What if we stopped grading lessons?

12
What if we stopped grading lessons? David Didau 7 th February 2014

description

A presentation on the perils and pitfalls of lesson observation for the National Teacher Enquiry Network Conference 7th February 2014

Transcript of What if we stopped grading lessons?

Page 1: What if we stopped grading lessons?

What if we stopped grading lessons?

David Didau7th February 2014

Page 2: What if we stopped grading lessons?

Why observe lessons?

• To check teachers are doing the ‘right’ things?

• To check that students are safe and happy?

• To improve the quality of teaching & learning?

Page 3: What if we stopped grading lessons?

Improving teaching & learning

• Is there a preferred teaching style?

• Progressive vs traditionalist

• What is ‘learning’?

Page 4: What if we stopped grading lessons?

Performance

Learning

Page 5: What if we stopped grading lessons?

Separating learning from performance

Performance is measurable but learning must be inferred from performance: it cannot be observed directly.

Robert A Bjork

Page 6: What if we stopped grading lessons?

‘Poor proxies’ for learning

• Students are busy: lots of work is done (especially written work)

• Students are engaged, interested, motivated• Students are getting attention: feedback,

explanations• Classroom is ordered, calm, under control• Curriculum has been ‘covered’ (i.e. presented to

students in some form)• (At least some) students have supplied correct

answers (whether or not they really understood them or could reproduce them independently)

Robert Coe, Improving Education: a triumph of hope over experience

Page 7: What if we stopped grading lessons?

The MET Project

• If a lesson is given a top grade, there’s a 78% chance a second observer will give a different grade

• If a lesson is given a bottom grade, there’s a 90% chance a second observer will give a different grade.

http://www.metproject.org/downloads/MET_Composite_Estimator_of_Effective_Teaching_Research_Paper.pdf

Page 8: What if we stopped grading lessons?

Do we know a successful teacher when we see one?

• Fewer than 1% of lessons judged inadequate are genuinely inadequate

• Only 4% of lessons judged outstanding actually produce outstanding learning gains

• Overall, 63% of judgements will be wrong

Strong, M., Gargani, J., & Hacifazlioglu, O. (2011). Do we know a successful teacher when we see one? Experiments in the identification of effective teachers. Journal of Teacher

Education, 62(4), 367–382.

Page 9: What if we stopped grading lessons?

What about ‘formative’ observations?

• Personal preference & bias is hard to avoid

• We focus on performance• If you can do it you can spot it?• Can observation really miss so

much?.

Page 10: What if we stopped grading lessons?

Improving observation

• Don’t make assumptions• You’re there to learn• Make it reciprocal• Focus on instructional support• Watch the teacher or the pupils?

Lessons from Lemov

Page 11: What if we stopped grading lessons?

Quality Assurance

• What are your non negotiables?– Pupils’ work– Quality of marking– Responses to feedback– Punctuality & attendance – Professionalism

• How would lesson observation be used to ensure these things were happening?

Page 12: What if we stopped grading lessons?

There’s nothing good or bad but thinking makes

it so.

@LearningSpylearningspy.co.uk

[email protected]