two different approaches to
teaching the same information. The learning outcome is the same
for all students however the avenue for getting there is different.
Copyright 2011, St. Cloud State University,Research Funded by a US Department of Education, Teacher Quality Enhancement
Grant
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Team Teaching
Well planned, team taught lessons, exhibit an invisible flow of instruction
with no prescribed division of authority. Both teachers are actively involved in
the lesson. From a student’s perspective, there is no clearly defined
leader, as both teachers share the instruction, are free to interject
information, and available to assist students and answer questions.
Copyright 2011, St. Cloud State University,Research Funded by a US Department of Education, Teacher Quality Enhancement
Grant
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Hierarchy????
OTeam TeachingOAlternative or Differentiated TeachingOSupplemental/Extended TeachingOParallel TeachingOStation TeachingOOne Teach, One AssistOOne Teach, One Observe
Copyright 2011, St. Cloud State University,Research Funded by a US Department of Education, Teacher Quality Enhancement
Grant
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Implementation
Team Teaching
Parallel Teaching
Station Teaching
OneTeach, OneAssist
Copyright 2011, St. Cloud State University,Research Funded by a US Department of Education, Teacher Quality Enhancement
Grant
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Sharing Responsibilities
MentorTeacher
Student Teacher
Copyright 2011, St. Cloud State University,Research Funded by a US Department of Education, Teacher Quality Enhancement
Grant
Planning
TeachingAssessment
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Sharing PlanningThe Teacher Candidate and Cooperating Teacher
will share:
What content to teach What co-teaching strategies to use Who will lead different parts of the
lesson How to assess student learning Materials and resources
Copyright 2011, St. Cloud State University,Research Funded by a US Department of Education, Teacher Quality Enhancement
Grant
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Sharing Instruction
While Co-Teaching, the Student Teacher
and Mentor Teacher will: Share leadership in the classroom Work with all students Use a variety of co-teaching approaches Be seen as equal partners Manage the classroom together Make changes as needed during a lesson
Copyright 2011, St. Cloud State University,Research Funded by a US Department of Education, Teacher Quality Enhancement
Grant
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Sharing Assessment
While Co-Assessing, the Student Teacher
and Mentor Teacher will:
Both participate in the assessment of the students
Share the workload of daily gradingProvide formative and summative
assessment of studentsJointly determine grades
Copyright 2011, St. Cloud State University,Research Funded by a US Department of Education, Teacher Quality Enhancement
Grant
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What does this look like…
Student Teachers will be expected to:
Contribute ideas from the very beginning of the experience
Engage with students assisting with their learning from the very first day
Be expected to take on full leadership in all 3 areas (planning, instruction & assessment)
Demonstrate competencies as a teacher Have opportunities to teach alone
Copyright 2011, St. Cloud State University,Research Funded by a US Department of Education, Teacher Quality Enhancement
Grant
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Summing It Up…
Co-Teaching requires the Student Teacher and Mentor Teacher to
build a strong relationship so they can collaboratively plan, teach and
assess the students in their classroom.
Copyright 2011, St. Cloud State University,Research Funded by a US Department of Education, Teacher Quality Enhancement
Grant
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edTPA – Teaching Performance Assessment
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• Create a body of evidence of teacher performance (pre-service)
• Contribute evidence for licensure decisions
• Measure a candidate’s readiness for licensure
• Provide a consistent measure across teacher preparation programs
• Support candidate learning• Improve information base for
accreditation
Goals of edTPA
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Pre-service assessments of teaching (for licensure, program requirements, etc.) should • allow us to predict reasonably well
how effective teachers will be in enabling students to learn important subject matter
• make teachers and teacher preparation better
Core Premise
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Task 1 – What to do
OContextual ContextOSelect learning segmentOSelect central focus and key
language demandOCreate instruction and
assessment planORespond to commentary
prompts
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Task 1 – What to submit
O Context for learningO Lesson plans
O instructional materialsO assessment tools/procedures and
criteriaO must know about 504s, IEPs, ELLs,
etc
Planning Commentary
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Task 2 – What to doOCollect permission forms for video-
recordingOReview lessons where students are
engagedOSubmit 1-2 video clips ORespond to commentary prompts
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Task 2 – What to submitOVideo ClipOInstruction Commentary
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Task 3 – what to doO Analyze class performanceO Identify 3 student work samples that illustrate
student understandingO Select and analyze the learning of 2 focus
studentsO Respond to commentary promptsO Identify next steps
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Task 3 – what to submitO Student work samplesO Evidence of feedbackO Assessment commentary
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Task 4 – What to doO Explain what was learned by candidateO What could be done differentlyO Explain how changes would improve students’
learning
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Task 4 – What to submitO Analyzing teaching commentary
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Contact InformationO Dr. Lisa Barron, Coordinator of
Clinical TeachingO Office phone 931.221.7190O Cell phone 615.519.0954O Email [email protected]
Theresa Dezellem, Administrative Assistant
Office phone 931.221.7441Email [email protected]