I have
been an administrator for 8 years…8 years!!!! Time flies and there are times
that I want to run back into that bald headed 30 year-old’s office 8 years ago and yell…
“Really?!?! This is how you are going to grow your staff?
Really?” I think we all do the best we can in the moment and hope that we
find growth opportunities for our staff, but I can’t help but believe that
groups we started with were not given the same chance. Reflecting on
instructional practice is a clear gateway to the advancement of our staff
members, yet we continuously miss the mark on teaching teachers how to reflect.
I believe
reflection is one of the most important components in teacher growth. I
have not met many people who feel like we should not reflect on our
practice. However, when I ask people what true reflection means, I get as
many answers as people asked. Self-reflection should be about growth, but
if we don’t teach people how to reflect I think we end up on a surface level
that inhibits the learning of our staff.
For
years, I spent time with teachers asking them about the logistics of their
practice. How was the behavior? How did you feel like the lesson
went? Would you have changed anything? The most prevalent answer
from all of those meetings was… “I think the lesson was pretty good”.
When we ask teachers to reflect on a lesson, and they know that conversation is
going to work its way into a year-end evaluation, we are setting them up to be
guarded and cater to the administrator. If self-reflection is about
“self”, then why are we setting up our conversations to have teachers appease
the audience rather than inform their practice?
The
question that surrounds teacher reflection doesn't really start with
the reflection process…it starts with trust. If we are going to see
people grow in their craft, there has to be a culture of trust established
within the building. First and foremost, administrators need to trust
that teachers are doing the best they can and are willing to grow themselves
throughout the year. We all know that 2 observations of 30 minutes each
often end up in viewing lessons that are not typical of the daily
routine. We, as school leaders, are to blame for that concept…not our
teachers. If the evaluation system lends itself to a dog and pony show
for 60 of the 70,000 minutes of instruction in a year then the issue is
ours. We must get beyond teachers only reflecting on practice when we ask
them to as part of an evaluation system.
The
second component is teachers trusting administrators. I often tell our
staff…take a risk, do something outside of your comfort zone, make something
happen. That being said, not all do because they are afraid failure in
risk taking will be noted in an evaluation. One way to shift that
paradigm is to model the environment and ensure that the opinion leaders in the
building have support in taking risks. They need to feel validated in
their attempt to try something new. Most importantly, if you say risk taking
and failure (if those risks don’t bear fruit) will not be looked at negatively
on an evaluation…then you have to follow through. I would much rather
have a staff member take a risk and fail, than continue to teach as they have
for years, in a way that they were probably taught as a student, which only
worked for a small percentage of people who became teachers. This simply
continues a cycle of worksheets and compliance as opposed to engagement and
innovation.
Once
those pieces are established, the actual teaching of self-reflection can
start. We are taking the process slowly and using the Danielson Model as
a medium for reflection in instructional practice. We are discussing one
Domain (3-Instruction) and allowing teachers to start the self-reflection
process with specific practice to improve instruction. Our walkthrough
model will hopefully allow staff members to look at their own practice and
reflect on specific instructional components of what they do in the
classroom. The important component is that the self-reflection is for
them…not me. They don’t need to turn anything in, answer a ton of questions
that won’t help them in the future, or try to justify why something went well
or not in the classroom. They are the owners of their improvement…we help
facilitate that improvement. I am a huge Jim Knight fan (@jimknight99 on Twitter). His perspective on
self-reflection and a look back, look at, look forward practice is fantastic
and one we will use with our staff over the course of the next 18 months.
Teaching the process, having the resources, and most importantly, creating a
culture of trust will help us reach the goal of instructional improvement at
all levels.
Side note
and shameless plug…if anyone is interested in learning more about how we are
using self-reflection to teach the Danielson Model join me for a webinar on
February 12th from
4:00-4:30 CST. Link can be found at http://community.simplek12.com/scripts/student/webinars/view.asp?fb=1&id=734#.URZnUpxSMYk.twitter
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