Our strongest school cultures demonstrate that when teachers thrive, students thrive. Decades of research prove what educators, students, and families know from direct experience: teachers have a greater impact on student success than any other school factor. To support teachers as we begin to integrate new, higher standards, principals will start aligning their teacher support and supervision practices with the demands of the Common Core.
To improve the instructional core across classrooms, all NYC school leaders are being asked to utilize a rubric that articulates what effective classroom teaching looks like to guide short, frequent cycles of classroom observation and collaborative examination of student work in the 2011-12 school year. When they do so, their teachers know what effective teaching looks like, have a shared language to discuss what's working and what needs to be improved, and know which actions to take to improve their practice.
Learn also offers Learning Opportunities to help school leaders and teachers understand the different competencies within The Framework for Teaching that support the design and implementation of Common Core-aligned units and tasks. Learning Opportunities include interactive modules, articles, videos, web links and other resources that will help educators improve their craft and prepare all students to thrive in college and their future careers.To explore some of the learning opportunities available in ARIS Learn see the table below.
In addition to the citywide work, there will be a Talent Management Pilot in school year 2011-12. Building on the 20-school Teacher Effectiveness Pilot in 2010-11, ~100 schools participating in the Talent Management Pilot will pilot implementation of a teacher evaluation and development model that centers on frequent observations and feedback aligned to a rubric of teaching practice, and incorporates measures of student learning (state and local) into teacher evaluations. The pilot will inform preparation for the roll-out of the new state requirements on teacher evaluation.
Teachers and school leaders involved in the 2010-11 Teacher Effectiveness Pilot overwhelmingly say they have benefited from their participation: