Title: Development and Use of a Tool for Evaluating Teacher Effectiveness
1Development and Use of a Tool for Evaluating
Teacher Effectiveness
- Alysia D. Roehrig
- Educational Psychology Learning Systems
- Florida Center for Reading Research
- Florida State University
2Exemplary Teaching Studies
- Inductive grounded theory approach used to gain
unique insights into teaching what exemplary
primary teachers do
- Pressley, Rankin Yokoi, 1996
- Pressley, Wharton-McDonald,
- Allington, Block, Morrow, Tracey,
- Baker, Brooks, Cronin, Nelson
- Woo, 2001
- Roehrig, Pressley Sloup, 2001
- Wharton-McDonald, Pressley
- Hampston, 1998
- Bogner, Raphael Pressley, 2002
- Day, Boothroyd, Johnston Cedeno, 1999
- Day, Woodside-Jiron Johnston, 1999
- Dolezal, Welsh, Pressley Vincent, 2003
- Johnston, Powers Costello, 1999
- Morrow, Tracey, Woo Pressley, 1999
What sets exemplary teachers apart?
3Three Levels of Effectiveness
- Effective Teachers Students
- Consistently engaged in reading and writing
- Higher achievement in reading and writing could
write many pages with good mechanics and spelling
and read books above grade level by end of year - Typical Teachers Students
- Variable student engagement
- Reading and writing achievement less impressive
- Ineffective Teachers Students
- Consistently low engagement
- Reading and writing achievement even less
impressive
4Exemplary Teachers had
- Classrooms consistently saturated with dozens of
motivational practices no undermining ones - (Bogner et al., 2002 Dolezal et al., 2003)
5 Developing the Classroom AIMS Instrument
- Qualitative teacher studies results inductively
coded to develop categories of items for
instrument - Descriptive headings
- Patterns/categories
- Reexamine original data confirm or recategorize
- Look for connections between categories
6Developing Validating the AIMS Instrument
- 3 rounds of coding completed to confirm
categorization - Surveyed expert researchers teachers about
importance of each practice/item to exemplary
teaching - Initially used instrument to assess teaching
practices of 20 teachers
7Rating with the AIMS Instrument
- Recommend 2 people observe class
- Extensive field notes taken of all interactions
- AIMS items rated independently
- 1seldom, 2somewhat, or 3consistently
characteristic of those found in exemplary
classrooms - Disagreements resolved
8Content of the AIMS Instrument
- 4 major categories 13 subcategories
- Atmosphere
- Instruction/Content
- Management
- Student Engagement
9Atmosphere
- Everything the teacher does that affects the
physical interpersonal environment to get and
keep students involved in learning.
10Atmosphere
- Sense of Community Fostered
- Teacher expresses empathy for students-encouraging
others to do so as well. - There is a high use of personal pronouns
communicating a sense of community,
participation, and ownership (e.g., This is OUR
class. WE will work together.).
11Atmosphere
- Interest Fostered
- Teacher encourages curiosity/suspensegetting
students excited about what they are
learning/doing (e.g., Listen carefully to the
story, youll find out the answer to our
questions. Tomorrow we are going to be having
a special mystery visitor!).
12Atmosphere
- Focus on Effort Rather than Performance
- Teacher attributes success to effort (e.g.,
strategies) and time. Given these, success was
believed to be imminent for ALL students. - Teacher does NOT attribute student successes and
failures to luck, ability, or task difficulty
(i.e., negative attributions that could
discourage students).
13Atmosphere
- Value of Learning Expressed
- Teacher encourages students to set goals for
their reading (e.g., to read so many books this
month, typically, a few more than were read last
month).
14Atmosphere
- High Expectations Expressed
- Teacher communicates to students that she is
determined students WILL learn. - Teacher signals difficult tasks that students CAN
do.
15Atmosphere
- Informative Feedback Provided
- Teacher often provides feedback that is
informativeteacher does NOT give much
unspecific, blanket praise.
16Instruction/Content
- The lessons, activities, and the teachers
instructional style.
17Instruction/Content
- Engaging Content and Activities Used
- Students lived experience is integrated with
literate practice (e.g., students encouraged to
connect reading and writing with personal
experiences). - Tasks matched to student interests.
18Instruction/Content
- High Instructional Density Achieved
- Teacher seems to teach constantly, with whole
group, small group, and individual mini-lessons
simply intermingled throughout the day. - The teacher does NOT miss many opportunities to
explain answers.
19Instruction/Content
- Appropriate Challenge Level Achieved
- Teacher supports appropriate risk-taking (i.e.
students are encouraged to take on
instructionally challenging tasks instead of ones
that are too easy or too hard for them).
20Instruction/Content
- Thinking Processes Modeled and Taught
- Teacher explicitly articulates the processes used
in strategies/problem solving (e.g., explains the
steps involved in brainstorming).
21Instruction/Content
- Academic Monitoring Provided
- Teacher walks around the room and does lots of
monitoring of the students as they are working in
order to check for understanding.
22Management
- The order, rules, routines, procedures what
keeps the instruction moving in an orderly
fashion.
23Management
- Behavioral Self Regulation Encouraged
- Teacher effectively uses redirection (e.g. asking
students what they are doing or what they should
be doing), glances, pauses to help keep students
on-task.
24Management
- Behavior/Task Monitoring Provided
- Teacher does whole class monitoring for on-task
behavior. - Teacher does NOT use punishment that distracts
students from their work.
25Student Engagement
- Students vocalize/express excitement about
content/activities (e.g., lots of Oohs and
Aahs.). - The students eagerly raise their hands and
participate. - At least 80 of students are consistently on task
and highly engaged in class activities. - Students are so self-regulated that disciplinary
encounters are rarely seen.
26AIMS in Action
- Can and has been used a number of different ways
- More on that later
- Primarily to evaluate teacher effectiveness/change
27Data Sources
- N 109
- Primarily elementary grades
- Between 1-47 years teaching experience
- Multiple states and countries
- 22 Public and Private schools
28Internal Consistency Reliability
- All subcategories of teaching practices a gt .63
- Atmosphere category a .87
- Instruction/Content category a .90
- Management category a .74
- Student Engagement category a .79
- Range 1-3, M 2.23, SD .53
29Distribution of Atmosphere Scores
30Distribution of Management Scores
31Distribution of Instruction/Content Scores
32Correlations with Student Engagement (p lt .01)
- Atmosphere r 0.64
- Instruction/Content r 0.67
- Management r 0.76
33Using the AIMS Instrument to Improve Teaching
- Theoretical organization of exemplary teaching
practices - To evaluate teaching effectiveness/change
- To organize professional development
- To code interviews, other data
- To guide reflection observation
34Evaluating Teachers
- Bohn, Roehrig, Pressley (2004). The first days
of school in effective and less effective
primary-grades classrooms. Elementary School
Journal, 104, 269-287. - AIMS used to evaluate classrooms
- Qualitative study
35Evaluating Teachers
- Effective teachers
- did more to establish routines procedures at
beginning of year, - provided more engaging activities,
- indicated higher expectations,
- and did more to encourage student self-regulation
36Guiding PD
- Roehrig, Bohn, Turner, Pressley (2008).
Mentoring beginning primary teachers for
exemplary teaching practices. Teaching and
Teacher Education, 24, 684-702. - AIMS used to guide beginning teacher induction/PD
- AIMS also used to evaluate teachers for
effectiveness change - Qualitative study
37Guiding PD
- Explored the potential for mentoring to support
novice teachers use of effective teaching
practices - More effective beginning teachers mentors had
more experience as mentors and were more
effective teachers than other mentors - More effective beginning teachers communicated
more with mentors, more accurately self-reported
use of effective teaching practices, and were
more open to mentoring
38To Code Interviews
- Roehrig, Turner, Grove, Schneider, Liu (in
press). Degree of alignment between beginning
teachers' practices and beliefs about effective
classroom practices. The Teacher Educator. Â - AIMS used to code interviews observations
- Qualitative study
39To Code Interviews
- Studied the relationships among teachers
practices and beliefs - Compared the presence/absence of alignment among
these variables in 6 beginning teachers with the
alignment of these variables in an experienced,
exemplary teacher - A testable model emerged depicting a
metacognitive feedback loop for teachers who are
aware of their shortcomings and place
responsibility for students behaviors and
learning on themselves
40To Guide Reflection
- Roehrig, Guidry, Bodur, Guan, Guo, Pop (2008).
Guided field observations Variables related to
preservice teachers knowledge about effective
primary reading instruction. Literacy Research
and Instruction, 47(2), 76-98. - AIMS used to guide preservice teachers
observations of their supervising teachers - AIMS also used to code their concept maps
- Correlational study
41To Guide Reflection
- Studied the relations between preservice
teachers guided field observations of primary
literacy instruction and knowledge about
effective beginning reading practices - The more effective motivating practices a
preservice teacher observed, the more likely he
or she was to reflect these practices in a
concept map representing effective beginning
literacy instruction, r S .368, p .015 - Even as a preservice teacher more often observed
and correctly identified both examples and
non-examples of effective motivating practices,
there was not a tendency for her or him to
represent those practices in a concept map, r S
.186, p .142
42Future Directions
- More data from secondary teachers
- Factor analysis
- Connect AIMS scores to PD implementation and
student outcomes
43Questions?
- More details about the items?
- More details about previous current studies?
- Suggestions about additional uses?
- Others?
44Thank You!
- Special thanks to Eric Christesen!!
- For more information, please email
aroehrig_at_fcrr.org