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The Analysis of Classroom Observations


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Classroom Observation

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Ross Morrison McGill founded @TeacherToolkit in 2007 and is widely recognised as one of the leading influencers in education in the UK and across the world. In 2015, he was named among The Sunday Times/Debrett’s 500 Most Influential People in Britain for his impact on...
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How should teachers conduct lesson observations of other teachers?

For 25 years, observing in the classroom has been largely a trial and error process. Sadly, I made many mistakes.

In a paper published by The British Psychological Society, 2010, Neil Mercer poses interesting theories about collecting observational data, especially in working classrooms, and why it requires a systematic and considered approach to what behaviours should be sampled, how these observations should be captured and the practicality of recording what is observed.

The paper describes methods for analysing classroom ‘talk’, comparing strengths and weaknesses. Both quantitative and qualitative methods based on specific theories of social action, research paradigms, and disciplines.

Discourse in the classroom

Studies which are typically observational, non-interventional, and qualitative ask the following type of questions:

  • How does classroom discourse enable, or inhibit, the expression of identities?
  • How are the languages/language varieties of different cultures recognised and used in schools?
  • Is current educational policy sensitive to the linguistic and cultural reality of school life?

Discourse and its impact in the classroom

Studies which research traditions in social and developmental psychology and pedagogical studies, with strong attachments to the work of Vygotsky ask the following types of questions:

  • How does dialogue promote learning and the development of understanding?
  • What types of talk are associated with the best learning outcomes?
  • Does collaborative activity help children to learn, or assist their conceptual development?

The paper continues to argue that both approaches cannot be understood without due attention to the nature and functions of qualitative analysis; that cultural and local norms shape the processes of teaching and learning; and that in the classroom, meanings are continually renegotiated over variable periods of time.

The implication is that one-off, ‘snapshot’ studies of the classroom are unlikely to yield as valid results as those which involve continuous and repeated observations, such as over a series of lessons and both approaches agreed to be critical of classroom research which does not recognise the importance of these principles.

Is it time to put one-off Learning Walks in the bin? Tell me what impact they have on teaching and learning?

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What is Ofsted up to?

Eight years later in June 2018, Ofsted published research which highlighted 6 observation models, unpicking how lesson observations may help with future inspection development – curated to support reliability and validity – as OfSTED seek to strengthen their purpose. Today as I write, Ofsted now consult the world on their inspection framework for September 2019, abandoning ‘teaching and learning’ as a key judgement because past research has proven that it is unreliable to be able to evaluate the complex nature of the classroom in such a short period of time.

One would be forgiven for thinking how Ofsted believe that they can still evaluate a school in just two days if grading a teacher in a snapshot period is so flawed.

Conclusion

In Mercer’s paper, he highlights the combined use of quantitative and qualitative methods has become more common in educational research – today, this is everything schools hope to achieve, but my research suggests it remains a significant challenge.

Mercer concludes arguments that only qualitative research can deal with the human reality of school life, or that only quantitative research amounts to real science, is unconvincing. Instead, researchers should accept that various methods – and methodologies have their distinctive strengths and weaknesses and that by asking ‘What do I need to do to answer my research questions?’ an open-minded researcher may avoid simplistic choices.

Something noteworthy, Mercer writes “We also know that the ways teachers use talk (verbal feedback) in the classroom have a significant effect on students as a tool for their own learning, but if this line of educational research is to have a major impact on educational policy and the training of teachers, we need more large-scale studies.”

My research with UCL may not (yet) be large-scale, but it’s a start to help rescue teachers from observational bias and the marking/workload burden.

Source

As a classroom practitioner, all I want to ask is, what is the impact on pupils and the classroom. Once we’ve worked out what the research suggests, as ever, teachers need to know what that then looks like in the classroom. May this serve as a good reminder to those all unpicking the complex world of the classroom.

The analysis of classroom talk: Methods and methodologies by Neil Mercer, Faculty of Education at the University of Cambridge. If you would like a copy of the full paper, leave a comment below.

One-off ‘snapshot’ observation is unlikely to yield valid results compared to a series of lessons – that’s not good news for those who record judgement.

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17th March 201917th March 2019 by @TeacherToolkit
Posted in Academic Research, School Inspection (Ofsted), Teaching and LearningTagged Curriculum, Faculty of Education, Lev Vygotsky, Neil Mercer, Observations, Teaching and Learning, The British Psychological Society, University of Cambridge, Verbal Feedback, Verbal Feedback Project

18 thoughts on “The Analysis of Classroom Observations”

  1. James Wilding says:
    17th March 2019 at 7:22 am

    I’ve remained astonished that both Ofsted and school leaders have set so much store by lesson observations. For schools to develop the open supportive culture that promotes successful learning cultures, permitting other teachers see you teach is important. Sharing good practice, talking about teaching, understanding how to nuance trategies that keep ‘Smithy’ on board without alienating ‘Jonesy’ are activities we all need to appreciate and engage. Chaotic teaching, unsafe teaching etc. are behaviours of employees who don’t have the skills and expertise yet; those lesson observations need to be reversed so the still-trainee sees and acquires greater understanding. Since the publication of Hidden lives of learners, noone can say we dont know evaluative lesson obs are vastly overrated.

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    1. @TeacherToolkit says:
      17th March 2019 at 10:15 am

      Best. book. ever!

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      1. Iwan Williams says:
        26th March 2019 at 10:49 pm

        interesting! If I could get a copy of the full paper please. Many thanks

      2. @TeacherToolkit says:
        28th March 2019 at 5:25 pm

        Now shared by email.

  2. James Pratt says:
    18th March 2019 at 8:19 am

    I would a copy of the full report please!

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  3. Adrian Dalzell says:
    18th March 2019 at 8:25 am

    I’kd like copy of the paper please. We are currently discussing with leadership and colleagues “the craft of teaching”. As you have pointed out this something that can not be measured in such a short observation.

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  4. mary elizabeth tulley says:
    24th March 2019 at 9:44 pm

    Please send a full copy of the report

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    1. Emma Small says:
      13th April 2019 at 9:17 pm

      I’d love a copy, please

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      1. @TeacherToolkit says:
        14th April 2019 at 3:06 pm

        You can grab a copy here.

  5. Richard Cairns says:
    28th March 2019 at 9:27 am

    Yes pleas, I’d like a copy.

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    1. @TeacherToolkit says:
      28th March 2019 at 5:25 pm

      Now shared by email.

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  6. Clare Goldsmith says:
    13th April 2019 at 9:32 pm

    Could I get a copy of the report?
    Thanks

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    1. @TeacherToolkit says:
      14th April 2019 at 3:06 pm

      You can grab a copy here.

      Log in to Reply
  7. Nika Maglaperidze says:
    13th April 2019 at 9:37 pm

    Would like to get a copy of the full report please

    Log in to Reply
    1. @TeacherToolkit says:
      14th April 2019 at 3:06 pm

      You can grab a copy here.

      Log in to Reply
  8. jason says:
    8th May 2019 at 7:31 am

    Could i get a copy of the report please

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    1. @TeacherToolkit says:
      8th May 2019 at 7:48 am

      Hi Jason – see comments above with the hyperlink shared.

      Log in to Reply

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