This checklist
consists of the headings from a long analysis of this topic, consisting
of the checklist plus explanatory text for each of the checkpoints (Journal
of Personnel Evaluation in Education,1994, vol. 8, no.2, pp.151-184).
The checklist provides a good overview of the whole approach, however,
and is based on a complex evaluative theory, which includes, for example,
the ethical principle that one cannot evaluate teachers by looking at
the teaching style they employ, except insofar as this is prescribed by
the accepted duties of a teacher. They can use much or little lecturing,
question asking, etc., no matter what the research shows, just so long
as they successfully cause the acquisition of valuable knowledge, skills,
and attitudes in the areas for which they are responsible, at a rate that
is appropriate or better for comparable students, within current ethical,
resource, and legal parameters. Teachers have no duty to teach using a
particular style, only to teach successfully. It is weakly sequential
because there are sociopolitical reasons for each item’s placement; e.g.,
the main reason for placing item 1 first was the perceived climate for
acceptance by school boards, state and federal agencies, and parents.
| 1. KNOWLEDGE
OF SUBJECT MATTER |
A. In the field(s)
of appointment, e.g., middle school mathematics
B. In across-the-curriculum
subjects, e.g., composition, spelling |
| 2. INSTRUCTIONAL
COMPETENCE |
A. Communication skills
(use of age-appropriate vocabulary, examples, inflection, body language)
B. Management skills
a. Management of (classroom) process, including discipline
b. Management of (individual student’s educational) progress
c. Management of emergencies (fire, tornado, earthquake, flood,
stroke, violent attack)
C. Course construction
and improvement skills
a. Course planning
b. Selection and creation of materials
c. Use of special resources
i. Local sites
ii. Media
iii. Specialists
d. Evaluation of the course, teaching, materials, and curriculum |
| 3. ASSESSMENT
COMPETENCE |
A. Knowledge about
student assessment options
B. Test construction
and administration skills
C. Grading, ranking,
scoring practices
a. Process (doing it correctly, i.e., using scoring keys, blind
scoring)
b. Output (the results meet appropriate standards, e.g., (usually)
not all As or all Fs)
D. Recording and reporting
student achievement
a. Knowledge about options and obligations in reporting achievement
b. Good reporting process (to students, administrators, parents,
authorized others) |
| 4. PROFESSIONALISM |
A. Professional ethics
B. Professional attitude
C. Professional development
D. Service to the profession
(some but not each of the following)
a. Knowledge about the profession
b. Helping beginners and peers
c. Working for professional organizationsd. Research on teaching
E. Knowledge of duties
F. Knowledge about the
school and its community |
| 5.
NONSTANDARD BUT CONTRACTUAL DUTIES |
| e.g., supervision of
chapel services in a religious school |
| |
| This checklist
is being provided as a free service to the user. The provider of
the checklist has not modified or adapted the checklist to fit the
specific needs of the user and the user is executing his or her
own discretion and judgment in using the checklist. The provider
of the checklist makes no representations or warranties that this
checklist is fit for the particular purpose contemplated by user
and specifically disclaims any such warranties or representations.
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