posted by:
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Laura Harnish
on May 15, 2003
at 9:20PM
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subject:
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levels of learning
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The teachers at my school have weekly meetings with a teacher leader for 9 weeks at a time. For example, I will visit the classroom for about thirty minutes and then the teacher and I will have a reflective dialogue about the lesson. The teachers select a goal at the beginning of the nine week period on which to focus. Goals include things like questioning skills, assessment techniques, or presenting instruction content. We've been operating on this model for several years. I'm wondering, though, is it possible for a teacher to not need this kind of support after awhile? Is there a point when they have cycled through all of the possible goals? I know that we are life long learners, but how do know when a teacher is at the maintaining level rather than a new learning kind of level? Is it simply a matter of looking at student achievement results? Classes with good test scores must have good teachers. Or is it the consistency? Teachers who employ good questioning skills (or other valued skills) on every lesson need different support than teachers who only employ the skills when conciously focusing on them. If there are teachers at different levels of growth such as new to the reform model, growing and developing skills, or maintaining skills; then how can professional development be differentiated for them? So what are your comments about the continuum of development I have just proposed here? Do you see teachers at those levels at your schools? Are there other levels? How do I determine which level a teacher is on?
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