Sunday, February 26, 2012

Thoughts About Co-Teaching


I believe that the co-teaching model can be extremely valuable with the right supports in place.  For it to be effective, building leaders need to establish a clear vision for what co-teaching should look like and how it will support student achievement.  The co-teaching model needs to be introduced to staff in a way that is non-threatening or overbearing.  Planning and teaching with another individual is an intimidating process, especially for someone who is used to teaching by themselves.  With that said, there are a number of challenges that arise with co-teaching models.  Co-teachers need at least one common planning time per week.  They need a large amount of support so that they can effectively co-teach, not just coexist.  They need to learn how to work closely with another individual and use student data to drive their instructional decisions.  As a new concept for teachers, this requires a lot of professional development and encouragement.

When evaluating a co-teaching team, does a supervisor write up two individual teacher observations or one? Since co-teaching is built on a collaborative model, I believe the evaluation needs to look at both teachers as one team.   I also think it’s important to keep the students as the primary focus of the evaluation instead of the teacher actions.  Are the students actively engaged and receiving an appropriate amount of support?  If observations show that students are struggling, then one needs to look at other factors in the classroom.  What kinds of roles do the teachers serve?  Are strategies being applied to affect all learners?

Another challenge that leaders may encounter is determining how to evaluate regular education teachers and special education teachers.  Should they be evaluated on different terms or by different supervisors?  I think that co-teaching opens up the lines of communication between regular education and special education, which is much needed.  Building principals are responsible for effectively evaluating all teachers and staff – not just regular education teachers.  In order to do that, they need to be informed about best practices.

As curriculum is upgraded for the 21st century, co-teaching becomes even more valuable because teachers can support each other with their integration of technology in the classroom.  If the special education teacher has knowledge of Universal Design for Learning (UdL), he/she can incorporate aspects of UdL into classroom instruction to help all kids succeed.

1 comment:

  1. You make a good point about teachers being evaluated as a team, if they are teaching as a team, they should be evaluated as a team.

    ReplyDelete