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How Do You Weigh a Teacher?

By Jill Berkowicz & Ann Myers — November 16, 2017 3 min read
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We welcome designers of the 16 Habits of Mind™ Art Costa and Bena Kallick as today’s guest bloggers.

Surely you don’t think that merely placing him or her on a scale ranging from one to four will tell you whether the teacher is practicing both the art and craft of teaching. We need to understand that while observing the teacher instructing content, we must also observe, and help teachers to self-observe, their dispositions. It is that very subtle concept of being a teacher.

People who are concerned with this question look for evidence of the Habits of Mind. For example, do you observe teachers:

Remaining open to continuous learning - Having the humility to say, “I have so much more to learn,” and wanting to find out.
Thinking about thinking -Regularly planning, monitoring, and reflecting upon actions and tasks and Being aware of your own thoughts, strategies, feelings and actions, and their effects on others
Problem solving- clarifying issues, data gathering, and rechecking information, such as:
· Gathering data through all senses
· Questioning and posing problems
· Striving for accuracy
Communicating effectively--both orally and in writing by:
· Listening with understanding and empathy
· Communicating with clarity and precision
· Thinking interdependently
Creating, imagining and innovating - Generating new and novel solutions and strategies, inventing new ideas and alternatives.
Taking responsible risks - Trying new and different ways, even if there is a chance for failure. It is as if you are living on the edge of your incompetence and you need to take a chance on jumping off the edge and try some new learning venture.
Persisting - Persevering in a task through its completion. Looking ways to reach your goal when stuck; not giving up.

As teachers incorporate Habits of Mind into their thinking and behaviors, they say, “I need more practice with...” or “I am so excited by how much I have learned about...” or “I need to go deeper into this material...” They have developed the desire to continuously improve and learn.

Such dispositions must be developed, nurtured, supported and practiced on a regular basis. The environment and culture of the school must honor and encourage these dispositions. Schools with supportive cultures are more likely to foster significant growth among its teachers. Like the whole child, whole teachers are a composite of human motivations and developmental drives :

Cognitive: Teachers must be cognitively and emotionally challenged, continually planning for, engaging in and reflecting on learning experiences.
Physical: Teachers must feel safe, secure, healthy, fit, resilient and strong.
Emotional: Teachers must be stress free, in a trustful, non-evaluative environment,
Social: Teachers must be in collaborative, interdependent, reciprocal, relationships
Spiritual: Teachers must transcend the trivial in curriculum and be dedicated and committed to achieving the larger value of what they do as purposefully leading to a better, more beautiful and harmonious world.

When considering teacher quality, we are concerned not just for what we observe in the moment. We are also concerned about whether the teacher has the more enduring habits that will serve them well as they continue to learn, grow and respond positively to change.

Attending to the whole teacher, we suggest evidence of the growth and development of these habits can be collected by triangulating data between self-observation, peer observation, and administrator observation. Many schools have developed surveys, group process observation tools, and journals to offer data regarding the habits. This data should be weighed as significantly as that of student performance. It is data about how effectively teachers are continuous learners who can both give and receive feedback to further their own growth as well as the growth of the professional community. After all, isn’t evaluation about improving and growing--not punishing?

Contact Art Costa at ArtCosta@aol.com and Bena Kallick at Kallick.Bena@gmail.com. You can follow their work at www.habitsofmindinstitute.org

Ann Myers and Jill Berkowicz are the authors of The STEM Shift (2015, Corwin) a book about leading the shift into 21st century schools. Ann and Jill welcome connecting through Twitter & Email.

Photo by geralt courtesy of Pixabay

The opinions expressed in Leadership 360 are strictly those of the author(s) and do not reflect the opinions or endorsement of Editorial Projects in Education, or any of its publications.