Teacher Self-Supervision: Why Teacher Evaluation Has Failed and What We Can Do About it
By (Author) William Powell
Hodder Education
John Catt Educational Ltd
8th November 2015
United Kingdom
Professional and Scholarly
Non Fiction
Teaching skills and techniques
Schools and pre-schools
371.12
Paperback
152
Width 156mm, Height 232mm, Spine 10mm
260g
Many, perhaps even most schools, are not reaching their potential to be places of collective learning. The authors believe that one of the greatest impediments to realizing this vision is the deleterious effect of traditional systems of teacher evaluation. Rather than infantilizing teachers, we need to empower them. Traditional forms of teacher evaluation have failed. They are riddled with negative expectations about teachers and what motivates them. Taken together, these underlying assumptions form a pernicious cloud of counterproductive expectations that many teachers will "live down to". Inadvertently, the traditional system of teacher evaluation has created a vicious cycle of "self-sealing logic." It is now time for teachers to reclaim their profession, the process of which involves a relentless focus on adult learning: professional learning that is self-directed. The more dynamic and stimulating the culture of adult learning, the more dynamic and stimulating student learning will be.