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Autor/inn/enRoussin, James L.; Zimmerman, Diane P.
TitelInspire Learning, Not Dread: Create a Feedback Culture That Leads to Improved Practice
QuelleIn: Journal of Staff Development, 35 (2014) 6, S.36-39 (5 Seiten)
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Spracheenglisch
Dokumenttypgedruckt; online; Zeitschriftenaufsatz
ISSN0276-928X
SchlagwörterTeacher Evaluation; Feedback (Response); Observation; Teacher Effectiveness; School Culture; Evaluators; Human Capital; Teachers; Principals
AbstractPolicymakers have turned to teacher evaluation as one way to ensure accountability for school reform. In most evaluation systems, the emphasis focuses on the external: test scores, observations of classroom practices, rubric based assessments, student feedback, evaluation, and student work. While these activities have a place in professional development, they distract from the most important variable of all: the teacher's mindset about continued growth and learning. How professionals receive and apply feedback is the cornerstone in any system for improving teacher performance. Feedback is most often given during teacher evaluations, after classroom observations, after walk-throughs, during peer reviews, and sometimes within the context of coaching. However, this leaves out the teacher's cognitive capital. Cognitive capital defines the inner resources of a teacher, which frames thought and shapes reflection before, during, and after practice--key measures of quality instruction (Costa, Garmston, & Zimmerman, 2014). When leaders foster a school culture that supports emotional resourcefulness and transparency, cognitive capital increases and individuals are more able to receive, interpret, and apply feedback to improve professional practice. This idea of incremental improvement through feedback--one teacher at a time, one classroom at a time--needs rethinking. Instead, reform efforts might be better served by promoting a culture that has learned how to receive and apply feedback in order to build collective wisdom. (ERIC).
AnmerkungenLearning Forward. 504 South Locust Street, Oxford, OH 45056. Tel: 513-523-6029; Fax: 513-523-0638; e-mail: NSDCoffice@nsdc.org; Web site: http://www.learningforward.org/news/jsd/index.cfm
Erfasst vonERIC (Education Resources Information Center), Washington, DC
Update2017/4/10
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