Saturday, October 27, 2018

How School Based Instructional Rounds Benefit The Educational System

By Scott Schmidt


There can be no doubt that the entire educational system is in a crisis. There are not enough resources. Teachers have to deal with very large classes and they often have to deal with disciplinary problems. The administrative load is heavy and they have to show support for extra curricular activities. This is all apart from their primary jobs, to teach. Luckily, with school based instructional rounds teachers get a chance to learn and to become better in their jobs.

Starting such a system is truly not difficult and it is extremely cheap. It simply means that a smaller group of teachers attend the class of a colleague, normally a well respected and experienced one, to see how he does his job. The whole idea is to learn from one another. There is never pressure placed upon anyone to participate as either observer or the teacher being observed.

Before attending a session, the observers meet in order to discuss the forthcoming visit and to set some goals. Observation sessions are short so the observers try to focus on one or two aspects only, normally the known strong points of the teacher under observation. He may be known, for example, for the excellent way in which he uses multimedia in his class. The session will then focus on that aspect of his teaching.

Observation sessions should never be confused with evaluation exercises. Observers do not evaluate the teacher that they observe. The sole purpose of the session is to learn. Everyone involved, including the students, are informed of this fact. The observers may take notes but they do not participate in the class activities at all, regardless. They do not provide any feedback either.

After each session, the observers meet once more. The purpose of this second meeting is to share their experiences and to tell each other what they have learned during the session. No criticism in any form is allowed and no report is compiled. Observers rather focus on ways in which they can implement the lessons that they have learned in their own classrooms. These meetings are deemed to be strictly confidential.

An overwhelming majority of participants in these sessions say that they derive many benefits from them. Not only can teachers learn from their colleagues, but they also get the chance to grow professionally and interact with their colleagues, something they do not get the chance to do often enough. It is no wonder that the popularity of observation sessions have grown tremendously and that even colleges and universities have caught on.

The critics are sceptical. They think that there is little benefit to be gained in short observation sessions and that the entire systems is much too informal. In addition, they accuse teachers being observed of taking special trouble to make a good impression upon their colleagues. Formal training is the only true answer to the problem of poor educational standards, these critics allege.

The fact remains that observation sessions are virtually free, simple to implement and very popular. Experts agree that they do make a difference. Anything that strive towards bettering the educational system and its standards should be supported and underwritten.




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