Evaluating Teacher Performance
Change, administration, assessment, classroom, leadership, pedagogy, teaching Tagged Change, reform, teacher evaluation, teacher performance May 29th, 2008A recent report by the Education Sector and the FDR Group “surveyed 1,010 K–12 public school teachers about their views on the teaching profession, teachers unions, and a host of reforms aimed at improving teacher quality.”
Here is one finding that I think merits serious thought:
Only 26 percent of teachers say that their most recent formal evaluation was useful and effective in helping them to improve their teaching. Seventy-nine percent support strengthening the formal evaluation of probationary teachers. And nearly a third of teachers (32 percent) say that tenured teachers should be evaluated on an annual basis.
I can remember some of my “formal” evaluations. They were typically done by an overburdened administrator who had the monumental task of evaluating every teacher in the building at
least twice a year in addition to all of their other responsibilities. Often, those evaluation visits where rescheduled due to unexpected events that arose. And, all of those evaluations where scheduled ahead of time. The result - teachers (myself included) would plan a smashing “song and dance” lesson that included those key elements that we all knew the principal liked and was looking for. Once the evaluation was over, it was back to business as usual. In the evaluation de-briefing (which also had to be scheduled with every teacher), unless there was anything glaringly abhorrent, most constructive criticisms were insignificant at best.
So, it is no surprise to see the low statistic of only 26 percent of teachers reporting that they found their most recent formal evaluation useful and effective. Along the same lines, 32 percent of tenured teachers feel that they should be evaluated on an annual basis. That makes total sense if almost the same percentage feel that those evaluations are not all that beneficial.
So, what to do? Are K-12 administrators perhaps not the best candidates to do faculty evaluations? Are they too busy to really give useful constructive criticism? Is their own teaching craft stale and their own idea pool dry? Can we expect building administrators to really be excellent teachers as well? Perhaps you consider yourself lucky to have an administrator who is still an active practitioner and who is keeping up with teaching innovation. But, my guess is that if you did a PowerPoint, projected a web page, sang a cool song, or did a nifty craft, you would get kudos - assuming your students were well-behaved (notice I didn’t use the term “meaningfully engaged”).
Who said education reform was simple? Are new models of teacher growth and evaluation needed?





May 29th, 2008 at 7:31 pm
[...] Evaluating Teacher Performance (EdTechTrek) [...]
May 31st, 2008 at 6:58 am
“Who said education reform was simple? Are new models of teacher growth and evaluation needed?”
Big time. Get this - I have been teaching since 1996 and have NEVER been evaluated (though I think at least 2 were scheduled). The last time I was evaluated as a teacher was when I was a student teacher (and even then it wasn’t by a building administrator but by my advising teacher and university advisor!)
May 31st, 2008 at 9:41 am
Tracy, I fear that your story is none to rare. Thanks for sharing it. The importance of self-evaluation, communities of practice, and personal learning networks afforded by new communication technologies become even more essential for continued professional growth. But, what about teachers who don’t consider any of this their responsibility and remain cloistered away in their own manila folders year after year?
I wonder if we could set up virtual teacher evaluation with UStream, for example, where those in our own PLNs would be willing to observe and evaluate us? It is used by some who are presenting… but what about using it as a tool for evaluation? Certainly takes putting your neck out there, huh!
As I am writing this, I am envisioning a wiki where willing victims… I mean participants… could add their teaching time schedule and others could add themselves as evaluators and scedule an evaluation time. Teachers would just need to subscribe to event updates to receive notification that they have an evaluator or evaluators. And, imagine the backchannel information that could also be beneficial from multiple evaluators as they reflect on what they are seeing. Hmmmm… I like it. What do you think? Of course, there would be the issue of filtering and having students viewed in their classrooms to deal with.
May 31st, 2008 at 4:49 pm
I like it, too. Though the issue about students being viewed online could be a tricky one to deal with. At the same time, I imagine that most parents, when presented with such an idea, may like the notion of ongoing teacher evaluation! (at least, I hope they would!).
So, we like it. Though I don’t mind if people pop by my classes unannounced. I like it when other teachers come in, or when admin drops by. I know a lot of teachers who have a strictly closed door policy when it comes to their classrooms…I can only imagine the staff room conversation around this!
May 31st, 2008 at 9:16 pm
Yes… I would like to be a fly on that staff room wall!!
June 25th, 2008 at 12:13 am
I would love to get involved in such a process. I have been teaching for 28 years and have just started working toward and administration endorsement. Please keep me posted.
June 25th, 2008 at 12:52 pm
Karen, it is so nice to hear from a teacher who is willing to be involved in a process that puts everything out in the open. So many teachers would rather just shut the door. It is also interesting to think that one’s physical door could be shut, yet one’s virtual door could be open to many!