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FACULTY OF EDUCATION

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Title: FACULTY OF EDUCATION


1
FACULTY OF EDUCATION DR. RAMLI BIN BASRI ROOM
G28, TEL office 03-8946 8248, H/P 019 224 1332
(sms prefered) E-MEL ramlibasri_at_upm.edu.my
2
L7 Supervisory options for teachers
3
Content
  • Supervisors generic and specific competency,
  • Supervisory options towards developing and
    empowering reflective practitioners among
    teachers
  • Teaching styles, teaching principles an authentic
    pedagogy
  • School climate, culture and change

4
National education aspiration the challenge
  • BAHAGIAN 1

5
SISC SIPARTNER
  • about 10 years ago, the assistant to a
    struggling ICT business man, weary about the huge
    bills for smses the company sent, urged him why
    not make something that send smses for free!
  • It was impossible then, but like countless ICT
    technologies invented, many that were conceived
    as impossible then, but now is a norm!
  • In this regard, l see you have a similar role

6
Quality aspiration Top third of countries in
international assessments by PISA rankings
In 15 years top third
Malaysia
United Kingdom
Australia
WAWASAN PEND NEGARA
Taiwan
Canada
Singapore
Bulgaria
Romania
Malaysia as the fastest improving education
system globally
Mexico
Malaysia
Today bottom third
Columbia
Kazakhstan
Trinidad and Tobago
Your mission is. Cabaran anda adalah.
6
7
EDUCATION TRANSFORMATION (2013 2025)
  • Provide equal access to quality education of
    international standard
  • Ensure every child is proficient in Malay and
    English language
  • Develop values-driven Malaysians
  • Transform teaching into the profession of choice
  • Ensure high performing school leaders in every
    school
  • Empower JPN, PPD schools to customize solutions
    based on needs
  • Leverage ICT to scale up quality learning across
    Malaysia
  • Transform Ministry delivery, capabilities and
    capacity
  • Partner with parents, community and private
    sector at scale
  • Maximize student outcome for every Ringgit
  • Increase transparency for public accountability.

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Guide empower teachers to produce students
  • Who embodies the national students aspiration
  • Who possesses the knowledge, skills and expertise
    needed to succeed in work and life it is a blend
    of content knowledge, specific skills, expertise
    and literacies.

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2 1ST C E N T U R Y SKILLS
  • BAHAGIAN 2

13
2 1 S T C E N T U R Y S T U D E N T O U T C
O M E S
14
2 1ST C E N T U R Y SKILLS
  • Every 21st century skills implementation requires
    the development of core academic subject
    knowledge and understanding among all students.
    Those who can think critically and communicate
    effectively must build on a base of core academic
    subject knowledge.
  • Within the context of core knowledge instruction,
    students must also learn the essential skills for
    success in todays world, such as critical
    thinking, problem solving, communication and
    collaboration.
  • When a school or district builds on this
    foundation, combining the entire Framework with
    the necessary support systemsstandards,
    assessments, curriculum and instruction,
    professional development and learning
    environmentsstudents are more engaged in the
    learning process and graduate better prepared to
    thrive in todays global economy.

15
1. CORE SUBJECTS FOR THE 21ST CENTURY
  • Mastery of core subjects and 21st century themes
    is essential to student success. Core subjects
    include English, reading or language arts, world
    languages, arts, mathematics, economics, science,
    geography, history, government and civics.

16
1. CORE SUBJECTS FOR THE 21ST CENTURY
  • In addition, schools must promote an
    understanding of academic content at much higher
    levels by weaving 21st century interdisciplinary
    themes into core subjects
  • Global Awareness
  • Financial, Economic, Business and Entrepreneurial
    Literacy
  • Civic Literacy
  • Health Literacy
  • Environmental Literacy

17
2. Learning and Innovation Skills
  • Learning and innovation skills are what separate
    students who are prepared for increasingly
    complex life and work environments in todays
    world and those who are not. They include
  • Creativity and Innovation
  • Critical Thinking and Problem Solving
  • Communication and Collaboration .

18
3. Information, Media and Technology Skills
  • Today, we live in a technology and media-driven
    environment, marked by access to an abundance of
    information, rapid changes in technology tools
    and the ability to collaborate and make
    individual contributions on an unprecedented
    scale. Effective citizens and workers must be
    able to exhibit a range of functional and
    critical thinking skills, such as
  • Information Literacy
  • Media Literacy
  • ICT Literacy

19
4. Life and Career Skills
  • Todays life and work environments require far
    more than thinking skills and content knowledge.
    The ability to navigate the complex life and work
    environments in the globally competitive
    information age requires students to pay rigorous
    attention to developing adequate life and career
    skills, such as
  • Flexibility and Adaptability
  • Initiative and Self-Direction
  • Social and Cross-Cultural Skills
  • Productivity and Accountability
  • Leadership and Responsibility

20
2 1ST C E N T U R Y SKILLS
  • To be delivered through
  • Learning environment
  • Professional development
  • Curriculum and Instruction
  • Standard and assessment.

21
21st century interdisciplinary themes
  • a) Global Awareness
  • Using 21st century skills to understand and
    address global issues
  • Learning from and working collaboratively with
    individuals representing diverse cultures,
    religions and lifestyles in a spirit of mutual
    respect and open dialogue in personal, work and
    community contexts
  • Understanding other nations and cultures,
    including the use of non-English languages

22
21st century interdisciplinary themes
  • b) Financial, Economic, Business and
    Entrepreneurial Literacy
  • Knowing how to make appropriate personal economic
    choices
  • Understanding the role of the economy in society
  • Using entrepreneurial skills to enhance workplace
    productivity and career options

23
21st century interdisciplinary themes
  • c) Civic Literacy
  • Participating effectively in civic life through
    knowing how to stay informed and understanding
    governmental processes
  • Exercising the rights and obligations of
    citizenship at local, state, national and global
    levels
  • Understanding the local and global implications
    of civic decisions

24
21st century interdisciplinary themes
  • d) Literacy
  • Obtaining, interpreting and understanding basic
    health information and services and using such
    information and services in ways that enhance
    health
  • Understanding preventive physical and mental
    health measures, including proper diet,
    nutrition, exercise, risk avoidance and stress
    reduction
  • Using available information to make appropriate
    health-related decisions
  • Establishing and monitoring personal and family
    health goals
  • Understanding national and international public
    health and safety issues

25
...21st century interdisciplinary themes
  • e) Environmental Literacy
  • Demonstrate knowledge and understanding of the
    environment and the circumstances and conditions
    affecting it, particularly as relates to air,
    climate, land, food, energy, water and ecosystems
  • Demonstrate knowledge and understanding of
    societys impact on the natural world (e.g.,
    population growth, population development,
    resource consumption rate, etc.)
  • Investigate and analyze environmental issues, and
    make accurate conclusions about effective
    solutions
  • Take individual and collective action towards
    addressing environmental challenges (e.g.,
    participating in global actions, designing
    solutions that inspire action on environmental
    issues)

26
2. Learning and Innovation Skills
  • Learning and innovation skills increasingly are
    being recognized as those that separate students
    who are prepared for a more and more complex life
    and work environments in the 21st century, and
    those who are not.
  • A focus on creativity, critical thinking,
    communication and collaboration is essential to
    prepare students for the future.

27
a) Creativity And Innovation
  • i) Think Creatively
  • Use a wide range of idea creation techniques
    (such as brainstorming)
  • Create new and worthwhile ideas (both incremental
    and radical concepts)
  • Elaborate, refine, analyze and evaluate their own
    ideas in order to improve and maximize creative
    efforts

28
a) Creativity And Innovation
  • ii) Work Creatively with Others
  • Develop, implement and communicate new ideas to
    others effectively
  • Be open and responsive to new and diverse
    perspectives incorporate group input and
    feedback into the work
  • Demonstrate originality and inventiveness in work
    and understand the real world limits to adopting
    new ideas
  • View failure as an opportunity to learn
    understand that creativity and innovation is a
    long-term, cyclical process of small successes
    and frequent mistakes

29
a) Creativity And Innovation
  • iii) Implement Innovations
  • Act on creative ideas to make a tangible and
    useful contribution to the field in which the
    innovation will occur

30
b) Critical Thinking And Problem Solving
  • i) Reason Effectively
  • Use various types of reasoning (inductive,
    deductive, etc.) as appropriate to the situation
  • ii) Use Systems Thinking
  • Analyze how parts of a whole interact with each
    other to produce overall outcomes in complex
    systems

31
b) Critical Thinking And Problem Solving
  • iii) Make Judgments and Decisions
  • Effectively analyze and evaluate evidence,
    arguments, claims and beliefs
  • Analyze and evaluate major alternative points of
    view
  • Synthesize and make connections between
    information and arguments
  • Interpret information and draw conclusions based
    on the best analysis
  • Reflect critically on learning experiences and
    processes

32
b) Critical Thinking And Problem Solving
  • iv) Solve Problems
  • Solve different kinds of non-familiar problems in
    both conventional and innovative ways
  • Identify and ask significant questions that
    clarify various points of view and lead to better
    solutions

33
c) Communication And Collaboration
  • i) Communicate Clearly
  • Articulate thoughts and ideas effectively using
    oral, written and nonverbal communication skills
    in a variety of forms and contexts
  • Listen effectively to decipher meaning, including
    knowledge, values, attitudes and intentions
  • Use communication for a range of purposes (e.g.
    to inform, instruct, motivate and persuade)
  • Utilize multiple media and technologies, and know
    how to judge their effectiveness a priori as well
    as assess their impact
  • Communicate effectively in diverse environments
    (including multi-lingual)

34
c) Communication And Collaboration
  • ii) Collaborate with Others
  • Demonstrate ability to work effectively and
    respectfully with diverse teams
  • Exercise flexibility and willingness to be
    helpful in making necessary compromises to
    accomplish a common goal
  • Assume shared responsibility for collaborative
    work, and value the individual contributions made
    by each team member

35
3. Information, Media and Technology Skills
  • People in the 21st century live in a technology
    and media-suffused environment, marked by various
    characteristics, including 1) access to an
    abundance of information, 2) rapid
  • changes in technology tools, and 3) the ability
    to collaborate and make individual contributions
    on an unprecedented scale.
  • To be effective in the 21st century, citizens and
    workers must be able to exhibit a range of
    functional and critical thinking skills related
    to information, media and technology

36
a) Information Literacy
  • i) Access and Evaluate Information
  • Access information efficiently (time) and
    effectively (sources)
  • Evaluate information critically and competently
  • ii) Use and Manage Information
  • Use information accurately and creatively for the
    issue or problem at hand
  • Manage the flow of information from a wide
    variety of sources
  • Apply a fundamental understanding of the
    ethical/legal issues surrounding the access and
    use of information

37
b) Media Literacy
  • i) Analyze Media
  • Understand both how and why media messages are
    constructed, and for what purposes
  • Examine how individuals interpret messages
    differently, how values and points of view are
    included or excluded, and how media can influence
    beliefs and behaviors
  • Apply a fundamental understanding of the
    ethical/legal issues surrounding the access and
    use of media

38
b) Media Literacy
  • ii) Create Media Products
  • Understand and utilize the most appropriate media
    creation tools, characteristics and conventions
  • Understand and effectively utilize the most
    appropriate expressions and interpretations in
    diverse, multi-cultural environments

39
c) ICT Literacy
  • Apply Technology Effectively
  • Use technology as a tool to research, organize,
    evaluate and communicate information
  • Use digital technologies (computers, PDAs, media
    players, GPS, etc.), communication/networking
    tools and social networks appropriately to
    access, manage, integrate, evaluate and create
    information to successfully function in a
    knowledge economy
  • Apply a fundamental understanding of the
    ethical/legal issues surrounding the access and
    use of information technologies

40
4. Life and Career Skills
  • Todays life and work environments require far
    more than thinking skills and content knowledge.
    The ability to navigate the complex life and work
    environments in the globally competitive
    information age requires students to pay rigorous
    attention to developing adequate life and career
    skills, such as
  • Flexibility and Adaptability
  • Initiative and Self-Direction
  • Social and Cross-Cultural Skills
  • Productivity and Accountability
  • Leadership and Responsibility

41
a) Flexibility and Adaptability
  • i) Adapt to Change
  • Adapt to varied roles, jobs responsibilities,
    schedules and contexts
  • Work effectively in a climate of ambiguity and
    changing priorities
  • ii) Be Flexible
  • Incorporate feedback effectively
  • Deal positively with praise, setbacks and
    criticism
  • Understand, negotiate and balance diverse views
    and beliefs to reach workable solutions,
    particularly in multi-cultural environments

42
b) Initiative And Self-direction
  • i) Manage Goals and Time
  • Set goals with tangible and intangible success
    criteria
  • Balance tactical (short-term) and strategic
    (long-term) goals
  • Utilize time and manage workload efficiently
  • ii) Work Independently
  • Monitor, define, prioritize and complete tasks
    without direct oversight

43
b) Initiative And Self-direction
  • iii) Be Self-directed Learners
  • Go beyond basic mastery of skills and/or
    curriculum to explore and expand ones own
    learning and opportunities to gain expertise
  • Demonstrate initiative to advance skill levels
    towards a professional level
  • Demonstrate commitment to learning as a lifelong
    process
  • Reflect critically on past experiences in order
    to inform future progress

44
c) Social and Cross-Cultural Skills
  • i) Interact Effectively with Others
  • Know when it is appropriate to listen and when to
    speak
  • Conduct themselves in a respectable, professional
    manner

45
c) Social and Cross-Cultural Skills
  • ii) Work Effectively in Diverse Teams
  • Respect cultural differences and work effectively
    with people from a range of social and cultural
    backgrounds
  • Respond open-mindedly to different ideas and
    values
  • Leverage social and cultural differences to
    create new ideas and increase both innovation and
    quality of work

46
d) Productivity and Accountability
  • i) Manage Projects
  • Set and meet goals, even in the face of obstacles
    and competing pressures
  • Prioritize, plan and manage work to achieve the
    intended result

47
d) Productivity and Accountability
  • ii) Produce Results
  • Demonstrate additional attributes associated with
    producing high quality products including the
    abilities to work positively and ethically,
    manage time and projects effectively, multi-task,
    participate actively, as well as be reliable and
    punctual, present oneself professionally and with
    proper etiquette, collaborate and cooperate
    effectively with teams, respect and appreciate
    team diversity, and be accountable for results

48
e) Leadership and Responsibility
  • i) Guide and Lead Others
  • Use interpersonal and problem-solving skills to
    influence and guide others toward a goal
  • Leverage strengths of others to accomplish a
    common goal
  • Inspire others to reach their very best via
    example and selflessness
  • Demonstrate integrity and ethical behavior in
    using influence and power
  • ii) Be Responsible to Others
  • Act responsibly with the interests of the larger
    community in mind

49
21st CENTURY SUPPORT SYSTEMS
  • The critical systems necessary to ensure student
    mastery of 21st century skills are
  • 21st Century Standards
  • Assessments of 21st Century Skills
  • 21st Century Curriculum and Instruction
  • 21st Century Professional Development
  • 21st Century Learning Environments

50
a) 21st Century Standards
  • Focus on 21st century skills, content knowledge
    and expertise
  • Build understanding across and among core
    subjects as well as 21st century
    interdisciplinary themes
  • Emphasize deep understanding rather than shallow
    knowledge
  • Engage students with the real world data, tools
    and experts they will encounter in college, on
    the job, and in life students learn best when
    actively engaged in solving meaningful problems
  • Allow for multiple measures of mastery

51
b) Assessment of 21st Century Skills
  • Supports a balance of assessments, including
    high-quality standardized testing along with
    effective formative and summative classroom
    assessments
  • Emphasizes useful feedback on student performance
    that is embedded into everyday learning
  • Requires a balance of technology-enhanced,
    formative and summative assessments that measure
    student mastery of 21st century skills
  • Enables development of portfolios of student work
    that demonstrate mastery of 21st century skills
    to educators and prospective employers
  • Enables a balanced portfolio of measures to
    assess the educational systems effectiveness in
    reaching high levels of student competency in
    21st century skills

52
c) 21st Century Curriculum and Instruction
  • Teaches 21st century skills discretely in the
    context of core subjects and 21st century
    interdisciplinary themes
  • Focuses on providing opportunities for applying
    21st century skills across content areas and for
    a competency-based approach to learning
  • Enables innovative learning methods that
    integrate the use of supportive technologies,
    inquiry- and problem-based approaches and higher
    order thinking skills
  • Encourages the integration of community resources
    beyond school walls

53
d) 21st Century Professional Development
  • Highlights ways teachers can seize opportunities
    for integrating 21st century skills, tools and
    teaching strategies into their classroom practice
    and help them identify what activities they can
    replace/de-emphasize
  • Balances direct instruction with project-oriented
    teaching methods
  • Illustrates how a deeper understanding of subject
    matter can actually enhance problem-solving,
    critical thinking, and other 21st century skills
  • Enables 21st century professional learning
    communities for teachers that model the kinds of
    classroom learning that best promotes 21st
    century skills for students

54
d) 21st Century Professional Development
  • Cultivates teachers ability to identify
    students particular learning styles,
    intelligences, strengths and weaknesses
  • Helps teachers develop their abilities to use
    various strategies (such as formative
    assessments) to reach diverse students and create
    environments that support differentiated teaching
    and learning
  • Supports the continuous evaluation of students
    21st century skills development
  • Encourages knowledge sharing among communities of
    practitioners, using face-to-face, virtual and
    blended communications
  • Uses a scalable and sustainable model of
    professional development

55
e) 21st Century Learning Environments
  • Create learning practices, human support and
    physical environments that will support the
    teaching and learning of 21st century skill
    outcomes
  • Support professional learning communities that
    enable educators to collaborate, share best
    practices and integrate 21st century skills into
    classroom practice

56
e) 21st Century Learning Environments
  • Enable students to learn in relevant, real world
    21st century contexts (e.g., through
    project-based or other applied work)
  • Allow equitable access to quality learning tools,
    technologies and resources
  • Provide 21st century architectural and interior
    designs for group, team and individual learning
  • Support expanded community and international
    involvement in learning, both face-to-face and
    online

57
Malaysian response to 21st Century skill
challenge
  • BAHAGIAN 3

58
EDUCATION TRANSFORMATION (2013 2025)
  • Provide equal access to quality education of
    international standard
  • Ensure every child is proficient in Malay and
    English language
  • Develop values-driven Malaysians
  • Transform teaching into the profession of choice
  • Ensure high performing school leaders in every
    school
  • Empower JPN, PPD schools to customize solutions
    based on needs
  • Leverage ICT to scale up quality learning across
    Malaysia
  • Transform Ministry delivery, capabilities and
    capacity
  • Partner with parents, community and private
    sector at scale
  • Maximize student outcome for every Ringgit
  • Increase transparency for public accountability.

59
SUPERVISORS, SISC SIPARTNER mission
  • BAHAGIAN 4

60
EDUCATION TRANSFORMATION (2013 2025)
  • Provide equal access to quality education of
    international standard
  • Ensure every child is proficient in Malay and
    English language
  • Develop values-driven Malaysians
  • Transform teaching into the profession of choice
  • Ensure high performing school leaders in every
    school
  • Empower JPN, PPD schools to customize solutions
    based on needs
  • Leverage ICT to scale up quality learning across
    Malaysia
  • Transform Ministry delivery, capabilities and
    capacity
  • Partner with parents, community and private
    sector at scale
  • Maximize student outcome for every Ringgit
  • Increase transparency for public accountability.

61
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KBAT
65
Supervisors, SISC SIPARTNER generic and
specific competency, and training needs to wards
developing and empowering a reflective
practitioners among teachers
  • BAHAGIAN 5

66
A) Generic Competencies
  • Knowledge
  • Interpersonal skill
  • Technical skill
  • Glickman et al (2010)

67
a) Knowledge
  • SISC SIPARTNER need to have knowledge in
  • Education ethics, School culture and work
    environment
  • Effective school theory
  • Teachers background (major, experience)
  • Teaching effectiveness
  • Teaching improvement

68
b) Interpersonal Skill
  • SISC SIPARTNER need to have skills in
  • Personnel and body language
  • Effective communication
  • Networking

69
c) Technical Skill
  • SISC SIPARTNER need to have technical skill
    in
  • Planning, implementing and monitoring
  • Development of instrument for supervision
  • Data collection, analysis and interpretation
  • Research
  • Instructional improvement.

70
B) Specific Competency
  • Those who provide school-based teacher
    development are often called mentors, coachers,
    instructional coordinators, and lead teachers.
  • To help, lead, facilitate and empower teachers in
    understanding and improving their teaching
    towards providing effective teaching and towards
    becoming reflective teachers and members of
    learning communities, SISC SIPARTNER needs to
    skillful in

71
B) Specific Competency
  • Those who provide school-based teacher
    development are often called mentors, coachers,
    instructional coordinators, and lead teachers.
  • To help, lead, facilitate and empower teachers in
    understanding and improving their teaching
    towards providing effective teaching and towards
    becoming reflective teachers and members of
    learning communities, SISC SIPARTNER needs to
    skillful in
  • Supervising and coaching teacher clinically
  • Making teachers collaborates through
  • peer supervision,
  • self directed supervision, and
  • mentoring

72
B) Specific Competency
  • To help, lead, facilitate and empower teachers in
    providing effective teaching and towards becoming
    reflective teachers, SISC SIPARTNER needs to
    skillful in
  • Leading teachers through
  • Lesson study
  • Looking at students work
  • Self directed supervision
  • Inquiry based supervision
  • Action Research
  • Instructional leadership, and
  • Teacher leadership

73
a) CLINICAL SUPERVISION
  • CS Goal the professional development of
    teachers, with an emphasis on improving teachers
    classroom performance
  • CS is design to engage supervisors teachers in
    supportive and interactive process
  • 1. provide objective feedback on instruction
  • 2. diagnose and solve problems
  • 3. assist teachers in developing strategies
  • 4. professional development for teachers.

74
Basic Steps of clinical supervision approach
  • PLANNING CONFERENCE meeting between the
    supervisor and supervisee, agree on the focus of
    classroom visit and a method for collecting data
    for later analysis.
  • CLASSROOM OBSERVATION supervisor observes a
    lesson systematically and nonjudgmentally,
    collecting data related to the objectives agreed
    upon during the planning conference.
  • FEEDBACK CONFERENCE supervisor meets with the
    teacher to analyze the data collected. The
    supervisor and supervisee interpret the data from
    the teacher's perspective with an eye towards
    diagnosing and solving instructional problems.

75
b) Peer Supervision
  • A approach as a moderately formalized process by
    which two or more teachers agree to work together
    for their own professional growth, usually by
    observing each others classroom, giving each
    other feed back about the observation, and
    discussing shared professional concern.

76
b) Peer Supervision
  • When two teachers observe each other, the one
    teaching is the coach and the one observing is
    the coached.
  • Showers B. Joyce, 1996

77
Five different forms of Peer Supervision
  1. Professional dialogue guided discussion and
    focus on teaching as a process of thinking, to
    enhance reflective practice.
  2. Curriculum development teachers working
    together on how to operationalize the existing
    curriculum, adapt the curriculum to the wide
    variety of students and situation faced in the
    classroom, and enriching the existing curriculum
    by inventing and developing new curriculum units
    and materials.

78
  • 3. Peer supervision observation of each
    others teaching follow by analysis and
    discussion.
  • 4. Peer Coaching collaborative development
    and practice of new teaching methods and skills
    in both workshop settings and under actual
    teaching conditions.
  • 5. Action Research the study of problem being
    faced and the development of feasible solution
    that result in changes in ones teaching pratice.

79
c) Self Directed Supervision
  • A process of supervision or evaluation where
    teachers develops and carries out an
    individualized plan to improve their own
    performance or for professional growth.
  • Based on teachers self-reflection on
    instructional effectiveness and leadership
    regularly.
  • Self-reflection involves two basic components,
    which are self-observation and self-assessment.

80
c) Self Directed Supervision
  • Being aware of personal needs, having an accurate
    self-perception in terms of strengths and
    weakness and able to find solutions.
  • Supervisor plays a supportive role and does not
    take an active or controlling part.
  • Collaboration support from colleagues is
    essential for teachers professional growth plan.

81
Steps in Self-Directed Supervision In School
82
d) MENTORING
  • Purpose of mentoring is to help a novice
  • become independent.
  • successfully learn their role.
  • establish their self-images as teachers.
  • figure out the school and its culture.
  • understand how teaching unfolds in real
    classrooms.
  • improve their effectiveness in demonstrating the
    schools' standards for teaching.

83
MENTORING SKILLS
  • needs analysis
  • negotiation and conflict solving
  • giving and receiving positive and negative
    feedback
  • observation and assessment
  • report writing and target setting
  • confidence in communication skills
  • (Shaw 1992)

84
SUCCESSFUL MENTORING
  • When
  • mentoring relationship evolve quickly from one of
    tutelage to one of mutuality
  • novices ask less and mentors tell less and when
    both settle down to solving problems together.
  • mentoring relationship becomes reciprocal.

85
MENTOR (EXPERIENCED TEACHER)
  • Teacher entrusted with tutoring, educating, and
    guiding another person ( mentee) who is typically
    new to teaching or new to a given school.
  • Presumed to know more not only about matters of
    teaching but also about the school's culture so
    that the novice can navigate through this culture
    successfully
  • The general role of a mentor involves providing
    resources and opportunities for development,
    helping learners to set high but achievable
    goals, making realistic plans, monitoring
    progress, providing feedback, passing on skills,
    assisting the learner in solving problems and
    providing personel support and motivation

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MENTOR (LEADING ROLES)
  • In the context of training a new teacher, the
    following are mentor leading roles
  • Training new teacher to teach their particular
    subjects.
  • Developing their understanding of how pupils
    learn.
  • Training them to manage classes and assess
    pupils.
  • Supervising them in relation to school-based
    elements of the course.
  • Assessing their competence in subject
    application and classroom skills . (Kirkham,
    1993 Wilkin, 1992)

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e) Lesson Study
  • Lesson Study is an effort to improve the process
    and outcome of collaborative learning is
    implemented and sustained by a group of teachers.
  • Lesson Study is a systematic and collaborative
    research on teaching and learning to enhance the
    learning experience and improving teaching.
  • Usually Lesson Study involves a group of teachers
    who plan collaboratively by title study, the
    teaching of the classroom, data collection
    observation, analysis and discuss data.

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What is lesson study?
e) Lesson Study
  • Lesson plan engage students.
  • Collaborative planning.
  • Consistent with the aims of the school
  • Reviewing the recording video, audio, and
    records relating to with the learning and
    training
  • Discussion among teachers, invite observers and
    consultant.

  • -PROF JIM Stigler

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continue
e) Lesson Study
  • Lesson Study is actually not just review the
    study of instructional material (IM) and build a
    worthwhile lesson. LS also exploring the idea of
    ??improving thoughts and undergo the process of
    thinking thus helping them find description of
    the problem, understand the topic, broaden
    understanding of the skills and capabilities.

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f) Looking At Student Work
  • Process used to analyze what a student is able to
    do independently in order to identify strengths
    and struggles.
  • Aides teachers in providing learning
    opportunities that match the needs of the child.

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Why look at student work?
  • Gaining a more comprehensive understanding of
    what students know and are able to do over time.
  • Embedding professional development in teachers
    daily practices to improve student achievement.
  • Building a sense of community
  • Fostering a culture that collaboratively assesses
    the quality and rigor of teacher work
  • Developing shared, public criteria to assess
    student work.

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Steps In Looking At Student Work
  • Organize a group of people (teachers, assistants,
    support providers, administrators, etc..)
  • The group decides which academic area they will
    focus on reading, writing, math, etc.
  • Each member of the group brings three samples
    each of student work

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Steps In Looking At Student Work
  • A member of the group is chosen to record
    findings on a chart.
  • The chart is divided into three sections
  • a) What they see (evidence in student work)
  • b) They make interpretations about the work
    of the student-the group makes inferences on
    what the student did and what the teacher may
    have taught.

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Steps In Looking At Student Work
  • c) They make implications for future teaching
    mini- lessons
  • After making implications, group members
    collaboratively create mini-lessons to support
    the students learning.

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G) Inquiry Based Supervision/ Action Research
  • IBS is a research
  • It represent an individual initiative or
    collaborative efforts as pairs or team of
    teachers work together to solve problems
  • IBS emphasis is on the problem solving nature of
    the supervisory experience.
  • In this Model, teachers be engaged in problems,
    generate new ideas, discover new insights and
    practices and develop conceptual knowledge.

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G) Inquiry Based Supervision/ Action Research
  • In IBS, teachers act as teacher-researcher
  • A teacher-researcher is an observer, a
    questioner, a learner, and as result a more
    complete teacher (Glenda L. Bissex, 1986)

97
G) Inquiry Based Supervision/ Action Research
  • Two approach of IBS -
  • Individual initiative
  • A teacher work closely with supervisor in sorting
    out problems and developing strategies for its
    resolution and in sharing findings and
    conclusions.
  • Pair or team of teachers
  • It involves collaboration with other teachers,
    problems are co-researched, findings are shared
    and together find out implications for changes in
    their teaching practices.

98
G) Inquiry Based Supervision/ Action Research
  • The prime purpose of IBS is to alter the teaching
    practices of the teachers themselves.
  • A process aimed at discovering new ideas and
    practices as well as testing old ones, exploring
    and establishing relationship between causes and
    effects, or of systematically gaining evidence
    about the nature of a particular problem
    (Florence Stratemeyer et.al)

99
Steps involved in IBS
  • the following are basic steps in IBS/AR
  • Step 1 Identify the problem
  • Step 2 Formulate hypothesis
  • Step 3 Test the formulated hypothesis
  • Step 4 Collect evidence based on hypothesis
  • Step 5 Organize, Analyze and draw
    generalization from the collected data
  • Step 6 Draw conclusion

100
Steps involved in IBS/AR
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H) Instructional Leadership
  • Direct
  • Staff Development
  • Teacher Evaluation and Supervision
  • Indirect
  • Resource Acquisition and Building Maintenance
  • Instructional Facilitation
  • Student Problem Resolution

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BECOMING A TEACHER LEADER
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HOW DO TEACHER BECOME LEADER or CHARACTERISTIC OF
TEACHER LEADER
  • Collaborate With Peers Facilitate Team Meetings
  • Participate in School Decisions Contribute
    Agenda Items
  • Demonstrate Expertise and Share Knowledge Invite
    Colleagues and Community Into the Classroom
  • Frequently Reflect on Work Establish Study
    Groups or Professional Learning Communities

104
WHAT ARE THE ROLE OF TEACHER LEADER
105
WHAT ARE THE ROLE OF TEACHER LEADER
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C) Training Needs for SISC
  • 1. Training for Content
  • What are SISC purpose or job functions?
  • What do SISC need to accomplish?
  • How will teachers do in classroom change?
  • What effect do we want on students achievement?

107
C) Training Needs for SISC
  • 2. Training in process
  • How will SISC accomplish their goal?
  • How do we win commitment for change from
    teachers?
  • How must we work together as colleagues or as
    members of communities of practice?

108
C) Training Needs for SISC
  • 3. Training in culture
  • What changes will be needed in the norms system?
  • How will expectation change?
  • What will be accepted ways of doing things?
  • How will we work together?
  • How will our purposes, values, and commitments be
    used to point the way and to evaluate our work?

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Teaching styles, Teaching principles Authentic
pedagogy
  • BAHAGIAN 6

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A) Teaching styles
  • Authoritarian or direct teacher directs all
    activities in class
  • Democratic or indirect teacher encourages group
    participation and is willing to let students
    share in decision making process
  • Laissez-faire teacher provides no goal and
    direction for group and individual behavior in
    class

111
A) Teaching styles
  • Flander (1954 1970) found
  • Students in indirect classrooms learned more and
    exhibited more constructive and independent
    attitudes than students in direct classrooms
  • All types of students in all types of subjects
    learned more with indirect or flexible teachers.

112
B) Teaching principles
  • Evertson-Emmer Model for effective teaching and
    students learning, the basic principles of
    teaching are
  • Rules and procedures are established and enforced
  • Similar expectations are consistently maintained
    for activities and behavior at all times for all
    students
  • Prompt management of Inappropriate behavior
  • All students works (classwork, homework, and
    papers) is corrected, errors discussed, and
    feedback provided promptly

113
B) Teaching principles
  • Interactive teaching ..includes presenting and
    explaining new material, questioning sessions,
    discussions, checking for students understanding,
    actively moving among students to correct work,
    providing feedback and reteaching.
  • Academic engaged time to manage students work
  • Pacing, information is presented at a rate
    appropriate to students ability to comprehend

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B) Teaching principles
  • Smooth transitions from one activity to another
    to eliminate confusion
  • Lesson Clarity, lesson are presented logically
    and sequentially. Clarity is enhanced by the use
    of instructional objectives and adequate
    illustration and by keeping in touch with
    students

115
C) Authentic Pedagogy
  • Newman Wehlage Standard For Authentic
    Pedagogy
  • Construction of knowledge, Discipline inquiry and
    Value beyond schools
  • a) Construction of Knowledge
  • Standard 1 High Order Thinking
  • Instruction involves students in manipulating
    information and ideas by synthesizing ,
    generalizing, explaining, hypothesizing, or
    arriving at conclusions that produce new meaning
    and understanding for them

116
C) Authentic Pedagogy
  • Newman Wehlage Standard For Authentic
    Pedagogy
  • b) Disciplined Inquiry
  • Standard 2 Deep knowledge
  • Instruction addresses central ideas or topic or
    discipline with enough thoroughness to explore
    connections and relationships and to produce a
    relatively complex understanding
  • Standard 3 Substantive conversation
  • Student engage in extended conversational
    exchanges with teachers and their peers about
    subject matter in ways that builds an improved
    and shared understanding of ideas or topics.

117
C) Authentic Pedagogy
  • Newman Wehlage Standard For Authentic
    Pedagogy Instruction
  • c) Value beyond school
  • Standard 4 Connection to the world beyond
    classroom
  • Students make connections between substantive
    knowledge and either public problem or personal
    experience

118
School climate, Culture and Change
  • BAHAGIAN 7

119
a) School Climate
  • Improving schools at
  • Structural level-altering arrangements, do things
    differently
  • Normative level-altered belief involving teachers
    view, belief, what they want, what they know, and
    how they do things that can change outcome.

120
a) School Climate
  • School climate as enduring characteristics of a
    school ...factors on attitudes, beliefs, values,
    and motivation of staff students
  • is the climate promotes or hinder learning and
  • School climate is a basis for predicting school
    outcome-new direction for school.

121
a) Dimensions of School Climate
  1. Conformity to externally imposed rules,
    procedures, policies and practice (autonomy)
  2. Personal responsibility
  3. Challenging standards
  4. Members are recognized rewarded
  1. School has a well defined goal
  2. Warmth supportive
  3. Members accept and reward leadership based on
    expertise

122
b) Dimensions of School Health
  1. Goal focus
  2. Communication adequacy
  3. Optimal power equalization (collaboration)
  4. Resource utilization
  5. Cohesiveness
  1. Morale
  2. Innovativeness
  3. Autonomy
  4. Adaptation, innovation
  5. Problem solving adequacy

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b) School Culture
  • Levels of school culture
  • Artifacts (what can bee seen in behavior and
    looks of pupils, teachers, classrooms)
  • Perspective of members of school hold (shared
    rules and norms..)
  • Values (management, philosophy, vision, mission)
  • Assumptions (the tacit beliefs that school hold)

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c) Planning for Change Teacher by Teacher
  • Teachers resist change when their basic needs are
    threaten, handle teachers resistance by
  • Providing clear information about their
    functions, what is expected of them how they
    are going to be evaluated Developing teachers
    into reflective practitioners
  • Assuring of future certainty
  • Providing collaboration
  • Change at their own pace and control.

125
Summary
  • To help, lead, facilitate and empower teachers in
    understanding and improving their teaching
    towards providing effective teaching and towards
    becoming reflective teachers and members of
    learning communities, SISC SIPARTNER needs to
    have
  • Generic competency knowledge, interpersonal and
    technical skills
  • Specific competency are the nine skills proposed
    relevant?

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ASSIGMENT 2 (22/11/14)
  • Choose one supervisory option for teachers and
    prepare an essay explaining this options
    (imagine you are presenting and trying to
    convince your fellow teachers in your school)
  • Format of essay
  • Topic of supervisory option.
  • Summary of the supervisory option (5 marks).
  • Describe how this option is implemented OR how
    this option can be implemented at your
    institution (10 marks).
  • Present your reflection on this option (5 marks).

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Terima Kasih
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