Every day our classroom environments include big
experiences when we start a lesson. Sometimes what students expect in the English
class changes; sometimes it grows or sometimes it reduces in certain way, and
because of that we have to deal with different attitudes, reactions, thoughts
and feelings in the day-to-day classroom practice. It can be said that observation is an important part in the
everyday teaching and learning process.
As teachers, we always try to observe what our students do, how they
react towards certain topics, how they use the material provided, how they
interact during the group work, etc.
Also, it is important to say that Teachers assess what students have and
have not learned, they assess the effectiveness of particular teaching
strategies, they determine which materials and activities students enjoy.
Class
observation is necessary in the teaching-learning process due to the fact that “it provides a basis to know and understand what is happening in the
classroom and is a guide to know what should follow, it is important for
planning instruction of a unit, lesson, or course in the future.” (Genesee
and Upshur). Classroom Teachers, unlike
many other people, are engaged not only in teaching and classroom management
but also in trying to observe and make sense of their students’ learning
process and what it encompasses. Classroom observation should be concerned
primarily with those language skills and language objectives. It is important to identify the aim of our
observations, some of the reasons for doing so are: a) To determine whether students are progressing as planned and are
ready to move to the next unit, b) To
identify difficulties that particular students are having so that appropriate
instruction can be planned for them, c) To assess the appropriateness and
usefulness of a textbook, among others.
One to the many tasks that a teacher needs to do is
deciding how to record the observations of their students in the learning
process and in the classroom. Like
information collection itself is an ongoing process, some record techniques are
necessary for the information to be useful such as a) Anecdotal Records, which is a good way to record observations
about instruction and students all times of the day, even during recess or
lunch time; those anecdotal records can be made on file cards, adhesive labels
or clipboards with note paper, etc; and b)
checklists and rating scales, which
are relatively structured formats or
lists of items that describe specific aspects of learning and teaching with
predesignated categories for recording observations.
To sum up, classroom observation is important to all
forms of evaluation and is part of the everyday routine of a teacher. What is really challenging is to plan a
relevant and useful observation and
recording keeping to benefit the instruction
process and the student learning process.
Hi Julie,
ResponderEliminarHave you had any experiences with keeping record of your observations? Do you think you could implemment this somehow into your teaching?
Raúl
Hi Raúl,
ResponderEliminarwell I remember that in highschool, in my last year I had to meet some literacy hours teaching classes to children and in those classes I had to observe them and fill out a form much like a checklist in order to record the develoment of each student, then I had to hand it in to the person who was in charge of my teaching, I suppose that for analyzing those formats because at that time wasn't aware enough about it.
well I would implement recording keeping in my teaching in order to analyze in depth the student learning process and to have a better idea of what is necessary to their instruction.