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McAllister, Felicia E. – ProQuest LLC, 2012
Co-teaching, the collaboration between a general education teacher and a special education teacher, is an option that is being perceived by many educators as the means to ensure that special education students have access to the same curriculum as their non-disabled peers as well as the specialized instructional strategies necessary to nurture…
Descriptors: Team Teaching, General Education, Special Education Teachers, Teacher Collaboration
Danielson, Charlotte – Educational Leadership, 2012
Classroom observation is a crucial aspect of any system of teacher evaluation. No matter how skilled a teacher is in other aspects of teaching--such as careful planning, working well with colleagues, and communicating with parents--if classroom practice is deficient, that individual cannot be considered a good teacher. Classroom observations can…
Descriptors: Teacher Effectiveness, Teaching Methods, Classroom Observation Techniques, Teacher Evaluation
Tschannen-Moran, Bob; Tschannen-Moran, Megan – Educational Leadership, 2011
Evaluation and coaching should not be linked, these authors argue. Although it's tempting for evaluators to identify deficiencies and then specify coaching as a remediation strategy, doing so turns coaching into a consequence of a poor evaluation and termination into a consequence of failed coaching. Another mistake is to use coaching as a data…
Descriptors: Coaching (Performance), Teacher Evaluation, Teacher Effectiveness, Professional Development
Eney, Patricia R.; Davidson, Evelyn – Journal of Developmental Education, 2012
With an increasing number of colleges and universities turning to part-time instructors to teach courses at their institutions, developmental education professionals are faced with the task of finding appropriate ways to train, serve, and evaluate these instructors. Unfortunately, there is little published information on how to accomplish these…
Descriptors: Part Time Faculty, Teacher Supervision, Educational Improvement, Teacher Improvement
Anast-May, Linda; Penick, Dana; Schroyer, Rebecca; Howell, Anna – International Journal of Educational Leadership Preparation, 2011
According to Sergiovanni and Starratt (2007), the evaluation process plays a powerful role in developing and nurturing a teacher's instructional capacity, which, in turn, contributes to students' academic successes. School districts in South Carolina utilize the Assisting, Developing and Evaluating Professional Teaching (ADEPT) system. A component…
Descriptors: Feedback (Response), Evaluation Methods, Teacher Evaluation, Educational Needs
Towndrow, Phillip A.; Tan, Kelvin – Teacher Development, 2009
Positive claims are made for the adoption of practices that permit greater levels of involvement in teacher appraisals. The assumption is that when teachers are more involved in observing and evaluating their teaching, corresponding increases in empowerment and autonomy occur as a direct result. This paper challenges this claim by arguing that…
Descriptors: Teacher Evaluation, Self Evaluation (Individuals), Teacher Empowerment, Professional Autonomy
Glatthorn, Allan A. – 1997
Differentiated supervision is an approach to supervision that provides teachers with options about the kinds of supervisory and evaluative services they receive. The differentiated model provides intensive development to nontenured teachers and to tenured teachers with serious problems. The rest of the faculty receive options for fostering their…
Descriptors: Elementary Secondary Education, Models, Personnel Policy, Professional Development

Ballard, Leah M.; Gullat, David E. – American Secondary Education, 1998
If evaluation's purpose is improving teaching rather than prescribing teaching effectiveness, then supervisors must find ways to communicate that purpose and to motivate teachers to seek improvement. This article reviews relevant literature, focusing on summative and formative evaluation, philosophical concepts espoused by neo-traditionalists and…
Descriptors: Formative Evaluation, Instructional Improvement, Professional Development, Secondary Education
Parsons, Llewellyn – 1979
This paper on the supervision and evaluation of teachers as professional personnel begins by delineating the characteristics and expectations of professionals, and then explains how they are socialized into their roles, the reasons why they should be supervised, the blocks and hindrances to supervision and evaluation, and how the blocks may be…
Descriptors: Administrator Role, Faculty Development, Humanization, Individual Development

Donaldson, Robert M. – Clearing House, 1985
Reviews practices related to professional growth and development from teacher training programs, business, and higher education and proposes a model applicable for the professional growth and development of teachers. (FL)
Descriptors: Business, Educational Research, Elementary Secondary Education, Higher Education
Lee, Howard D. – 1990
This document contains an outline of a workshop on instructional supervision for vocational, technical, and adult education supervisors in Wisconsin. Materials used in the workshop, along with preparation materials, are included. Extensive appendixes include a list of workshop participants, the agenda, handouts on instructional supervision, and…
Descriptors: Educational Improvement, Evaluation Methods, Instructional Effectiveness, Postsecondary Education

Iwanicki, Edward F.; McEachern, Lucille – Journal of Staff Development, 1983
Teacher self-improvement is a concept that can be used as part of a school's program for professional development and teacher evaluation. Methods for helping teachers evaluate their own performances, for obtaining feedback from students and colleagues, for designing self-improvement programs, and for monitoring progress are described. (PP)
Descriptors: Elementary Secondary Education, Evaluation Methods, Feedback, Inservice Teacher Education
Gordon, Stephen P., Ed. – Eye on Education, 2005
The standards in this book will enhance teaching and learning. The list of the book's contributors reads like a "Who's Who" in the field of instructional supervision. These standards are practical, specific, and flexible, so that schools and districts can adapt them to their own contexts and goals. Each set also includes activities for…
Descriptors: Collegiality, Reflective Teaching, Professional Development, Intellectual History
Lyman, Lawrence – 1987
This paper examines factors that promote and diminish teacher trust in the instructional supervision process. Trust--key to the supervisor's success in helping teachers change behaviors--is correlated with such factors as confidentiality, approach to dealing with complaints, and the development of collaboration and participation in supervisory…
Descriptors: Administrator Responsibility, Administrator Role, Cooperative Planning, Elementary Secondary Education
Acheson, Keith A.; Gall, Meredith Damien – 2003
This book about the clinical supervision of teachers emphasizes the techniques of clinical supervision: ways to work with teachers to help them improve their classroom teaching. The book is intended to serve both as a practical hands-on guide for the inservice principal and school district personnel who supervise teachers, and as a textbook for…
Descriptors: Classroom Observation Techniques, Clinical Supervision (of Teachers), Collegiality, Due Process
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