Teacher Evaluations

The other day, my husband and I were talking about teacher evaluations and all the expectations and accountability that are placed on teachers.

His perspective is from the business world and being a manager/administrator who did annual “reviews” of his employees.

First of all, they called them “reviews”, which is perhaps more appealing than “evaluations”.

Evaluation = from the Latin valere meaning to be of value or worth.

Instead of reviewing or taking another view(point) or look at the person’s performance over the past year with the intention of deciding what went well and what needs to change (plus-delta approach)…

…it seems that what administrators are being asked to do is determine what “value” to place on a teacher or decide what that teacher is “worth”.

I prefer a different model for reviewing or evaluating people’s participation and performance in an event called the “plus-delta” approach.

Technically, the “plus-delta” model was designed and developed by the aviation and medical industries as a debriefing system for meetings, simulations and practices.

This approach uses more “improvement” oriented language rather than language that may be considered too negative, judgmental and discouraging. 

How could the delta-plus model be better implemented in education, 

especially for teacher evaluations?

(more…)

Teacher Tales #42 – Finding a way, showing up and making accommodations: JoAnne, ESL Bilingual District Supervisor, leader/mentor and educational champion for all

Teacher Tales
Teacher Tales #42 - Finding a way, showing up and making accommodations: JoAnne, ESL Bilingual District Supervisor, leader/mentor and educational champion for all
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In this episode, we meet JoAnne, a district supervisor in New Jersey who wears many hats. Originally, JoAnne set out to become a lawyer. However, after working in a refugee center in college, JoAnne became impassioned to become a teacher and champion for ESL bilingual students. She became a mentor, leader and instrument for change. JoAnne realized that she was (just) a piece of a bigger “machine” at work and that she needed to show up and do her part to keep the machine running. She couldn’t control the whole machine, just the piece or part that she was in that machine. JoAnne tells us that this creates real power and a sphere of influence that can make a difference. Also, in a moment of vulnerability, JoAnne shares how an accident left her with a traumatic brain injury and how she had to learn to talk, walk, read and write again. Nonetheless, she doesn’t linger there, but instead shares how this has changed her perspective on learning, how the brain works, communication, accommodations and the power of listening. She also has some great advice about how to best deal with parents, something all teachers could use right now, correct?  Enjoy and be sure to tuck those pearls of wisdom away in a safe place where you can find them again when you most need them. Thank you, JoAnne! You are a true inspiration to us all!

Teacher Tales #26 – Teacher’s role as a change-maker, state-shifter and dreamweaver: Kim @FreetheMindCo, mother, educator and thought leader

Teacher Tales
Teacher Tales #26 - Teacher’s role as a change-maker, state-shifter and dreamweaver: Kim @FreetheMindCo, mother, educator and thought leader
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In this episode, you will find hope, inspiration, support and direction from Kim, the founder of Free the Mind Co.  Education Week released a study that shows that teachers are more vulnerable to anxiety and depression than any other profession. Another survey shows that over 50% of teachers are burned out and want to leave the profession. Through her experiences working with Steven Spielberg on Schindler’s List, with Holocaust Survivors, with Apartheid Activists in South Africa and with orphan and vulnerable children affected by HIV aids, Kim has garnered a wealth of knowledge, compassion, heart, vision and purpose to make the world a better place. To this end, she has partnered with her son, Brent, to create resources, support, trainings and curriculum that help teachers, students and parents navigate their way through anxiety and depression and to develop greater self-awareness and SEL skills. Kim and Brent discovered that anxiety and other emotional challenges stop potential and keep dreams from coming true, but that teachers have the power to create change by shifting the state of being of a child in any given moment and to help them weave together their potential and their dreams. This is a call and an invitation to all teachers to re-examine what is important in the classroom, to re-focus and to create, manifest and weave together a whole new world of potential and possibilities for all children. After, all, the children are watching us, as adults and role models, and we have a choice in every moment how we will show up for them. Success in school is not measured by tests, data, funding, titles or whatever “gizmos and gadgets galore” we own…it is about how we prepare students to answer life’s greatest questions and to learn how to W.I.N., by asking this essential question: What’s.Important.Now?

Check out the resources, courses, support and trainings (including one with Spirit of Teaching)  at freethemindco.com or you can reach out to spiritofteaching.org