Tuesday, January 29, 2019

Micro-Teaching: Using Technology to Innovate Instruction

Check out this article by Doug Fisher and Nancy Frey on Micro-Teaching. Coaching and innovating instruction goes to all new levels when video recording of student learning takes place. Have you ever done this? Share your experiences! If you want to do this or learn more about the process- Leverage Learning Group is here to help! #ALLmeansALL


Show & Tell: A Video Column / The Micro-Teaching Advantage
Douglas Fisher and Nancy Frey
Videotaping a teacher's practice makes for a better debrief, more learning.

Technology has transformed the ways teachers and leaders conduct much of their work. Classrooms are filled with smartboards, audience-response systems, and tablets. We take attendance electronically, autodial parents with students' absences, and spend hours each week on email. But one area hasn't reflected this change: the process of observation, coaching, and feedback. By and large, peers, coaches, and administrators still visit classrooms, observe a colleague teaching, and schedule a time to debrief with that teacher.
The Trouble with Tradition
There are at least two problems with this. The first centers on the fact that the observation focuses more on the teaching and less on the learning. Too often, the observer attends to what the teacher is doing, documenting what the teacher says during the entire observation. The debrief conversation focuses on the teacher's instructional moves; little attention is paid to whether students learned anything.
Admittedly, it's hard to focus on everything happening in the classroom when you observe. We often have to remind ourselves to "look down as often as we look up." By that, we mean that we should pay attention to the students, the tasks they're completing, and whether there is evidence of learning, rather than just looking up to see what the teacher is doing.
The second problem is that the debrief tends to focus on what the observer perceived—which can be disputed by the person teaching. We've heard of administrators telling teachers things like, "You only called on students in the front of the classroom," "Several students weren't engaged," or "I liked the way you used gestures to make your point." When feedback is relayed in this way, a teacher may or may not remember the situation well enough to be able to reflect on her or his practice. Or the teacher may remember it differently or have an alternative perspective.
This can devolve into a he said/she said situation in which the observer loses any ability to encourage growth. In fact, some teachers are impervious to the feedback they receive from classroom observations because they have a pre-existing "confirmation bias" about their teaching and only accept examples that confirm what they already believe. In addition, some teachers suffer from a "halo effect": They use the experiences of a few students to generalize about what's happening with all students' learning. When concrete evidence isn't part of the discussion, teaching—and learning—might not change. Worse, a teacher may think that the "expert" (the person coming to observe) knows it all—and that he or she just needs to be told how to teach. That's not an effective way to create change.
Enter Micro-Teaching
One way to get past these limitations is to video-record a short segment of a teacher's practice. Not too many years ago, it would have required a Herculean effort to video-capture what goes on in a classroom. Few people had portable video equipment with high-quality sound capabilities. But now we all do! Mobile phones and tablets are excellent devices for capturing real-time learning environments.
We recognize that many educators are wary of being recorded; they fear the "evidence" could be used against them. Thus, as coaches and leaders embrace the use of technology for observation and feedback, they should consult with teachers in advance and clearly outline the appropriate and inappropriate uses of such recordings. For example, in some schools, the digital files are deleted after the discussion. In others, the observer uses the teacher's technology to record so that the file is never in the observer's hands. It can also help to start by recording only teachers who volunteer and allowing others to join in over time.
We call using a video clip (of a teacher giving a lesson or leading an activity) to spark discussion about that teacher's practice micro-teaching.1  We believe the day is coming when micro-teaching will be commonplace.
There is strong evidence that micro-teaching works. In his 2012 research review, John Hattie collected a large number of meta-analyses, or statistical compilations of many studies on the same topic.2  His findings suggest that the average impact on learning of any instructional practice is .40 (this effect size represents a magnitude, or how strong the impact could be). Micro-teaching has an effect size of .88, more than double the average impact.


Watching It Work
Simply video-recording classrooms won't result in the impact noted in Hattie's review. Each video clip must serve as fodder for the discussion a teacher has with a colleague about what that clip reveals. Rather than an observer telling a teacher what he or she saw, the video can be used to encourage the teacher to notice particular moves he or she is making, and the impact those moves have on students' learning.
You can see such a discussion in the video accompanying this column. Two math teachers at Health Sciences High and Middle College in San Diego—Heidi Allen and Joseph Assof—watch a video of Heidi teaching and discuss what they notice. Joseph is Heidi's peer coach, and vice versa. They work together to improve outcomes for both their students; sometimes Heidi observes and records Joseph and other times he records her.
Note that during their discussion, Joseph uses skills in cognitive coaching and reflective teaching to ensure that he doesn't tell Heidi what he thinks about the lesson, but rather thinks with her about what they observe. Both teachers ask reflective questions as they watch the clip. They ponder the impact of specific moves and note things Heidi could have done that might have led to increased learning. Consistent with a micro-teaching approach, they focus on short segments of the video, dissecting instructional moves and students' responses to those moves. In other words, they don't limit their conversation to teaching; learning is also important.
Consequential Conversations

The quest for better learning need not be limited to developing instructional strategies and tools. We can also use micro-teaching to foster honest, reflective conversations about what is being taught andlearned in a classroom. Many of these evidence-based conversations won't be easy. But they will be consequential, impacting both a teacher's teaching and a students' learning.

Educational Leadership, February 2019

Friday, September 28, 2018

Part 4: Supporting Reading Comprehension With Strategies That WORK!



Here we go again!  We are continuing our blog conversation on strategies to support reading comprehension instruction.  Previously we have talked big picture research and introduced FIVE strategies: Monitoring, Metacognition, Graphic Organizers, Question-Answer-Relationship, and Generating Questions.  Today we conclude our discussion with a few more instructional innovations Classroom Discussions and Annotating Text.



  • Monitoring
  • Metacognition
  • Graphic Organizers
  • Question-Answer-Relationship
  • Generating Questions
  • Classroom Discussion
  • Annotating Text


Classroom Discussion

When students have the ability to engage in sustained classrooms discussions about texts, they think and talk about a text beyond its literal meaning. When asked questions that evoke discussion, ones that don't have a simple one answer, it encourages students to delve deeper into the text and listen to and respond to other students and their understanding. 

Classroom discussion is comprehension strategy that involves the entire class in a discussion. The teacher poses quality questions and students get together as a class to discuss possible responses. Classroom discussion allows students to improve communication skills by voicing their opinions and thoughts. Teachers also benefit from classroom discussion as it allows them to see if students comprehend the concepts presented in the text. Moreover, a classroom discussion creates an environment where everyone learns from each other.

Classroom Discussion strategies that have proven to be effective for reading comprehension are:

·     ACE the Question:  During classroom discussion, students are required to Answer the question, Cite evidence for their answer, and Expand their thinking to demonstrate their understanding. 
·     Expand (E4):  During the discussion, students are encouraged to build upon the responses of other students.  They are asked to Explain their thinking further, to Elaborate on their response, to provide an Example to support their thinking, or to ask a follow up question to Elicit more information. 
·     Point-Counterpoint: Teacher and/or students make a specific point about the text that could have potential perspectives.  Asking for a counterpoint that acknowledges the ideas of the original, but gives insight into another response is a great tool to liven classroom discussions. 

Annotating Text

Annotating is any action that deliberately interacts with a text to enhance the reader's understanding of, recall of, and reaction to the text. Annotating usually involves highlighting or underlining key pieces of text and making notes in the margins of the text.

By annotating a text, students understand what is happening in a text as they read it. As they annotate, the should note the author's main points, shifts in the message or perspective of the text, key areas of focus, and their own thoughts as they read. Annotating isn't just for students who feel challenged when reading academic texts. If students are competent readers, annotating will help them summarize a text, highlight important pieces of information, and ultimately prepare them for discussion and future writing prompts. 

Annotation strategies that have proven to be effective for reading comprehension are:


READ with a PEN: Students can annotate by hand or by using document software. Students can also annotate on post-its if there is a text that cannot be marked up. 

  • Use a key or legend that indicates what each marking is for, and use a different marking for each type of information. Example: Underline for key ideas, highlight for vocabulary, and circle for clarification.
  • If using highlighters, consider using different colors for different types of reactions to the text. Example: Yellow for definitions, orange for questions, and blue for disagreement/confusion.
  • Dedicate different tasks to each margin: Use one margin to make an outline of the text (thesis statement, description, definition #1, counter-argument, etc.) and summarize main ideas, and use the other margin to note your thoughts, questions, and reactions to the text.