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. Co-Teaching:. Not Your Mother's Student Teaching Experience. CO-TEACHING: An emerging model for successful student teaching. . Marc Gamble, Social Studies, Ashe High School, West Jefferson, NCJenny Risk, Social Studies, Ashe High School, West Jefferson, NCLinda McCalister, Appalachian State University.
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3. CO-TEACHING: An emerging model for successful student teaching
MarcMarc
4. Rationale High Stakes Accountability
Second adult in the classroom setting
Exceptional Education’s Inclusion Model
Growing expectation of collaboration
marcmarc
5. History of Co-Teaching: Inclusion The inclusion classroom paved the way for Co-Teaching in the student teaching process.
Wather-Thomas (1997)-co-teaching in 23 schools
- improved academic, social skills, attitudes, self-concepts and in children w/disabilities
Walsh & Snyder (1993)
-14% increase in state competency tests
LindaLinda
6. Characteristics of Co-Teaching
Co-teaching - “two or more professionals delivering substantive instruction to a diverse group of students in a single physical space”.
Teachers must share ownership for the success of all the students in a co-teaching setting.
Co-teaching partners must share decision making, resources, responsibility, and accountability.
Establishing and Supporting Mutual respect lindalinda
7. What Co-Teaching Is Not One person teaching one topic followed by another who teaches a different aspect of the day’s lesson.
One person teaching while another person prepares instructional materials at the photocopier or corrects student papers.
One person teaching while the other sits and watches.
When one person's ideas prevail regarding what will be taught and how it will be taught jennyjenny
8. Five Basic Models One Teach, One Support
Parallel Teaching
Alternate Teaching
Station Teaching
Team Teaching
Jenny-introJenny-intro
9. Five Basic Models One Teach, One Support:
One teacher does all the teaching while the other moves about the room helping individual students and observing behaviors.
Allows opportunity for modeling appropriate instructional / discipline proceduresOne teacher does all the teaching while the other moves about the room helping individual students and observing behaviors.
Allows opportunity for modeling appropriate instructional / discipline procedures
10. One teach, one support Advantages
Ideal beginning teaming method for student teachers - Incorporates the student teacher on the first day.
The cooperating teacher can model instruction and discipline techniques.
Sets the scene so that roles can be reversed later in the semester.
Works well throughout the semester; it can be used as the structure for seamless switching back and forth between teacher and student teacher within a class period. Marc-explain
Jenny- Walk around the room and make sure everyone understands (Ask Questions for understanding))
Switch roles
Supplies to give outMarc-explain
Jenny- Walk around the room and make sure everyone understands (Ask Questions for understanding))
Switch roles
Supplies to give out
11. Parallel Teaching Classroom is divided with both instructors teaching the same information at the same time.
Ex: differentiated instruction, art, small groups
Linda-explain slide
Small groups
Jenny-”describe your student teaching” words to describe
Marc-”describe….”-discussion
Linda-synthesize information “on your feet”
Classroom is divided with both instructors teaching the same information at the same time.
Ex: differentiated instruction, art, small groups
Linda-explain slide
Small groups
Jenny-”describe your student teaching” words to describe
Marc-”describe….”-discussion
Linda-synthesize information “on your feet”
12. One instructor works with most of the class while the other works with an identified group either inside or outside the classroom
Don’t model
Don’t model
13.
Classroom is divided into various teaching stations
Provides mobility rather than confinement
Great for hands-on learners
Allows some students to work at an accelerated pace or alone
Marc-Explain and give examples. We are getting example clips from art.Classroom is divided into various teaching stations
Provides mobility rather than confinement
Great for hands-on learners
Allows some students to work at an accelerated pace or alone
Marc-Explain and give examples. We are getting example clips from art.
14.
Two teachers serve as one. Both are actively engaged in management and instruction.
Allows both teachers to utilize their respective strengths
Presents both teachers a co-equals
Provides practice and models exploratory discussion
Both teachers are actively engaged in management and instruction. Real topic
Two teachers serve as one. Both are actively engaged in management and instruction.
Allows both teachers to utilize their respective strengths
Presents both teachers a co-equals
Provides practice and models exploratory discussion
Both teachers are actively engaged in management and instruction. Real topic
16. Why Co-teach? In today’s world of high stakes testing and accountability (EOC’s, EOG’s, AP’s, ABC’s, Gateways and NCLB), no classroom teacher can afford to turn his or her classroom over to a student teacher for the duration of student teaching.
In today’s world, the student teacher deserves the opportunity to work side by side with the career teacher, learning from him or her every day, before entering the education profession. MarcMarc
17. Why Co-Teach – One more time Our students and their parents are our clients. Co-Teaching offers them the best instruction we can present. It also offers the student teacher extensive opportunities to find his or her own teaching style.
Highly effective teachers in today’s classroom recognize collaboration and communication as imperative to student academic success.
MarcMarc
18. Works Cited Ashe County PDS. Marc Gamble, Pat Morrison Alex Rollins, Rebecca Wells.
ASU Public School Partnership. Linda McCalister, Kathy Howell.
MidValley Consortium for Teacher Education. A Co-teaching Resource Handbook for Cooperating Teachers, Student Teachers and College/University Supervisors. Virginia Department of Education. August 2000. Online. Internet. 6 Feb. 2007. Available: www.teachercenter.mnscu.edu/staff/featured/JTEpiece.pdf