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Chapter 2: Differences in Perspectives and Preferences among Co-Educators

Chapter 2: Differences in Perspectives and Preferences among Co-Educators. By: Emily Clark, Natalie Smith, and Karen Thomas. Individual Differences among Adults in Educational Environments. Different Perspectives and Perspectives change occurrences in the classroom

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Chapter 2: Differences in Perspectives and Preferences among Co-Educators

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  1. Chapter 2: Differences in Perspectives and Preferences among Co-Educators By: Emily Clark, Natalie Smith, and Karen Thomas

  2. Individual Differences among Adults in Educational Environments • Different Perspectives and Perspectives change occurrences in the classroom • Perspectives: a mental view of facts and ideas, and seeing the relevant data in meaningful relationships • Preference: a selection or choice to which one gives a priority • For a better classroom, teachers co-teaching will put aside the different preferences and perspectives to create great lessons

  3. Recognizing Differences in Professional Perspectives • Analyzing problem-solving capacities of groups in various team endeavors: • Cognitive Diversity • Different types of disciplinary training • Different tools and diverse understandings to the task

  4. General Education and Special Education • The issue of “your students” versus “my students” • There is a difference between Special Education and Regular Education teachers • Different Curriculum • Different Standards to meet • Teaching and behavioral management strategies • Assessment methods for grading and reporting outcomes • Collaboration has made both teachers prepare the lesson in a way that will help all students

  5. General Education and Special Education • Collaboration does show the difference between novice and tenured teachers • The ability to make the right decisions in lesson planning • Novice teachers are more likely to show enthusiasm with their first lesson of the year • Using more time to plan their first “true” lesson • Exposure to the newest: • Educational theories • Methods • Materials

  6. Grade Levels and Curriculum Areas • There is a need to understand the differences in standards among Elementary and Middle, then Special Education and General Education • Different Professional Perspectives when dealing with different subjects in each grade level • Different ways to collaborate and learning tools in Professional Development

  7. More Differences of Perspectives • Homework: How much, often, and what kind • Pull-out or Pull-in sessions for certain students • Do make-up work during pull-out times • Use test accommodations and modifications for students with disabilities • Grading Policies • Allowing “do-over” work for full or partial credit • Time-out, positive and negative reinforcement, and contract contingencies

  8. More Differences of Perspectives • Frequency and type of parent involvement in the classroom • Noise and activity levels within the classroom • Appearance and activity levels of the classroom • Being the only teacher on staff without parenting responsibilities, or vice versa • Ways in which you co-teach and conduct classroom observations • Use of Student portfolios • Spending personal money on school supplies, or not doing so

  9. Principles of Learning • Variation in achievement among students cannot be eliminated • Ways to do this: • Speed up less able students artificially, unethical means • Slow down very able students, unethically and preventing learning from happening • Good teaching will increase individual differences in achievement among students • Students with less ability and with disabilities will learn • Students with more ability will learn even more if they are not being held back by teaching processes

  10. Principles of Learning • 8 ways to successful collaboration and consultation • Types of Learning Theory • Kinds of subject matter • Types of instructional goals • Orientations in time and achievement levels • Kinds of tests • Types of scores • Interpretations of score • Domains for learning and doing, with transfer of the learning

  11. Types of Learning Theory • Cognitive • Directed to the students learning • Behavioral • Focus on observation, reinforcement conditions for modifying behaviors, responses, prerequisite skills, instructional sequencing, and observable criteria • Social • Co-constructive process in which people interact and negotiate to understand, apply, and problem solve

  12. Three Kinds of Subject Matter • Essential • Subject matter is the most basic and clear-cut level within closed, fixed sphere for learning • Developmental • Specific but expansive to the extent that it either cannot be fully mastered or it need not be fully mastered in order to continue to learn and do • Ideational • Subject matter is neither specifiable not masterable

  13. Annual Goals and Instructional Objectives • Goals must include • An observable student behaviors • Conditions for demonstrating the behavior • The minimal level of attainment expected • Special Education curriculum must be measurable in order for IEP goals to be achieved • General Education may need to follow IDEA in order for students with IEP’s to achieve goals

  14. Time and Achievement Dimensions • This is a main proponent for teachers to decide how much time for a student to have in order to achieve their IEP goals • Special Education teachers help students to achieve goals made • Collaborative teachers must think of ways to work towards the goal with instruction but not helping the student achieve the goal

  15. Assessment and Evaluation Processes • Purpose of tests is to obtain scores, interpretation of scores, and true meaning of the score obtained by students • Teachers create flawed meanings for creating tests and grading tests: • Using percentages to score nonmasterable material • Confusing percentile scores with percentages • Using grade and age Equivalencies • Grading on a curve • Assessment adaptations for students with disabilities

  16. Thinking and Doing Together..But in Different Ways

  17. Thinking Together • Educators do not need to think alike. • They need to think together. • If you value the individualism and uniqueness of students, then you should also value and respect the differences of your colleagues and co-educators.

  18. Thinking Together • Crucial factors of teacher preparation • Ability to relate constructively to others • Responding to differences with emotional maturity • Dialectical thinking (Madeline Hunter) • Not abandoning one’s position • Taking the opposing view momentarily

  19. Tomorrow’s leaders • Demonstrate tolerance • Convey genuine interest in different ways of doing things • Appreciate different ways of doing things • Model such skills and attitudes every day in the school context

  20. Recognizing Differences in Personality Preferences • Personality- the sum total of physical, mental, and social characteristics of an individual • Individuality is demonstrated by personality • Studies of personalities • Kolb cognitive style concepts • The Dunn and Dunn learning style assessment • Myers- Briggs Type Indicator • Increase awareness and understanding of human preferences that influence behavior

  21. Jungian Theory • Every person is equipped with a broad spectrum of attributes and can use them as needed. • Prefers to focus on one or the other at a time • Example-- Prefers a red car, but could live with a blue car • Less preferred function contributes to productivity and self-satisfaction • Provide balance and completeness

  22. Self-study • Help educators become aware of their own attributes and best qualities • Completed at P.D.s or department meetings • Strengths can be combined to help diverse students • Be careful not to oversimplify or generalize results

  23. Doing Together • By addressing own preferences • Become more insightful to student learning styles • Improve differentiation • More willing and able to relate to colleagues’ personal preferences • Work in different ways but build on it together • Maximize team productivity

  24. Using Adult Difference to Facilitate Collaboration • Some researchers focus on necessity of common perspective, negating value of differences • Best collaboration makes sincere effort to capitalize on differences • Learn more from differing views of theory and practice

  25. Differences When Communicating • Most problems occur from personality and professional differences • Myers says, “it is human nature not to listen attentively if one has the impression that what is being said is going to be irrelevant or unimportant…”

  26. Differences When Problem Finding and Problem Solving • Individuals differ on how they confront problems (“meticulously” “rashly”) • When alone, one generally looks for multiple perspectives to address all angles • Collaboration sets this framework by nature • No specific personality type is best • Researchers show teams with composite personalities outperforms a team with identical personalities

  27. Differences When Evaluating and Reporting • Expressing views on “…assessment, grading, and reporting results…” is best weapon against disagreements • Recognize that differences do not intentionally aim to irritate or alienate

  28. Using Adult Differences to Facilitate Team Interactions • Helpful elements in a team include: • Positive interdependence • Individual accountability • Face-to-face interaction • Collaborative skills • Group processing • Use strengths to… • Generate ideas for meeting need • Organize and divide work • Prepare evaluation procedures • Follow-up with evaluation (further planning)

  29. Ethical Issues Concerning Individual Perspectives and Preferences • To avoid issues, be ready to change minds when evidence warrants it • DO NOT: • Become so enthused you share inappropriately • Generalize unadvisedly • Stereotype inadvertently • Draw others out indiscriminately • Take disagreement personally • Keep it practical, appropriately personal • “Onedownsmanship”-de-emphasis of prior knowledge in order to maintain relationships

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