Working togetherfor success
Assoc Prof Barrie O’Connor4030CLS – 4201EBL Lecture 3, Sem. 1, 2009
Overview
What is collaboration? How used? Benefits? Empirical support… Assignment 1A + others!
Collaboration?
Working together to maximise outcomes“Two heads better than one” … 1+1 = 3
Key players?
Key players?
Responsible for up to 59% of the variance in student learning outcomes (Alton-Lee, 2003, p. x)
Key players?
Other team members? Class teachers class teachers Specialist staff
Special educators Advisory visiting teachers AVTs Learning assistance teachers… Teacher aides / school officers
Auslan Language Models (ALM); Indigenous learning assistants Library staff Therapy staff
Speech language, OT, Physio Office staff School administration Outside professionals (Health, Communities, Youth) Milpera (newly arrived refugees) at Chelmer
Key Message #1
A word of encouragement is
powerful.
Two viewpointsA. We get along very well. We are
both flexible and have developed similar expectations for students and similar classroom management styles. We feed off each others' comments and teaching styles. We switch which groups we work with so that we both get to perform a variety of roles with all our students. We work together, develop together, and bounce things off each other. Working as a team makes you feel good.
(Salend et al., 2002, p. 196)
B. I don't think I'd like to work in this
type of program again. She felt like a visitor in my classroom, and we never connected personally. We struggled because of differences in roles, teaching and communication styles, and philosophy. The students also were confused. They felt that I was the teacher and she was my aide. I felt like she was always watching me and judging me. We didn't know how to do it and received little support from our principal.
(Salend et al., 2002, p. 196)
Two viewpointsA. We get along very well. We are
both flexible and have developed similar expectations for students and similar classroom management styles. We feed off each others' comments and teaching styles. We switch which groups we work with so that we both get to perform a variety of roles with all our students. We work together, develop together, and bounce things off each other. Working as a team makes you feel good.
(Salend et al., 2002, p. 196)
B. I don't think I'd like to work in this
type of program again. She felt like a visitor in my classroom, and we never connected personally. We struggled because of differences in roles, teaching and communication styles, and philosophy. The students also were confused. They felt that I was the teacher and she was my aide. I felt like she was always watching me and judging me. We didn't know how to do it and received little support from our principal.
(Salend et al., 2002, p. 196)
In pairs, 1. select one viewpoint each to read; 2. List the key characteristics of the relationship; 3. compare and contrast your findings
Two viewpointsA. We get along very well. We are
both flexible and have developed similar expectations for students and similar classroom management styles. We feed off each others' comments and teaching styles. We switch which groups we work with so that we both get to perform a variety of roles with all our students. We work together, develop together, and bounce things off each other. Working as a team makes you feel good.
(Salend et al., 2002, p. 196)
Characteristics?
Two viewpointsA. We get along very well. We are
both flexible and have developed similar expectations for students and similar classroom management styles. We feed off each others' comments and teaching styles. We switch which groups we work with so that we both get to perform a variety of roles with all our students. We work together, develop together, and bounce things off each other. Working as a team makes you feel good.
(Salend et al., 2002, p. 196)
Characteristics?
Compatible Shared expectations, goals Share teaching values and
strategies Complementary efforts Flexible and variable roles and
tasks with students Working and growing together Satisfaction
Two viewpointsCharacteristics? B.
I don't think I'd like to work in this type of program again. She felt like a visitor in my classroom, and we never connected personally. We struggled because of differences in roles, teaching and communication styles, and philosophy. The students also were confused. They felt that I was the teacher and she was my aide. I felt like she was always watching me and judging me. We didn't know how to do it and received little support from our principal.
(Salend et al., 2002, p. 196)
Two viewpointsCharacteristics?
Dissatisfaction, retreat Social distance, disconnection,
lack of trust? Major differences in ways of
working and philosophy Students confused about role
relationships and status differentials
Defensiveness Principal disinterested,
unsupportive
B. I don't think I'd like to work in this
type of program again. She felt like a visitor in my classroom, and we never connected personally. We struggled because of differences in roles, teaching and communication styles, and philosophy. The students also were confused. They felt that I was the teacher and she was my aide. I felt like she was always watching me and judging me. We didn't know how to do it and received little support from our principal.
(Salend et al., 2002, p. 196)
Collaboration
At least two members….
Collaboration
Parity in membership
Collaboration
Voluntary engagement
CollaborationWhat do you
think…?
Shall we explore this together…?
Sharing decisions
Collaboration “a style for direct interaction between at least two coequal parties voluntarily
engaged in shared decision making as they work toward a common goal”
(Friend & Cook, 1992, p. 5). voluntary engagement in the activity parity among members Sharing decisions
Teacher responsibilities
“teachers need to demonstrate through their actions that collaboration is not about working with best friends or, necessarily, with like-minded people. Collaboration is about trust and respect. It's about working together to create better outcomes for all students. If teachers learn to like each other in the process, that is a bonus, but it is not a prerequisite. … in some schools, the professionals who collaborate are those who are most comfortable with each other; others are not part of the culture.
“Educators collaborate because doing so benefits students. They sometimes work together, even if they would not socialize and sometimes even if they have rather opposing views of teaching and learning.
“Collaboration is not a personal preference; it is a strategy to do what is best for students.
(Marilyn Friend on collaboration – interview with Brownell & Walther-Thomas, 2002, p. 226)
Key Message #2
We work to benefit
student outcomes.
What we bring… Interpersonal skills?
Self awareness (verbal and non-verbal behaviour) Self disclosure Openness Trust
Trusting and trustworthy Sending effective messages; clarity Harnessing thoughts and feelings - genuineness Active listening Challenging ideas – respectful confrontation Focus on ways forward rather than the past …
Willingness to engage Willingness to explore, problem-solve…
Self awareness
Self awareness
How well do I relate to others?
Self awareness
How well do I relate to others?
How do others
view me?
Self awareness
How well do I relate to others?
How do others
view me?
What non-verbal cues do I give?
Self awareness
How well do I relate to others?
How do others
view me?
What non-verbal cues do I give?
Do I listen carefully before
responding?
Self awareness
How well do I relate to others?
How do others
view me?
What non-verbal cues do I give?
Do I listen carefully before
responding?Am I quick to
judge?
Self awareness
How well do I relate to others?
How do others
view me?
What non-verbal cues do I give?
Do I listen carefully before
responding?Am I quick to
judge?
Am I willing to keep learning about how I
relate to others?
Self-disclosure
Risking our “skin” to let others in to our thoughts
and feelings
Self-disclosure
Risking our “skin” to let others in to our thoughts
and feelings
I’m feeling anxious about this approach?
I think we can make this
work…
Self-disclosure
Too defensive, we close up to
others’ thoughts and ideas
Self-disclosure
Too defensive, we close up to
others’ thoughts and ideas
It won’t work; I don’t want any part of it. Go
away…
Too risky for me!
I don’t know as much as she does; I’ll look stupid…
Self-disclosure
Inappropriate disclosure leaves us vulnerable
The parents are useless – don’t
even bother. Mother’s crazy…
Self-disclosure
Too much disclosure leaves us vulnerable; perhaps fatally
Self-disclosure
Inappropriate disclosure leaves us vulnerable
The parents are useless – don’t
even bother. Mother’s crazy…
No special cases in my room – I treat them all
the same!
Stages of group development
1. Forming
2. Storming
3. Norming
4. Performing
5. Mourning
Getting started
Uncertainty, discontent …
Gaining focus, clarifying roles …
Getting on with the task
Regrets leaving team at end
(Tuckman & Jensen, 1977)
Emerging models of support1950s Class teachers – sole responsibility Speech correctionists Guidance officers1960s Remedial teachers – pull-out/withdrawal1970s Teacher librarians Parent volunteers Resource teachers – in-class support/consultants Teacher aides Advisory visiting teachers1990s+ Learning support / enhancement teachers …
Emerging models of support
2000s Inclusive curriculum, educational adjustments AVTs, behaviour support coaching… Co-teaching Community of learners
Inside school Engaging wider community - e.g. Rennie (2006), working
in Indigenous communities – curriculum knowledge complemented by community knowledge)
An example of support
David Wassink – Youth Summit RepABC Radio National - Life Mattershttp://www.abc.net.au/rn/lifematters/stories/2008/2216561.htm
15 April 2005 - 4 mins
There were five subject areas: his was family and community. Now studying to be a primary school teacher, he was homeless for several years in his teens.
Principal – key leadership role “One outstanding principal I know worked in a school in which teachers
tended to stay in their classrooms, where small cliques existed but little collaboration occurred. He decided a change was in order, and he took specific steps to recreate the school culture.
He created lunch-hour study groups where teachers read about and debated various issues related to collaboration. He created working committees assigned to make important decisions concerning the school, and he taught committee members strategies for working effectively during meetings and for group problem solving.
He asked an external consultant to meet with staff to identify concerns and resolve them, including interpersonal issues. After 2 years, teachers and other professionals in the school worked closely together, and they saw collaboration as an essential element of all aspects of their jobs. This all happened because someone in the school set the standard and led staff to it; the someone who can do this is the principal.” (Marilyn Friend on collaboration – interview with Brownell & Walther-Thomas, 2002, p. 225)
Key Message #2
Engage in change processes to change student outcomes.
Evaluating collaborative teams
What roles do teachers perform? Are these roles meaningful? How often and for how long are teachers interacting with each
other? Who is initiating and ending these interactions? What is the nature
of these interactions (e.g., cooperative, reciprocal, supportive, complementary, individualistic)?
Which students are the recipients of these interactions? What are the outcomes of these interactions for teachers and their
students? What factors appear to promote and limit these interactions? Do the teachers have an equal-status relationship? To what extent do teachers coordinate their roles and blend their
skills? (Salend et al., 2005, p. 198)
Co-teaching models1. Instructor + roving individual assist
2. Station teaching content and space managed in classroom zones students rotates to staff positions
3. Parallel teaching joint planning / delivery to two heterogeneous groups
4. Alternative teaching large group (main instruction) + small group (intensive instruction; small
student : teacher ratio)
5. Team teaching planning / instructional parity between teachers alternate primary instructor role within individual lessons.
(Based on Cook & Friend, as cited in Kloo & Zigmond, 2008, p. 15)
Co-teaching fociKloo and Zigmond (2008)
Three broad lesson configurations from co-teaching: both teachers instructing a single group of students, each teacher actively instructing his or her own group of students, neither teacher involved in whole group instruction.
In all cases, either special education teacher or general education teacher serves in role of first teacher or second teacher.
The advantage of alternative framework: focuses on the number of instructional groups in a co-taught class; not on
interactions between teachers recognizes team teaching as just one of several configurations in which only one
lesson is occurring, and not as the ideal model of co-teaching.
Enhancing learner engagement1 Instructor + roving individual assist
2. Station teaching content and space managed in classroom zones students rotate to staff positions
3. Parallel teaching joint planning / delivery to two heterogeneous groups
4. Alternative teaching large group (main instruction) + small group (intensive instruction; small
student : teacher ratio)
5. Team teaching planning / instructional parity between teachers alternate primary instructor role within individual lessons.
TEACH
Co-teaching – increasing student opportunities to engage with learning
Target skills / strategies for student to learn. Express enthusiasm and optimism. Adapt instructional environment. Create opportunities for small-group or individual, direct,
intensive instruction. Help student apply skills learned to content classes.Kloo and Zigmond (2008, p. 15)
Special Ed Teacher SUPPORT Study content Understand big ideas Prioritize objectives Plan with general education teacher Observe Ss in class attending to instruction Rephrase, repeat, redirect Teach your coteacher to do it all on his/her own.
Kloo and Zigmond (2008, p. 16)
Co-teaching in content areas Collaboration … e.g. general and special educator
teaching in single classroom. shared instructional responsibilities and planning time Zigmond and Magiera (2001) - major goals of co-
teaching increasing access to a wider range of instructional options for
students with disabilities enhancing the participation of students with disabilities within
general education classes enhancing the performance of students with disabilities … but limited efficacy data
(Mastropieri et al., 2005)
Co-teaching in content areas Equivocal research findings on effectiveness
“After reviewing 23 studies, Weiss and Brigham (2000) listed several overall problems with co-teaching research, including the following:
1. omitting important information on measures,2. interviewing teachers only in cases in which co-teaching is successful,
(bias?)3. finding in many cases that teacher personality was the most important
variable in co-teaching success,4. inconsistent definition of co-teaching, and5. stating outcomes subjectively.
Weiss and Brigham stated that, overall, there were few reports of what teachers actually did in the classroom. This … is relevant and important because careful analyses of what co-teachers are doing and how this relates to student success can help facilitate efforts to better understand and improve co-teaching practices.”
(Mastropieri et al., 2005, p. 261)
What co-teachers do – secondary Hardy (2001) observed special and general educators in
secondary biology classrooms Presence of special education teachers in co-taught
classrooms – contributes to changes in general educators' instructional behaviors, specialized instruction (albeit limited) for students with
disabilities, a successful partnership, and success for some students with disabilities.
(Mastropieri et al., 2005, p. 261)
Observing co-teaching
Phase 1: What Makes a Good Lesson?
Phase 2: Does the Evaluation of a Co-Taught Class Require a Unique Perspective?
Phase 3: What Are the Essential Components Needed in an Observation Tool for Co-
Taught Lessons?
(Wilson, 2005, pp. 272-273)
What Makes a Good “Lesson” Lessons are student-centered Recognition of diverse learning styles of students Questions tap high-order thinking Engagement of students and evidence that students are on task Use of materials that are useful and available Attention to motivation Awareness of transitions Aims that are open-ended Summation at the middle and end of the lesson Activities that apply the information Connections made to students' experiences Positive student-teacher relationships and interactions Appropriate use of technology Adherence to state standards Reinforcement of previously learned and new material Positive teacher-teacher relationships
Does the Evaluation of a Co-Taught Class Require a Unique Perspective? e.g. Observed Yr 10 Biology & Yr 9 English Subtle and blatant differences between singly-
taught and co-taught classes: Roles of the teachers Instructional strategies Assessment processes
(Wilson, 2005, pp. 272-273)
Observing Co-Taught Lessons?
1.Meaningful roles for each teacher Can they be defined at any point in lesson? Meaningful roles, enhancing learning process? Do teachers vary their roles during lesson? Each teacher well suited to their roles? Both teachers comfortable with content and process? Special ed. teacher working with all students?
(Wilson, 2005, pp. 272-273)
Observing Co-Taught Lessons?
2.Promoting success for ALL students Are teachers engaged in co-planning? Focus on process and content, reinforcing important
skills? Directions clear? What strategies/modifications employed to assist
different learners? What adaptations to materials? How are students engaged actively in learning? How are students grouped? Fit the task? Purposeful? What reinforcement strategies used?
(Wilson, 2005, pp. 272-273)
Observing Co-Taught Lessons?
3.Evidence of success Are students answering/asking questions? Are students engaged in meaningful work throughout
the lesson? How are teachers assessing the learning needs of
each student? What evidence is there that all students have been
appropriately challenged?
(Wilson, 2005, pp. 272-273)
Evaluating co-op teaching teams
Teacher roles - what? meaningful? Teacher interactions - how often and for how long? Who initiates / ends interactions? What is their nature (e.g.,
cooperative, reciprocal, supportive, complementary, individualistic)? Which students receive interactions? What outcomes of interactions for teachers and their students? What factors promote / limit interactions? Do teachers enjoy equal-status relationship? How well do teachers coordinate roles and blend skills?
(Salend et al., 2002)
Clue for Assignment 1b
Read:McHatton, P. A., & Daniel, P. L. (2008). Co-teaching at the
pre-service level: Special education majors collaborate with English education majors. Teacher Education and Special Education, 31(2), 118-131.
References
Ashman & Elkins (2008) – Chapters 12Bahr, M. W., & Kovaleski, J. F. (2006). The need for problem-solving teams.
Introduction to the special issue. Remedial and Special Education, 27(1), 2-5.
Beamish, W., Bryer, F., & Davies, M. (2006). Teacher reflections on co-teaching a unit of work. International Journal of Whole Schooling, 2(2), 3-19.
Broer, S. M., Doyle, M. B., & Giangreco, M. F. (2005). Perspectives of students with intellectual disabilities about their experiences with paraprofessional support. Exceptional Children, 71(4), 415-430.
Brownell, M.T., & Walther-Thomas, C. (2002). An interview with Dr Marilyn Friend. Intervention in School and Clinic, 37(4), 223-228.
Brownell, M. Y., Adams, A., Sindelar, P., Waldron, N., & Vanhover, S. (2006). Learning from collaboration: The role of teacher qualities. Exceptional Children, 72(2), 169-182.
Friend, M., & Cook, L. (1992). Interactions: Collaboration skills for school professionals. New York: Longmans.
References
Gable, R. A., Mostert, M. R, & Tonelson, S. W. (2004). Assessing professional collaboration in schools: Knowing what works. Preventing School Failure, 48(3), 4-8.
Gately, S. E., & Gately, F. J. (2001). Understanding coteaching components. Teaching Exceptional Children, 33(4), 40-47. Giangreco, M.F., Edelman, S.W., Broer, S.M., & Doyle, M.B. (2001). Paraprofessional support of students with disabilities: Literature from the past decade. Exceptional Children, 68, 45-63.
Kloo, A., & Zigmond, N. (2008). Coteaching revisited: Redrawing the blueprint. Preventing School Failure, 52(2), 12-20.
McHatton, P. A., & Daniel, P. L. (2008). Co-teaching at the pre=service ;evel: Special education majors collaborate with English education majors. Teacher Education and Special Education, 31(2), 118-131. Mastropieri, M.A., Scruggs, T.E., Graetz, J., Norland, J., Gardizi, W., & McDuffie, K. (2005). Case studies in co-teaching in the content areas: Successes, failures and challenges. Intervention in School and Clinic, 40(5), 260-270.
Rennie, J. (2006). Meeting kids at the school gate: The literacy and numeracy practices of a remote Indigenous community. The Australian Educational Researcher, 33(3), 123-142.
Salend, S. J., Gordon, J., & Lopez-Vona, K. (2002). Evaluating cooperative teaching teams. Intervention in School and Clinic, 37, 195-200.
Tuckman, B.W., & Jensen, M.A.C. (1977). Stages of small group development revisited, Group and Organisation Studies, 2, 419-427.
Wilson, G.L. (2005). This doesn't look familiar! A supervisor's guide for observing co-teachers. Intervention in School & Clinic, 40(5), 271-275.