+ All Categories
Home > Documents > Welcome to Lead Evaluator Training 3 – Feedback and Coaching August 7 and August 9 2012.

Welcome to Lead Evaluator Training 3 – Feedback and Coaching August 7 and August 9 2012.

Date post: 11-Jan-2016
Category:
Upload: kathlyn-johns
View: 213 times
Download: 1 times
Share this document with a friend
Popular Tags:
45
Welcome to Lead Evaluator Training 3 – Feedback and Coaching August 7 and August 9 2012
Transcript
Page 1: Welcome to Lead Evaluator Training 3 – Feedback and Coaching August 7 and August 9 2012.

Welcome to

Lead Evaluator Training 3 –

Feedback and Coaching

August 7 and August 9 2012

Page 2: Welcome to Lead Evaluator Training 3 – Feedback and Coaching August 7 and August 9 2012.

In Focus with Dr. Jon Saphier - “Say Something”

• What was something that stood out to you as you listened to Dr. Saphier?

• If you quoted him, what quote did you choose to bring and why?

• What are you thinking about as you reflect on the clip? How does it relate to the thinking of your district with respect to your APPR conversations and your district areas of focus in your APPR plans?

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fQz69uzA03Y

Page 3: Welcome to Lead Evaluator Training 3 – Feedback and Coaching August 7 and August 9 2012.

Leaders will…

• Describe current practices for responding to teacher performance

• Define the characteristics of praise, criticism and feedback

• Explain how feedback is related to Evidence Based Observation and to the language of the rubric

• Describe how local decisions about scoring observations impact feedback for improvement

• Use four criteria for evidence to label feedback

• Describe recommended components of action plans to improve instruction

Page 4: Welcome to Lead Evaluator Training 3 – Feedback and Coaching August 7 and August 9 2012.

Thinking back to our earlier Lead Evaluator work for teacher evaluation….• The Third Grade ELL teacher…• The Biology lesson…• The Eighth Grade Social Studies teacher• The Sixth Grade Math teacher• The Ninth Grade Math lesson• The Global Studies lesson• The elementary writing lesson• The Socratic Seminar• The Sixth Grade Science lesson• The fifth grade math lessons (muffins )

So many of you wanted to “jump in” and “coach”, talk with the teacher, respond to their teaching!

Page 5: Welcome to Lead Evaluator Training 3 – Feedback and Coaching August 7 and August 9 2012.

This gets to the heart of today!

How do you respond to teacher performance?

Page 6: Welcome to Lead Evaluator Training 3 – Feedback and Coaching August 7 and August 9 2012.

What is your current practice?

• The content of written documents?

written or unwritten “rules”?

Page 7: Welcome to Lead Evaluator Training 3 – Feedback and Coaching August 7 and August 9 2012.

What is your district’s current practice?

• What is the nature of post-observation?

The evaluator’s role?

The teacher’s role?

Page 8: Welcome to Lead Evaluator Training 3 – Feedback and Coaching August 7 and August 9 2012.

We respond in writing or verbally in three ways to practice.

Page 9: Welcome to Lead Evaluator Training 3 – Feedback and Coaching August 7 and August 9 2012.

Global Studies Lesson – Exit Activity for Lead Evaluator Training 2

Great job with student engagement! I know you have been working on that and it shows.

As a building we have been stressing engagement of students. Keeping them in pairs will engage them more.

T- “We are going to do an activity called triples read. In triples, one person will read out loud one column of the chart, the other two students just listen, and then the two students who listened will verbally summarize what they think they just heard”

Evidence to support feedback, criticism or praise? Which one is it?

Praise

Criticism

Evidence

Page 10: Welcome to Lead Evaluator Training 3 – Feedback and Coaching August 7 and August 9 2012.

Praise, Criticism and FeedbackWhat are the characteristics of each?

Page 11: Welcome to Lead Evaluator Training 3 – Feedback and Coaching August 7 and August 9 2012.

Praise is…..

• Expressing approval or commending performance

Why do we praise?Build confidence and self-esteemRecognition for a job well donePositive feeling – tone

Motivation

Page 12: Welcome to Lead Evaluator Training 3 – Feedback and Coaching August 7 and August 9 2012.

Criticism is…..

• An act of judgment – often takes on a negative connotation

Why do we criticize?• Frustration• Feeling-tone• We think we are changing practice…• We want to give “constructive” criticism

Page 13: Welcome to Lead Evaluator Training 3 – Feedback and Coaching August 7 and August 9 2012.

Feedback is….

• Descriptive• Specific• Non-judgmental

Sounds like Evidence Based Observation!

Page 14: Welcome to Lead Evaluator Training 3 – Feedback and Coaching August 7 and August 9 2012.

Adventures in weight training

Great job! Look how far you have come! You haven’t lifted that much before.

If you keep doing it that way. You will hurt yourself.

When you place your hands on the bars and use this grip, you will strengthen your trap muscles and not injure your neck.

When have you gotten feedback that has changed your performance?

Page 15: Welcome to Lead Evaluator Training 3 – Feedback and Coaching August 7 and August 9 2012.

Global Studies Lesson – Exit Activity for Lead Evaluator Training 2

Great job with student engagement! I know you have been working on that and it shows.

As a building we have been stressing engagement of students. Keeping them in pairs will engage them more.

T- “We are going to do an activity called triples read. In triples, one person will read out loud one column of the chart, the other two students just listen, and then the two students who listened will verbally summarize what they think they just heard”

Feedback, criticism or praise? Which one is it?

Praise

Criticism

Feedback

I called it engaged learning when you said…because the triples read put students in roles where all students were engaged, relevant to your outcome.

Page 16: Welcome to Lead Evaluator Training 3 – Feedback and Coaching August 7 and August 9 2012.

“Feedback is not about praise or blame, approval or disappointment. Feedback is value-

neutral. It describes what you did and did not do. Praise is necessary but praise only keeps

you in the game. It doesn’t get you better.”

- Grant Wiggins

Page 17: Welcome to Lead Evaluator Training 3 – Feedback and Coaching August 7 and August 9 2012.

• Recipient makes meaning from it

• It is provided in time to make a difference

• The culture influences perceptions about improvement

• There is just enough- not too much!

Feedback is most effective when…

Page 18: Welcome to Lead Evaluator Training 3 – Feedback and Coaching August 7 and August 9 2012.

Use the positive power of your position to influence…

Describe strengths and missed opportunities

By

Giving objective, specific feedback

Based on

Multiple Areas of Performance

For the purpose of

Changing and Improving

Current Practice to

More Skillful Practice

Page 19: Welcome to Lead Evaluator Training 3 – Feedback and Coaching August 7 and August 9 2012.

What is the relationship between …

Evidence Based Observation practices we have been learning and the rubrics your district’s have chosen?

Labeling teacher practice and eventually scoring it depends on the agreed upon attributes of effective teaching practice and the language and construct of the rubric.

Page 20: Welcome to Lead Evaluator Training 3 – Feedback and Coaching August 7 and August 9 2012.
Page 21: Welcome to Lead Evaluator Training 3 – Feedback and Coaching August 7 and August 9 2012.

Quality evidence is….OARS

• Objective and specific – free of bias/opinion, quantified

• Aligned to indicators/elements of the rubric –e.g. 3.1c –NYSUT – Engages Students

• Representative – Evidence in all areas of teacher performance

• Sufficient - Enough evidence to make a final judgment

Teaching and Learning Solutions

Page 22: Welcome to Lead Evaluator Training 3 – Feedback and Coaching August 7 and August 9 2012.

Trends in evidence from the Lead Evaluator 2 evidence collection assignment:

• Increased objectivity, however, still some tendency to summarize and to judge e.g.,

“teacher gave little wait time”

“teacher called on numerous students”

“teacher asked effective questions”

“transition was smooth”

“the objective was posted on the board”

Page 23: Welcome to Lead Evaluator Training 3 – Feedback and Coaching August 7 and August 9 2012.

Trends in evidence continued…..

• More balance between teacher words/actions and student words and actions…keep this up! Especially quotations….Having this information will help you give more concrete/meaningful feedback to the teacher.

T -“As a refresher, look at the geography of Greece. How did that contribute to the rise of city states?”

S – “mountains in Greece that created isolation”T – “Anything else that created the city states?”S2 – “surrounded by water”T – “what’s going to be hindered by the isolation of city states?”S3 – “isolation”S4 – “trade”

Page 24: Welcome to Lead Evaluator Training 3 – Feedback and Coaching August 7 and August 9 2012.

Trends in evidence continued…

• You were labeling your evidence correctly when you had to sort it and label it as:

1. Check for understanding (all students, relevant observable behavior so the teacher can see they “got it”)

2. Engaged learners ( all students, consistently, relevant to the outcome)

3. Effective questions (range of questions, all invited to think, time to think)

4. Teach to an Outcome (all (questions, activities, feedback) relevant to outcome, time used efficiently)

Page 25: Welcome to Lead Evaluator Training 3 – Feedback and Coaching August 7 and August 9 2012.

Quality evidence is….OARS

• Objective and specific – free of bias/opinion, quantified

• Aligned to indicators/elements of the rubric –e.g. 3.1c –NYSUT – Engages Students

• Representative – Evidence in all areas of teacher performance – We picked 4 areas – 4 -5 pieces of evidence for each area

• Sufficient - Enough evidence to make a final judgment – Teaching and Learning Solutions

Page 26: Welcome to Lead Evaluator Training 3 – Feedback and Coaching August 7 and August 9 2012.

Ready to observe, “script”, label and give feedback?Student engagement - What is the language in your rubric with respect to student engagement?

Page 27: Welcome to Lead Evaluator Training 3 – Feedback and Coaching August 7 and August 9 2012.

Elida Gallegos – ELA Lesson

• Observe and take down evidence

ELA Lesson Outcomes• Students will use listening, speaking, reading and writing to improve

comprehension

• Students will understand how to use key details to summarize

• Students will work collaboratively to summarize a chapter from the novel, Bridge to Terabithia

• Students will think creatively

Page 28: Welcome to Lead Evaluator Training 3 – Feedback and Coaching August 7 and August 9 2012.

Next steps…

• “clean up” your evidence• Sort through evidence – What evidence will you use

to give Elida feedback on student engagement?• Create an additional word document you can sort

this into (copy and paste) or use the paper provided if you choose

• Next time – we will use this evidence, language from our rubrics specific to student engagement and a version of conversation protocol to lead a five minute conversation with a colleague (Elida)

Page 29: Welcome to Lead Evaluator Training 3 – Feedback and Coaching August 7 and August 9 2012.

Feedback to us on blue sheets.

Thank you so much. See you soon.

Page 30: Welcome to Lead Evaluator Training 3 – Feedback and Coaching August 7 and August 9 2012.

Welcome to

Lead Evaluator Training 3 –

Feedback and Coaching

August 7 and August 9 2012

Page 31: Welcome to Lead Evaluator Training 3 – Feedback and Coaching August 7 and August 9 2012.

Your thoughts and learning….

• The focus on specific teaching areas and examples has been helpful

• Time to discuss specifically within districts about how you looked a the lessons you viewed – ready with the next step – aligning to the chosen rubrics – using and becoming more familiar with the rubric language

• *focus on conversations to help move teachers forward

Page 32: Welcome to Lead Evaluator Training 3 – Feedback and Coaching August 7 and August 9 2012.

Next steps…

• “clean up” your evidence• Sort through evidence – What evidence will you use

to give Elida feedback on student engagement?• Create an additional word document you can sort

this into (copy and paste) or use the paper provided if you choose

• Next time – we will use this evidence, language from our rubrics specific to student engagement and a version of a conversation protocol to lead a five minute conversation with a colleague (Elida)

Page 33: Welcome to Lead Evaluator Training 3 – Feedback and Coaching August 7 and August 9 2012.

Evaluator Led Conversation – Specific feedback

• It is a planned conversation. (outcomes!)• A relationship has been established and that

relationship building is continuing.

A. Opening (Thank you, positive specific praise)

B. Probe – ( open ended statements/questions designed to offer the teacher an opportunity to talk about their decision-making)

C. Target – present the data – “bite sized” area(s) of focus – label with the rubric*

D. Action Plan

E. Closing - next steps*

Page 34: Welcome to Lead Evaluator Training 3 – Feedback and Coaching August 7 and August 9 2012.

Giving verbal feedback – OAR(s)

• You will take the objective specific evidence you have and align in to the language of your rubric as you give “practice” feedback.

• Take some time now to prepare – jot down specific things you will say to “open”, focus on the target, present data, label and “close”

Page 35: Welcome to Lead Evaluator Training 3 – Feedback and Coaching August 7 and August 9 2012.

Giving Feedback – Practice in Trios

• Principal A B C Gives verbal feedback• Teacher B C A• Observer C A B

• The observer will give “feedback” - What did you notice specifically about the “principal” as they conveyed feedback? OAR (S)

Page 36: Welcome to Lead Evaluator Training 3 – Feedback and Coaching August 7 and August 9 2012.

Let’s debrief

Click icon to add picture

Stop/Start/Continue

Page 37: Welcome to Lead Evaluator Training 3 – Feedback and Coaching August 7 and August 9 2012.

Recommended practices for the teacher improvement process and planning

Fostering teacher ownership and providing focus and support

“The principal owns the responsibility for defining the areas where improvement is needed. The teacher must share ownership for the

development and implementation of the plan.” Michelle Howser

Page 38: Welcome to Lead Evaluator Training 3 – Feedback and Coaching August 7 and August 9 2012.

Recommended practices for the teacher improvement process and planning

Establish Assistance team

• Shares in the setting of goals and developing the plan ( teacher, primary supervisor, curriculum specialist, teacher mentor)

• Clearly communicates the school’s (districts’) commitment to improvement and growth

Select Focus area(s)

• Objectively communicate area(s) of teacher’s practice that are the focus of he plan.

Mrs. Friendly does not frame the learning (both the objective and the sequence of activities) for students and does not regularly communicate the reasons for activities.

Page 39: Welcome to Lead Evaluator Training 3 – Feedback and Coaching August 7 and August 9 2012.

Recommended practices for the teacher improvement process and planning

Develop Performance Goals

Select strategies, Activities/w/timetable

• Specific and measurableMrs. Friendly will communicate to students the lesson and unit objectives and the sequence of lesson and unit events.

• Targeted directly to goals and specific enough to be implemented effectively

• They need to be measurable• They assign the teacher responsibility for doing

the work.• They specify a timetable

Page 40: Welcome to Lead Evaluator Training 3 – Feedback and Coaching August 7 and August 9 2012.

Recommended practices for the teacher improvement process and planning

Determine need for support structures

Choose data collection sourcesWhat will be collected and who will collect it?

Decide on evidence to document progress

Page 41: Welcome to Lead Evaluator Training 3 – Feedback and Coaching August 7 and August 9 2012.

Teacher Improvement Plan

• A way of laying out the process guided by the recommendations… One Principal’s thinking

• What do the documents and process look like for you? – District conversation

• Pair-up with colleagues from another district to share thinking

Page 42: Welcome to Lead Evaluator Training 3 – Feedback and Coaching August 7 and August 9 2012.

Next steps….

Click icon to add picture

Page 43: Welcome to Lead Evaluator Training 3 – Feedback and Coaching August 7 and August 9 2012.

Upcoming opportunities…..

• SLO Assessment Development Work• The State Provided Growth Model

• Lead Evaluator Training for Teacher Evaluation

• Principal Evaluation work

• Rubric specific work – inter-rater agreement regionally

• Summer Network Team Institute

August 13 – 17• Effective Teaching Practice – examining best practice and the language

of specific rubrics chosen by districts (for teachers)

Page 44: Welcome to Lead Evaluator Training 3 – Feedback and Coaching August 7 and August 9 2012.

 “I would like to suggest that the ‘first thing’, the most important feature of our job description for each of us as educators, is to discover and provide the conditions under which people’s learning curves go off the chart. Sometimes its other people’s learning curves: those of students, teachers, parents, administrators. But at all times it is our own learning curve. ’’ 

Roland Barth

 

Page 45: Welcome to Lead Evaluator Training 3 – Feedback and Coaching August 7 and August 9 2012.

Feedback on blue sheets.

Thank you so much. See you soon.


Recommended