Effective
teaching is much more than an intuitive process. A teacher must continually
make decisions and act on those decisions.
How
can you avoid this complacency and stagnation? One strategy is to maintain your curiosity and develop habits of inquiry and
reflection.
Developing
the habits of inquiry and reflection should begin now, in your
teacher education program. Your experiences with schools,
teachers, and students along this path will give you many opportunities to reflect on what has
occurred.
As
you reflect, you are likely to
encounter and think about moral and ethical issues. Teachers make moral and ethical
decisions every day.
The
role of the teacher is a reflective decision maker who must make many decisions almost instantly, as she adapts her
teaching to changing classroom conditions.
In
each of these planning, implementing, and evaluating stages of instructional
decision making,
Teachers
must ask themselves not only "What am I going to teach?" but also
"What should my students be learning?" "How can I help them
learn it?" and
"Why is it important?" To
answer these questions, teachers must be familiar with children and their
developmental stages.
There
are five areas of competence to be essential for a teacher:
1.
Attitudes that foster learning and genuine human relationships
2.
Knowledge of the subject matter to be taught
3.
Theoretical knowledge about learning and human behavior
4.
Personal practical knowledge
5.
Skills of teaching that promote student learning
Many
people believe that the teacher's personality is the most critical factor in
successful teaching. If teachers have warmth, empathy, sensitivity, enthusiasm, and humor, they are much more likely
to be successful than if they lack these characteristics.
There
are four major categories of attitudes that affect teaching behavior: (1) the
teacher's attitude toward self, (2) the teacher's attitude toward children and the relationship
between self and children, (3) the teacher's attitudes toward peers and pupils' parents, and (4) the teacher's attitude
toward the subject matter.
Children
are sensitive observers of adult behavior, and they often see, and become preoccupied with,
aspects of the teacher's attitude toward them. In many cases, the teacher may be
unaware of which attitude he or she is projecting. Consider how a teacher's
effectiveness might be reduced by these feelings or attitudes toward students:
• A strong dislike for particular pupils and obvious fondness for others
• Biases toward or against particular ethnic groups
•
A bias toward certain kinds of student behavior, such as docility or Inquisitiveness
• An uneasiness in working with children who have disabilities
In
general, a teacher's expectation that all students can succeed seems to
make a difference in students' achievement.
The five competencies I feel should be memorized and put into practice by all teachers who are interested in becoming effective teachers.
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