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Lesson observation: new approaches, new possibilities, June 17 th 2015
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Lesson observation: new approaches, new possibilities, June 17 th 2015.

Dec 22, 2015

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Phyllis Jacobs
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Page 1: Lesson observation: new approaches, new possibilities, June 17 th 2015.

Lesson observation: new approaches, new possibilities,June 17th 2015

Page 2: Lesson observation: new approaches, new possibilities, June 17 th 2015.

“Conceptualizing observation as a tool for reciprocal learning has the potential to break down some of the traditional hierarchies and power imbalances associated with the observer-observee relationship, particularly if it is not linked to summative assessment for high stakes purposes, i.e. graded lesson observation.”

(O’Leary, 2014)

Page 3: Lesson observation: new approaches, new possibilities, June 17 th 2015.

•What is a coaching approach and where does it fit into ungraded observations?

•Which skills and approaches are needed?

•What kind of coaching questions can be used?

Page 4: Lesson observation: new approaches, new possibilities, June 17 th 2015.

“Sometimes you get real insight from someone who sees what you don’t, questions what you take for granted and makes you think differently. .”

(Coe, 2014)

http://54.72.152.175/blog/414/

Page 5: Lesson observation: new approaches, new possibilities, June 17 th 2015.

Listen actively and watch carefullyAsk questions that foster reflectionMine the coachee’s resources/experiencesFocus on coachee-created approachesMake suggestions only where appropriateHelp identify small action steps

Page 6: Lesson observation: new approaches, new possibilities, June 17 th 2015.

Pre-observation dialogue – learners’ needsLesson planning sessionsProfessional dialogue/feedback meetingAction planning sessionsReview meetingsSharing practice slotsUsed by managers, T&L coaches, peers

Page 7: Lesson observation: new approaches, new possibilities, June 17 th 2015.

You are going to meet someone new. Discuss your responses to a quote and

share your opinions and experiences.

Page 8: Lesson observation: new approaches, new possibilities, June 17 th 2015.

“It is obviously far easier to lecture, providing the solutions, than providing the skills to allow coaches to then allow coachees to find their own solutions. This process is longer but in the long-term the changes are far more durable.

Thomas WilliamsLearning Leader, Joseph Chamberlain College,

Birmingham.

Page 9: Lesson observation: new approaches, new possibilities, June 17 th 2015.

“Of course there is value to move across the continuum of mentoring to coaching as appropriate. .”

Kim NeveDirector of Curriculum, East Kent College

Page 10: Lesson observation: new approaches, new possibilities, June 17 th 2015.

“Using coaching to review the targets that were set following the observation feedback has been brilliant! Staff now value the dialogue which both supports and challenges them, but in a constructive way.”

Mandeep GillVice Principal Transforming Learning, John Ruskin College,

Croydon

Page 11: Lesson observation: new approaches, new possibilities, June 17 th 2015.

“Coaching encourages them to share good practice & adapt new ideas and strategies to suit their subject areas, in line with the professional standards requirements.”

Julie Sinclair,Head of Teaching, Learning and Organisational

Development, Westminster Kingsway College, London

Page 12: Lesson observation: new approaches, new possibilities, June 17 th 2015.

Thanks! Take a seat

Page 13: Lesson observation: new approaches, new possibilities, June 17 th 2015.

“It allowed an exploration of the teaching and learning that was not just tied in to a number. …it expanded the dialogue that occurred, challenged my thinking and led to changes in practice….”

Evaluation comment from a teacher being coached during an ungraded observation cycle, EHWLC

Page 14: Lesson observation: new approaches, new possibilities, June 17 th 2015.

•Teacher buy in and ownership•Increased follow through and development•Joined up QI work•Developing reflective practitioners•Creating professional dialogue skills•Becoming a learning organization?

Page 15: Lesson observation: new approaches, new possibilities, June 17 th 2015.

•Use the pack of materials to complete a short self-assessment of coaching skills for observations.

•Identify three areas for further exploration or development within your practice.

•Share those with a partner.

Page 16: Lesson observation: new approaches, new possibilities, June 17 th 2015.

Use the pack to choose and try out a set of coaching questions with a new partner.You can choose to:

Use the questions to discuss a recent lesson you taught or

Evaluate their usefulness to a recent lesson observation you have carried out/the process itself

Page 17: Lesson observation: new approaches, new possibilities, June 17 th 2015.

Which questions did you find particularly interesting or effective?

How could you adapt these questions for use in your context?

Page 18: Lesson observation: new approaches, new possibilities, June 17 th 2015.

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“Having control over the five key dimensions of choice of observer, focus of observation, form and method of feedback, resultant data flow and the next steps encouraged them to focus on improvement of practice rather than demonstration of existing good practice.” (McMahon et al, 2007)

Page 19: Lesson observation: new approaches, new possibilities, June 17 th 2015.

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For further support with planning, training or coaching

Email: [email protected]

http://joannemilesconsulting.wordpress.com/

Twitter: @JoanneMiles2

Want to develop/embed coaching?Want to develop/embed coaching?

Page 20: Lesson observation: new approaches, new possibilities, June 17 th 2015.

Paperback available:http://routledge.com/u/oleary/

Kindle version via Amazon:http://goo.gl/jisYgP