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NYSED Principal Evaluation Training Program. Day 2: Learning and Teaching Session 2: Recording Evidence. Session 2: Recording Evidence. Aims of The Session. To increase participants’ cognition of: What can be observed in lessons Evidence based observation and recording What is evidence. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
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Day 2: Learning and Teaching
Session 2: Recording Evidence
NYSED Principal Evaluation Training Program
Day 2 Session 2: Recording Evidence -Pacing Guide
Time Activity slides
10.00 Welcome back / Aims 1 -3
10.05 What can be observed in lessons (discussion) 4-5
10.15 Activity 1 – Lesson Observation 15 min obs + 5 min Pair + 10 min obs + 15 share
6
10.50 Evidence based recording – what is learning 7 - 10
11.00 Activity 2 part 1 – observe lesson 220 minutes observe10 min Self check 10 min Pairs15 min group discussion
11 -13
11.55 Summary 14
12.00 END
February 9 , 2012Session 2: Recording Evidence 4
Aims of The Session
To increase participants’ cognition of:
• What can be observed in lessons
• Evidence based observation and recording
• What is evidence
February 9 , 2012Session 2: Recording Evidence
What can be observed in lessons?
Individually imagine you are in the classroom of a highly effective teacher, reflect and note:
• What would you see?
• What would you hear?
• What would the students be doing or saying?
In small groups spend 5 minutes to reflect and note the types of teacher effectiveness standards which this would relate to.
5
What can be observed in lessons?
• Content knowledge • Pedagogy• Communication with students• Questioning techniques • Student engagement• Higher order thinking • Assessment of learning• Integrating reading and writing
and math into the lesson
• Managing classroom procedure• Managing student behavior• Positive and negative feedback• Respect by teachers• Respect by students• Equity and diversity• Use of physical space • Use of resources and technology• Time management
6February 9 , 2012
Session 2: Recording Evidence
February 9 , 2012Session 2: Recording Evidence
Activity 3: Lesson Observation 1
Individually
• View the first five minutes of the lesson on DVD
• Record your observations on paper
In pairs
• Compare your written observations
• Review and reflect on the similarities and differences
• View the first remaining parts of the lesson on DVD
• Record your observations on paper
• At the end of the observations compare your written observations with a different partner
7
February 9 , 2012Session 2: Recording Evidence
Evidence-based recording
Many principals have been trained to script instruction in detail or to use a checklist .
Evidence based observations require a different approach.
• Principals need to focus on recording objective evidence
• They need to record sufficient evidence to serve as a robust record
The completed record should enable the principal to:
• track the link, cause and effect, between teaching and learning
• identify areas for improvement and actionable change to achieve them
• cite objective evidence to support the foundation of the areas to be explored during feedback
8
February 9 , 2012Session 2: Recording Evidence
Types of Observations/Evidence
• Verbatim scripting of teacher or student comments: “Bring your white boards, markers and erasers to the carpet and sit on your square.”
• Non-evaluative statements of observed teacher or student behavior:Teacher presented the content from the front of room.
• Numeric information about time, student participation, resource use, etc.:[9:14 – 9:29] Warm-up. 8 of 22 Ss finished at 9:20, sat still until 9:29.
• An observed aspect of the environment:Desks were arranged in groups of four with room to walk between each group.
Developed by TLS, Inc. FFT-Based Rubrics
9
February 9 , 2012Session 2: Recording Evidence
What is Evidence? - Review
• Actions, by teacher or students
• Statements or questions, by teacher or students
• Observable features of the classroom
Developed by TLS, Inc. FFT-Based Rubrics
10
February 9 , 2012Session 2: Recording Evidence
What is Learning?
Focus on recording evidence of cognition:
How did students:
• acquire new knowledge and skills, develop their ideas….
• consolidate their knowledge, skills and ideas..
• apply their knowledge, skills and ideas..
• extend their knowledge, skills and ideas ..
and have met the learning objective for the lesson
11
February 9 , 2012Session 2: Recording Evidence
Observing LessonsTHE HEALTH WARNING!
We observe all the time, which means that it is easy to do, but hard to do objectively
Remember• We tend to see what we want to see• We have to be aware of and avoid bias, particularly personal idiosyncrasies• We have to avoid preconceptions• Observation should be objective not subjective• This enables feedback to be given which is based upon objective evidence• End of year evaluations will then be rooted in evidence and based on
agreed criteria
12
February 9 , 2012Session 2: Recording Evidence
Activity 4: Lesson Observation 2
13
DVD 2
Individually:
• Observe DVD 2 and record objective evidence (on paper).
• Use the self-check questions to review your evidence collection Have I recorded only facts? Is my evidence relevant to the criteria being examined? Whenever possible, have I quantified words such as few, some, and most? Have I used quotation marks when quoting a teacher or student? Does my selection or documentation of evidence indicate any personal or
professional preferences? Have I included any opinion (in the guise of fact)?
Developed by TLS, Inc. FFT-Based Rubrics
February 9 , 2012Session 2: Recording Evidence
Activity 4: Lesson Observation part 2
14
In pairs:• Exchange your lesson observation scripts – compare and
contrast.
• Review the evidence cited – is it evidence? Or opinion?
In your group:
• Discuss ways in which you could coach a principal to identify more objective evidence.
February 9 , 2012Session 2: Recording Evidence
Summary of the session 2
• Observations should be objective and evidence based
• Each observation should build on the previous observation for each individual teacher
• The principal’s job is to provide constructive feedback that provides the teacher with specific actionable changes which improve the teacher’s practice and enhances student learning
• The principal evaluator’s job is to seek evidence of how well the principal carries out these activities
15
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