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Supervision. Our most important job;Our only job. Principal’s Role in Motivation of Teachers. Understand your own values, strengths, needs; Set personal goals; Display enthusiasm for your work; Communicate; Understand their personal values; Identify their strengths and needs
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Supervision Our most important job;Our only job
Principal’s Role in Motivation of Teachers • Understand your own values, strengths, needs; • Set personal goals; • Display enthusiasm for your work; • Communicate; • Understand their personal values; • Identify their strengths and needs • Provide evaluation and feedback
What do teachers want to know? • How am I doing? • How can I improve? • What will be expected of me in the next supervisory visit? • How will my work be evaluated? • What kind of help can I expect?
What do teachers want from us? • General interest and concern • Many formal and informal visits • Points out strengths and weaknesses • Talks with teachers • Welcomes teacher input • Is fair
Supervision: to enable the teacher to grow professionally, to “walk with” the teacher on her journey toward mastery. Evaluation: to determine if the teacher should be retained or terminated. Supervision: different from Evaluation
What are the components of good teaching? • 1. Knowledge of the subject matter • 2. Planning skills • 3. Use of materials • 4. Classroom management • 5. Human relations skills • 6. Instructional skills
1. Knowledge of subject matter • Pursuit of subject mastery • Scope and sequence • Ability to apply relevancy
2. Planning Skills • Beyond the textbook • Long-range/short-range • Plan B • Time and task management
3. Use of materials • Nonreliance on textbook • Ability to use a variety of materials • Ability to select appropriate materials • Updating of available materials
4. Classroom management • Effective discipline • Management of paper work • Group behavior • Use of psychology, knowledge of child development
5. Human relations skills • Motivational skills • Caring • Ability to identify abilities and needs • Ability to read body language
6. Instructional skills • Ability to determine learning styles • Ability to use differentiated learning • Testing, grading • Setting goals • Prescribe for learning needs