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Principle 1: Content Pedagogy
The teacher understands the central concepts,
tools of inquiry, and structures of the discipline(s) he or she teaches and
can create learning experiences that make these aspects of subject matter
meaningful for students.
Principle 1's Knowledge
- The teacher understands major
concepts, assumptions, debates, processes of inquiry, and ways of
knowing that are central to the discipline(s) s/he teaches.
- The teacher understands how students'
conceptual frameworks and their misconceptions for an area of knowledge
can influence their learning.
- The teacher can relate his/her
disciplinary knowledge to other subject areas.
Principle 1's Dispositions
- The teacher realizes that subject
matter knowledge is not a fixed body of facts but is complex and
ever-evolving. S/he seeks to keep abreast of new ideas and
understandings in the field.
- The teacher appreciates multiple
perspectives and conveys to learners how knowledge is developed from the
vantage point of the knower.
- The teacher has enthusiasm for the
discipline(s) s/he teaches and sees connections to everyday life.
- The teacher is committed to
continuous learning and engages in professional discourse about subject
matter knowledge and children's learning of the discipline.
Principle 1's Performances
- The teacher effectively uses multiple
representations and explanations of disciplinary concepts that capture
key ideas and link them to students' prior understandings.
- The teacher can represent and use
differing viewpoints, theories, "ways of knowing" and methods of inquiry
in his/her teaching of subject matter concepts.
- The teacher can evaluate teaching
resources and curriculum materials for their comprehensiveness,
accuracy, and usefulness for representing particular ideas and concepts.
- The teacher engages students in
generating knowledge and testing hypotheses according to the methods of
inquiry and standards of evidence used in the discipline.
- The teacher develops and uses
curricula that encourage students to see, question, and interpret ideas
from diverse perspectives.
- The teacher can create
interdisciplinary learning experiences that allow students to integrate
knowledge, skills, and methods of inquiry from several subject areas.
Principle 2: Student Development
The teacher understands how children learn
and develop, and can provide learning opportunities that support a child's
intellectual, social, and personal development.
Principle 2's Knowledge
- The teacher understands how learning
occurs--how students construct knowledge, acquire skills, and develop
habits of mind--and knows how to use instructional strategies that
promote student learning.
- The teacher understands that
students' physical, social, emotional, moral and cognitive development
influence learning and knows how to address these factors when
making instructional decisions.
- The teacher is aware of expected
developmental progressions and ranges of individual variation within
each domain (physical, social, emotional, moral and cognitive), can
identify levels of readiness in learning, and understands how
development in any one domain may affect performance in others.
Principle 2's Dispositions
- The teacher appreciates individual
variation within each area of development, shows respect for the diverse
talents of all learners, and is committed to help them develop
self-confidence and competence.
- The teacher is disposed to use
students' strengths as a basis for growth, and their errors as an
opportunity for learning.
Principle 2's Performances
- The teacher assesses individual and
group performance in order to design instruction that meets learners'
current needs in each domain (cognitive, social, emotional, moral, and
physical) and that leads to the next level of development.
- The teacher stimulates student
reflection on prior knowledge and links new ideas to already familiar
ideas, making connections to students' experiences, providing
opportunities for active engagement, manipulation, and testing of ideas
and
materials, and encouraging students to assume responsibility for shaping
their learning tasks.
- The teacher accesses students'
thinking and experiences as a basis for instructional activities by, for
example, encouraging discussion, listening and responding to group
interaction, and eliciting samples of student thinking orally and in
writing.
Principle 3: Diverse Learners
The teacher understands how students
differ in their approaches to learning and creates instructional
opportunities that are adapted to diverse learners.
Principle 3's Knowledge
- The teacher understands and can
identify differences in approaches to learning and performance,
including different learning styles, multiple intelligences, and
performance modes, and can design instruction that helps use students'
strengths as the basis for growth.
- The teacher knows about areas of
exceptionality in learning--including learning disabilities, visual and
perceptual difficulties, and special physical or mental challenges.
- The teacher knows about the process
of second language acquisition and about strategies to support the
learning of students whose first language is not English.
- The teacher understands how students'
learning is influenced by individual experiences, talents, and prior
learning, as well as language, culture, family and community values.
- The teacher has a well-grounded
framework for understanding cultural and community diversity and knows
how to learn about and incorporate students' experiences,
cultures, and community resources into instruction.
Principle 3's Dispositions
- The teacher believes that all
children can learn at high levels and persists in helping all children
achieve success.
- The teacher appreciates and values
human diversity, shows respect for students' varied talents and
perspectives, and is committed to the pursuit of "individually
configured
excellence."
- The teacher respects students as
individuals with differing personal and family backgrounds and various
skills, talents, and interests.
- The teacher is sensitive to community
and cultural norms.
- The teacher makes students feel
valued for their potential as people, and helps them learn to value each
other.
Principle 3's Performances
- The teacher identifies and designs
instruction appropriate to students' stages of development, learning
styles, strengths, and needs.
- The teacher uses teaching approaches
that are sensitive to the multiple experiences of learners and that
address different learning and performance modes.
- The teacher makes appropriate
provisions (in terms of time and circumstances for work, tasks assigned,
communication and response modes) for individual students who have
particular learning differences or needs.
- The teacher can identify when and how
to access appropriate services or resources to meet exceptional learning
needs.
- The teacher seeks to understand
students' families, cultures, and communities, and uses this information
as a basis for connecting instruction to students' experiences (e.g.
drawing explicit connections between subject matter and community
matters, making assignments that can be related to students' experiences
and cultures).
- The teacher brings multiple
perspectives to the discussion of subject matter, including attention to
students' personal, family, and community experiences and cultural
norms.
- The teacher creates a learning
community in which individual differences are respected.
Principle 4:
Multiple Instructional Strategies
The teacher understands and uses a variety
of instructional strategies to encourage student development of critical
thinking, problem solving, and performance skills.
Principle 4's Knowledge
- The teacher understands the cognitive
processes associated with various kinds of learning (e.g. critical and
creative thinking, problem structuring and problem solving, invention,
memorization and recall) and how these processes can be
stimulated.
- The teacher understands principles
and techniques, along with advantages and limitations, associated with
various instructional strategies (e.g. cooperative learning, direct
instruction, discovery learning, whole group discussion, independent
study, interdisciplinary instruction).
- The teacher knows how to enhance
learning through the use of a wide variety of materials as well as human
and technological resources (e.g. computers, audio-visual
technologies, videotapes and discs, local experts, primary documents and
artifacts, texts, reference books, literature, and other print
resources).
Principle 4's Dispositions
- The teacher values the development of
students' critical thinking, independent problem solving, and
performance capabilities.
- The teacher values flexibility and
reciprocity in the teaching process as necessary for adapting
instruction to student responses, ideas, and needs.
Principle 4's Performances
- The teacher carefully evaluates how
to achieve learning goals, choosing alternative teaching strategies and
materials to achieve different instructional purposes and to meet
student needs (e.g. developmental stages, prior knowledge, learning
styles, and interests).
- The teacher uses multiple teaching
and learning strategies to engage students in active learning
opportunities that promote the development of critical thinking, problem
solving, and performance capabilities and that help student assume
responsibility for identifying and using learning resources.
- The teacher constantly monitors and
adjusts strategies in response to learner feedback.
- The teacher varies his or her role in
the instructional process (e.g. instructor, facilitator, coach,
audience) in relation to the content and purposes of instruction and the
needs of students.
- The teacher develops a variety of
clear, accurate presentations and representations of concepts, using
alternative explanations to assist students' understanding and
presenting diverse perspectives to encourage critical thinking.
Principle 5: Motivation and
Management
The teacher uses an understanding of
individual and group motivation and behavior to create a learning
environment that encourages positive social interaction, active engagement
in learning, and self-motivation.
Principle 5's Knowledge
- The teacher can use knowledge about
human motivation and behavior drawn from the foundational sciences of
psychology, anthropology, and sociology to develop strategies
for organizing and supporting individual and group work.
- The teacher understands how social
groups function and influence people, and how people influence groups.
- The teacher knows how to help people
work productively and cooperatively with each other in complex social
settings.
- The teacher understands the
principles of effective classroom management and can use a range of
strategies to promote positive relationships, cooperation, and
purposeful learning in the classroom.
- The teacher recognizes factors and
situations that are likely to promote or diminish intrinsic motivation,
and knows how to help students become self-motivated.
Principle 5's Dispositions
- The teacher takes responsibility for
establishing a positive climate in the classroom and participates in
maintaining such a climate in the school as whole.
- The teacher understands how
participation supports commitment, and is committed to the expression
and use of democratic values in the classroom.
- The teacher values the role of
students in promoting each other's learning and recognizes the
importance of peer relationships in establishing a climate of learning.
- The teacher recognizes the value of
intrinsic motivation to students' life-long growth and learning.
- The teacher is committed to the
continuous development of individual students' abilities and considers
how different motivational strategies are likely to encourage this
development for each student.
Principle 5's Performances
- The teacher creates a smoothly
functioning learning community in which students assume responsibility
for themselves and one another, participate in decision making,
work collaboratively and independently, and engage in purposeful
learning activities.
- The teacher engages students in
individual and cooperative learning activities that help them develop
the motivation to achieve, by, for example, relating lessons to
students' personal interests, allowing students to have choices in their
learning, and leading students to ask questions and pursue problems that
are meaningful to them.
- The teacher organizes, allocates, and
manages the resources of time, space, activities, and attention to
provide active and equitable engagement of students in productive tasks.
- The teacher maximizes the amount of
class time spent in learning by creating expectations and processes for
communication and behavior along with a physical setting conducive to
classroom goals.
- The teacher helps the group to
develop shared values and expectations for student interactions,
academic discussions, and individual and group responsibility that
create a positive classroom climate of openness, mutual respect,
support, and inquiry.
- The teacher analyzes the classroom
environment and makes decisions and adjustments to enhance social
relationships, student motivation and engagement, and productive work.
- The teacher organizes, prepares
students for, and monitors independent and group work that allows for
full and varied participation of all individuals.
Principle 6:
Communication and Technology
The teacher uses knowledge of effective
verbal, nonverbal and media communication techniques to foster active
inquiry, collaboration, and supportive interaction in the classroom.
Principle 6's Knowledge
- The teacher understands communication
theory, language
development, and the role of language in learning.
- The teacher understands how cultural
and gender differences
can affect communication in the classroom.
- The teacher recognizes the importance
of nonverbal as well as
verbal communication.
- The teacher knows about and can use
effective verbal,
nonverbal, and media communication techniques.
Principle 6's Dispositions
- The teacher recognizes the power of
language for fostering self-expression, identity development, and
learning.
- The teacher values many ways in which
people seek to communicate and encourages many modes of communication in
the classroom.
- The teacher is a thoughtful and
responsive listener.
- The teacher appreciates the cultural
dimensions of communication, responds appropriately, and seeks to foster
culturally sensitive communication by and among all students in the
class.
Principle 6's Performances
- The teacher models effective
communication strategies in conveying ideas and information and in
asking questions (e.g. monitoring the effects of messages, restating
ideas and drawing connections, using visual, aural, and kinesthetic
cues, being sensitive to nonverbal cues given and received).
- The teacher supports and expands
learner expression in speaking, writing, and other media.
- The teacher knows how to ask
questions and stimulate discussion in different ways for particular
purposes, for example, probing for learner understanding, helping
students
articulate their ideas and thinking processes, promoting risk taking and
problem-solving, facilitating factual recall, encouraging convergent and
divergent thinking, stimulating curiosity, helping students to question.
- The teacher communicates in ways that
demonstrate a sensitivity to cultural and gender differences (e.g.
appropriate use of eye contact, interpretation of body language and
verbal statements, acknowledgment of and responsiveness to different
modes of communication and participation).
- The teacher knows how to use a
variety of media communication tools, including audio-visual aids and
computers, to enrich learning opportunities.
Principle 7: Planning
The teacher plans instruction based upon
knowledge of subject matter, students, the community, and curriculum goals.
Principle 7's Knowledge
- The teacher understands learning
theory, subject matter, curriculum development, and student development
and knows how to use this knowledge in planning instruction to meet
curriculum goals.
- The teacher knows how to take
contextual considerations (instructional materials, individual student
interests, needs, and aptitudes, and community resources) into account
in planning instruction that creates an effective bridge between
curriculum goals and students' experiences.
- The teacher knows when and how to
adjust plans based on student responses and other contingencies.
Principle 7's Dispositions
- The teacher values both long term and
short term planning.
- The teacher believes that plans must
always be open to adjustment and revision based on student needs and
changing circumstances.
- The teacher values planning as a
collegial activity.
Principle 7's Performances
- As an individual and a member of a
team, the teacher selects and creates learning experiences that are
appropriate for curriculum goals, relevant to learners, and based upon
principles of effective instruction (e.g. that activate students' prior
knowledge, anticipate preconceptions, encourage exploration and
problem-solving, and build new skills on those previously acquired).
- The teacher plans for learning
opportunities that recognize and address variation in learning styles
and performance modes.
- The teacher creates lessons and
activities that operate at multiple levels to meet the developmental and
individual needs of diverse learners and help each progress.
- The teacher creates short-range and
long-term plans that are linked to student needs and performance, and
adapts the plans to ensure and capitalize on student progress and
motivation.
- The teacher responds to unanticipated
sources of input, evaluates plans in relation to short- and long-range
goals, and systematically adjusts plans to meet student needs and
enhance learning.
Principle 8: Assessment
The teacher understands and uses formal
and informal assessment strategies to evaluate and ensure the continuous
intellectual, social, and physical development of the learner.
Principle 8's Knowledge
- The teacher understands the
characteristics, uses, advantages, and limitations of different types of
assessments (e.g. criterion-referenced and norm-referenced instruments,
traditional standardized and performance-based tests, observation
systems, and assessments of student work) for evaluating how students
learn, what they know and are able to do, and what kinds of experiences
will support their further growth and development.
- The teacher knows how to select,
construct, and use assessment strategies and instruments appropriate to
the learning outcomes being evaluated and to other diagnostic purposes.
- The teacher understands measurement
theory and assessment related issues, such as validity, reliability,
bias, and scoring concerns.
Principle 8's Dispositions
- The teacher values ongoing assessment
as essential to the instructional process and recognizes that many
different assessment strategies, accurately and systematically used, are
necessary for monitoring and promoting student learning.
- The teacher is committed to using
assessment to identify student strengths and promote student growth
rather than to deny students access to learning opportunities.
Principle 8's Performances
- The teacher appropriately uses a
variety of formal and informal assessment techniques (e.g. observation,
portfolios of student work, teacher-made tests, performance tasks,
projects, student self-assessments, peer assessment, and standardized
tests) to enhance her or his knowledge of learners, evaluate students'
progress and performances, and
modify teaching and learning strategies.
- The teacher solicits and uses
information about students' experiences, learning behavior, needs, and
progress from parents, other colleagues, and the students themselves.
- The teacher uses assessment
strategies to involve learners in self-assessment activities, to help
them become aware of their strengths and needs, and to encourage them to
set personal goals for learning.
- The teacher evaluates the effect of
class activities on both individuals and the class as a whole,
collecting information through observation of classroom interactions,
questioning, and analysis of student work.
- The teacher monitors his or her own
teaching strategies and behavior in relation to student success,
modifying plans and instructional approaches accordingly.
- The teacher maintains useful records
of student work and performance and can communicate student progress
knowledgeably and responsibly, based on appropriate
indicators, to students, parents, and other colleagues.
Principle 9:
Reflective Practice: Professional Growth
The teacher is a reflective practitioner
who continually evaluates the effects of his or her choices and action on
other (students, parents, and other professionals in the learning community)
and who actively seeks out opportunities to grow professionally.
Principle 9's Knowledge
- The teacher understands methods of
inquiry that provide him/her with a variety of self-assessment and
problem-solving strategies for reflecting on his/her practice, its
influences on students' growth and learning, and the complex
interactions
between them.
- The teacher is aware of major areas
of research on teaching and of resources available for professional
learning (e.g. professional literature, colleagues, professional
associations, professional development activities).
Principle 9's Dispositions
- The teacher values critical thinking
and self-directed learning as habits of mind.
- The teacher is committed to
reflection, assessment, and learning as an ongoing process.
- The teacher is willing to give and
receive help.
- The teacher is committed to seeking
out, developing, and continually refining practices that address the
individual needs of students.
- The teacher recognizes his/her
professional responsibility for engaging in and supporting appropriate
professional practices for self and colleagues.
Principle 9's Performances
- The teacher uses classroom
observation, information about students, and research as sources for
evaluating the outcomes of teaching and learning and as a basis for
experimenting with, reflecting on, and revising practice.
- The teacher seeks out professional
literature, colleagues, and other resources to support his/her own
development as a learner and a teacher.
- The teacher draws upon professional
colleagues within the school and other professional arenas as supports
for reflection, problem-solving and new ideas, actively sharing
experiences and seeking and giving feedback.
Principle 10:
School and Community Involvement
The teacher fosters relationships with
colleagues, parents, and agencies in the larger community to support
students' learning and well being.
Principle 10's Knowledge
- The teacher understands schools as
organizations within the larger community context and understands the
operations of the relevant aspects of the system(s) within which s/he
works.
- The teacher understands how factors
in the students' environment outside of school (e.g. family
circumstances, community environments, health and economic conditions)
may influence students' life and learning.
- The teacher understands and
implements laws related to students' rights and teacher responsibilities
(e.g. for equal education, appropriate education for handicapped
students, confidentiality, privacy, appropriate treatment of students,
reporting in situations related to possible child abuse).
Principle 10's Dispositions
- The teacher values and
appreciates the importance of all aspects of a child's experience.
- The teacher is concerned about
all aspects of a child's well being (cognitive, emotional, social,
and physical), and is alert to signs of difficulties.
- The teacher is willing to consult
with other adults regarding the education and well-being of his/her
students.
- The teacher respects the privacy
of students and confidentiality of information.
- The teacher is willing to work
with other professionals to improve the overall learning environment
for students.
Principle 10's Performances
- The teacher participates in
collegial activities designed to make the entire school a
productive learning environment.
- The teacher makes links with
the learners' other environments on behalf of students, by
consulting with parents, counselors, teachers of other classes
and activities within the schools, and professionals in other
community agencies.
- The teacher can identify and
use community resources to foster student learning.
- The teacher establishes
respectful and productive relationships with parents and
guardians from diverse home and community situations, and seeks
to develop cooperative partnerships in support of student
learning and well being.
- The teacher talks with and
listens to the student, is sensitive and responsive to clues of
distress, investigates situations, and seeks outside help as
needed and appropriate to remedy problems.
- The teacher acts as an
advocate for students.
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