250 likes | 541 Views
2. Why Self-Evaluation?. Improve School Development Planning Increase collaboration / participationChallenge assumptions regarding qualityInternational
E N D
2. 2 Why Self-Evaluation? Improve School Development Planning
Increase collaboration / participation
Challenge assumptions regarding quality
International & national policy
Complement & transform WSE
3. 3 Is Self-Evaluation related to Whole School Evaluation?
Looking at our School is a guide to self-evaluation
It is also the framework for WSE
WSE will have regard to self-evaluation
Self-evaluation is highly recommended by the inspectorate
Self-evaluation is focused and managed by the school
Your experience?...........
4. 4 What is Self-Evaluation? Systematic, evidence based inquiry into an aspect of school life
Seeks to find out how well the school is doing in relation to accepted standards of good practice
Guides the school to select planning priorities for improvement
5. 5 So what’s new? Systematic
Evidence-Based
Standards
Improvement
6. 6 Self-Evaluation and School Development Planning Self-evaluation
is about getting real value from the time you already give to planning
should be selective and sharply focused on what it is important to look at now
complements external evaluation / WSE
7. 7 Process of Self-Evaluation –key steps Regarding a selected area/policy:
Determine what good practice is
Gather reliable data on actual practice
Collate and interpret the data - evidence
Reach valid conclusions that you can stand over
Prioritise for planned improvement
8. 8 Self-Evaluation Regarding a specific area/policy:
How do you know what you should be doing?
How do you know what you are doing?
How do you know how well you are doing?
How are you going to do better?
9. 9 Stages in Self-Evaluation - Selected area Buy-in : focus, aims and conditions
What to look for
What to look at
How to manage it – structures
What to ask – who to ask – useful stats
Interpretation & conclusions
What to do with information
SDP – plan, act & communicate
10. 10 How do you decide what to evaluate? Explore checklist developed from ‘Looking at our school’
It is important to be selective
Homework, as an element of assessment is the focus of this workshop.
11. How do you decide which area to evaluate? The Quality of Teaching and Learning
Planning and preparation
Planning of work in line with syllabus
Planning Documentation
Differentiation
Resources
Health & Safety
(See checklist developed from Looking at our school: a guide to school self-evaluation)
12. The Quality of Teaching and Learning(‘Looking at our school’) Teaching & Learning
Methodology
strategies
pace
variety
resources
Classroom management
student motivation
behaviour
Classroom atmosphere
interactions
environment
Learning
suitability
questioning
engagement
Assessment & Achievement
Assessment modes and outcomes
systematic
varied,
type of feedback
Record keeping
reporting to parents
Student engagement in subject
knowledge
understanding
enthusiasm
Overall student achievement in subject
review of outcomes
13. 13 Focus of Self-Evaluation
Homework
14. 14 Buy-in Phase – Felt needs?
Teacher ‘I can’t get homework back from this class!’
Parent ‘all night doing homework’
Student ‘What’s the point?’
Subject Inspection report
15. 15 Ground Rules for Self-Evaluation What ground rules need to be put in place to ensure positive cooperation of all partners?
respect and appreciation of all contributions
general commitment to improved practice
where need arises
constructive use of all data gathered
no recrimination
no individuals identified
16. 16 Self-Evaluating Homework Describe good practice in Teaching and Learning in relation to Homework
Evaluate current school practice in the light of this
Identify strengths and challenges
Agree planning priorities to be addressed
17. 17 Homework – 3 Dimensions
Whole-school
Subject Department
Teacher
18. 18 BuzzWhat are we looking for?
What is good practice in relation to homework at whole-school level ?
(Think of the indicators of good practice against which you might evaluate actual practice in your school)
ii
19. 19 Indicators of good practice at Whole-school level
School policy in place
School policy is known and followed . . .
HW has clear pedagogical purpose
Set regularly
Homework is differentiated
Recorded in HW journal
Completed by student
Acceptable standard achieved
Corrected promptly
Feedback given
Records maintained
Information is used to guide teaching
Non-presentation of HW is addressed
20. 20 WorkshopYou are a planning group evaluating Homework In relation to these indicators you need to develop questions to discover current practice –
Who would you ask?
What would you ask?
How would you ask?
Essential to strike a balance between Qualitative and Quantitative information
21. How do you interpret and report results?
22. 22 Process of Self-Evaluation –key steps Regarding a selected area/policy:
Determine what good practice is
Gather reliable data on actual practice
Collate and interpret the data - evidence
Reach valid conclusions that you can stand over
Prioritise for planned improvement
23. 23 Planning Self-Evaluation – key questions What means will you use to collect the information you need?
What resources will be needed?
What timescale will be involved?
How do you intend to use the findings?
Who will be informed of the outcomes?
What means will you use to communicate the findings to the relevant partners?
24. 24 Planning Self-Evaluation – key questions At what point will the evaluation be conducted?
Who will conduct the evaluation?
What indicators of good practice will you use?
What questions do you want answered?
From whom do you want to get information?
25. 25 Self-Evaluation ‘Schools contribute significantly to improving quality through school self-evaluation.’
(Guide to Whole School Evaluation in Post Primary Schools, DES 2006)
To facilitate self-evaluation as a central component of the continuous planning process the inspectorate published
Looking at Our School: An Aid to Self-Evaluation in Second-Level Schools (2003).