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Introduction to Supervision EDCL 5348 1:30 p.m. - 4:10 p.m. Summer II 2010 Sherry Lepine, Ph.D.
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Introductions Groups of 3 or 4 Ask only these 2 questions: Where are you from? What do you do? Based on the answers to the 2 ?’s, mentally guess (not aloud) 1. The person's favorite kind of food, favorite genre of music, and favorite pastime. Do not share your predictions. Repeat until all group members have answered
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Whole Group Select one person to go first. He/She introduces the person on the right and shares the 3 predictions about the person. The person shows, one, two, or three fingers to indicate how many are right, or a fist to show none are right. Continue until all have shared.
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Next The person tells which of the predictions were right and the answers to the questions Return to your seats.
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Perceptions Are colored by our pre-conceived notions What information did you use to make your guesses? What pre-conceived notions do we make about students in our classrooms?
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Take the Awareness Test http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ahg6qcgo ay4 When concentrating on one aspect of our students, we can miss many other important details.
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Dimensions of Culture For the next activity you will need two colored cards, one green, one purple This a forced choice activity To choose the top statement, raise the purple card To choose the bottom statement, raise the green card
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Which would you expect to be taught in the classroom? Children should be taught: To confront problems with interpersonal relationships directly To be sensitive and avoid embarrassing confrontations with people
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Which would you expect to be taught in the classroom? Children should be taught: To feel that everyone is equal, or That there are levels of status relative to age, family, role, profession, income and level of education?
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Which would you expect to be taught in the classroom? Children should be taught: A successful person works hard, does his/her personal best and always strives for excellence A successful person recognizes the importance of working together to achieve excellence
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Dimensions of Cultural Variability EqualityHierarchy Direct Indirect Individual Group/Collectivist Brooks Peterson, 2004
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Everyday We Force Students to Choose Between: Home Culture and School Culture
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Understanding Differences in Supervision “Supervisors of instruction are expected to work with teachers in the same way that we expect teachers to work with students…
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…by celebrating diversity and responding to that diversity in ways that enhance learning for all.” Pajak (2003) p.20-21
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When you think about diversity… Digital native vs. digital immigrant Highly experienced vs. new to the profession Preferred styles of perceiving, judging and communicating about reality
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Understanding the Clinical Cycle Do you agree that teachers benefit from expert assistance and feedback about their classroom performance? Answer with your 3 O’clock partner: What does good teaching look like? List or explain several features or characteristics of good teaching. Decide who will share
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Good teaching is… Students sitting in rows Teacher at front of room Students working problems at the board How will you respond when you see this? A Native American School c. 1895
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What is Clinical Supervision? Stage 1: Pre-observation Conference Stage 2: Classroom Observation Stage 3: Data Analysis and Strategy Stage 4: Conference Stage 5: Post Conference Analysis
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Questions to Ponder… Who should provide feedback to teachers? How should feedback be delivered? When in a teacher’s career is supervision most helpful? Why is clinical supervision important?
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“ …Supervisors of instruction, no less than teachers, should make a deliberate effort to honor and legitimate perspectives and practices that differ from their own preferred styles of… The Foundation of This Class Rests Upon the Following Belief:
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Differentiated Supervision …perceiving, judging, (sensing), thinking about and communicating about reality.” Pajak (2003) p.4
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Four Families of Clinical Supervision 1.Original Clinical Models – stress importance of collegial relationships, cooperative discovery of meaning and development of unique teaching styles 2.Artistic/Humanistic Models – not step-by- step, emphasis on open interpersonal relations and personal intuition, artistry and idiosyncrasy
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Four Families, Continued 3.Technical/Didactic Models – draw from process-product and effective teaching research. Feedback that reinforces certain “effective” behaviors or predetermined models of teaching to which teachers are expected to conform.
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Four Families, Continued 4. Developmental/Reflective Models – Sensitive to individual differences and the social, organizational, political and cultural contexts of teaching. Encourages teachers to reflect on their practice, foster growth and promote justice and equity
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Dr. Waite - Dialogic Supervision Developmental/Reflective Model Key Feature: Instead of using an instrument – the supervisor and the teacher mutually (re)construct the lesson in dialogue, each from their point of view Asks: 1. What is the role of the teacher in supervision? 2. What is the role of the supervisor? 3. What purpose does supervision serve?
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Homework Assignment http://www.keirsey.com/personalityzone/index.asp http://www.personalitypage.com
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