Part 4 of 10. This is how schools and school districts handle the first and biggest challenge

BRAVOLesson blog April 5th 
All pupils and students deserve fantastic teaching 
and all teachers deserve constructive feedback! 
That is the core of school improvement.

 

 A systematic approach to improve teaching. Our ten part series continues – this is part 4.

Some schools and municipalities/school districts get going with a systematic approach and others do not. We have previously described that feedback to teachers is not only about systematics but also about collaborating and improving together – to be recognised as a teacher and experience increased work satisfaction. To get to that, we have recognised a pattern; It is about systematics and a concrete plan.
Those who get going start by creating a plan and then being transparent about What to do and How. They hand out responsibilities, set goals, work collaboratively and follow up. Nothing is new under the sun.

In our previous blog we adressed the 4 + 2 challenges to achieve systematic focus on how to improve teaching. The first challenge is to prioritise – to prioritise, organise and to use time for working with one of the key characteristics of successful school. ***  

“All schools work with school improvement, but very few schools have a concrete plan for how to improve teaching systematically.”

Download our example
In our guide there is an example of a plan that helps you tackle the 4 + 2 challenges for systematic feedback to teachers – for their own reflection on teaching. The plan is based on the principal’s legal responsibility for the quality of the teaching. It also has the objective of achieving collaborative learning – that, it step by step, becomes natural for teachers to give and receive feedback in order to systematically develop the teaching together. Download our example via the link below.

PS. We know that we have used the word “systematically” seven times in this blog. Sorry!… however, that’s just the right word.

_______________________________

*** Sources:
Hargreaves, A. & Fullan, M. (2012). Professional capital: Transforming teaching in every school. New York, NY: Teachers College Press.

Leithwood, Jantz & Steinbach (2002) Changing Leadership for Changing Times. Buckingham: Open University Press

_______________________________

We hope you will follow our series! It will continue until the summer of 2019 with one new part every two weeks.

Greetings from the BRAVOLesson Team

Download our free white paper

 

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Part 3 of 10. The four + two key challenges for a systematic approach to improve teaching

BRAVOLesson blog March 14th 
All pupils and students deserve fantastic teaching 
and all teachers deserve constructive feedback! 
That is the core of school improvement.

 

 A systematic approach to improve teaching. Our ten part series continues – this is part 3.

Our survey, carried out in Sweden, included questions to 
primary, secondary and upper secondary school teachers. The survey showed that teaching is a lonely profession, with teachers receiving little support or guidance. 
Only every tenth teacher gets feedback on their teaching from a school leader, a colleague or a coach. OECD Statistics indicate that only every fourth teacher gets perspective on their own and their colleagues teaching. ***

 

This means:

  • A fantastic opportunity for education and schools!
  • There are schools already successfully working with a systematic approach already.


This leads to questions like: How do they think and what do they do?  
We wanted to get answers to the these questions and we subsequently organised a conference, ”Öppna klassrumsdörrarna” (”Open the classroom doors”), in Stockholm in April 2018. Researchers, experts, experienced school leaders and teachers met to share their experiences. When we reviewed the experiences together with other things that research has shown to be important dimensions of good teaching, we could conclude the following:                                                                                                                             

 

Their are four + two key challenges for successful implementation of systematic approach:                     

  1. Trust

  2. Time and priorities
  3. Evidence-based systematics 

  4. The quality of the feedback                                                                                         
    You also need to:    
  1. Be sure that agreed work will be completed     
  2. Be able to measure progress – the dimensions that have been successful and which still need to be developed                 


Our white paper helps you to tackle these four + two key challenges.

_____________________________

*** Sources:
– Successful Schools Swedens/BRAVOLessons survey via Novus. Konstruktiv feedback kring undervisning. 2016
– How to make a good teacher.  The Economist (June 11th – 17th): 13, 21-24. 2016.

_____________________________

We hope you will follow our series! It will continue until the summer of 2019 with one new part every two weeks. 

Greetings from the BRAVOLesson Team

Download our free white paper

 

Online tools to improve teaching and learning 

 

+46 (0)10 - 516 40 90

Part 2 of 10. How to make a good teacher?

BRAVOLesson blog Feb 25th. 
All pupils and students deserve fantastic teaching 
and all teachers deserve constructive feedback! 
That is the core of school improvement.

 

 A systematic approach to improve teaching. Our ten part series continues – this is part 2.

How to make a good teacher? – the headline of the editorial article in the 2016  June issue of the magazine The Economist. The question is a summary of a global challenge where many nations invest more and more in public education. The article describes profession that is starting to transform in many countries – to be a teacher is an art and a beautiful craft but is now also a profession that is about systematics based on research and best practice with focus on continuous improvement.

The question is important since high performing teachers generate one and a half year of learning per academic year. The ten percent low performing teachers only generate half a year of learning per academic year. It does not have to be like that. 1)

“The ten percent low performing teachers only generate half a year of learning per academic year.”

According to the article few other professionals are so isolated in their work, or get so little feedback, as Western teachers. In other words, other parts of society have much more focus on the quality of “production” than the school.

“Few other professionals are so isolated in their work, or get so little feedback, as Western teachers.”

There is every reason to read the texts in The Economist regardless of whether you are a teacher, principal, head of school, politician, parent or student. In the articles – because they are two – everyone will find perspectives for raising both the school debate, school development and teaching.

_____________________________

1) Hanushek, Eric. The economic value of higher teacher quality.  Economics of Education Review 30 (2011): 467

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We hope you will follow our series! It will continue until the summer of 2019 with one new part every two weeks. 

Greetings from the BRAVOLesson Team

Download our free white paper

PS. Do you want to read the articles from The Economist? Here you will find the editorial article and here you find the main article.

 

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Part 1 of 10. What does a systematic approach to improve teaching really mean?

BRAVOLesson blog Feb 4th 
All pupils and students deserve fantastic teaching
and all teachers deserve constructive feedback!
That is the core of school improvement.


Welcome to our ten parts series!

Not just improvements – continuous improvements. This series is about our whitepaper: A guide on how to implement a systematic approach to improve teaching. The perspective is not about leadership controlling teachers, but instead about working together with teachers to improve teaching. The teachers are both appreciated and valued, but also challenged about learning and improving student outcomes. This is also about increasing job satisfaction. It all goes together.

It is important to start with a vision. Why should we do this at all? When discussing a vision it is important and helpful to discuss the following questions – to engage everyone in the organisation:

  1. What is our mission?
  2. What and when do our students learn during a lesson?
        How do we know that learning is taking place?
  3. What are the important qualities of teaching?
  4. What qualities do we focus on first?
  5. Do we agree on the important qualities of teaching?
  6. What do we observe when we visit a classroom/lesson?
  7. What do we discuss during the dialogue afterwards?
  8. How can we see and measure progress?

We hope you will follow our series! It will continue until the summer of 2019 with one new part every two weeks. Below you can see the topics of next parts.

WELCOME!
Greetings from the BRAVOLesson Team

DOWNLOAD OUR GUIDE

DOWNLOAD THE QUESTIONS

 

Upcoming parts in our series about
a systematic approach to improve teaching

  • Part 1 of 10 
    Eight questions before you get started
  • Part 2  
    How to make a good teacher?
  • Part 3 
    The four challenges for a systematic approach to improve teaching
  • Part 4
    Trust
  • Part 5
    Improve teaching across the whole staff

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BETT 2019 – New and smart features to systematically improve teaching

During BETT in London on January 23-26, we are happy to show BRAVOLesson and the following news and smart features.

Welcome to booth F60 which we share with our English partner Derventio Education.

NEW! BRAVOLesson Analytics – statistics module for municipalities and organisations
The analytics module that is standard inside BRAVOLesson is now available for municipalities and organizations with several school units. This means that you can generate statistics on how teaching is developing for a school, for several schools or for all schools.

NEW! BRAVOLesson App – for iOS and Android
In January, we release the BRAVOLesson App which can be downloaded for FREE from AppStore and Google Play.
With the app one can, among other things, easily upload filmed video sequences or images directly to your own Video and Media archive in BRAVOLesson.

NEW! Save lesson planning related to lesson observation
We have made improvements to what was previously called My Video Archive and renamed it My Video and Media Archive. Now one can easily connect the teacher’s lesson plan to the saved lesson observation.

NEW! Notifications via email
For those schools and municipalities that have school licenses and accounts for all teachers, one can now choose to turn on notifications via email. Then the teacher / user gets a message and a link to BRAVOLesson when a lesson observation or video observation about them has become:
– planned
– saved
– changed

SMART FEATURE! Compare your views of what quality in teaching is
We also want to point to a smart feature to improve teaching together. If two teachers visit a colleague’s lesson, they in BRAVOLesson can set up an observation form each and after the lesson compare how their experience from the lesson.

See you at BETT!

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BRAVOLesson white paper – A guide on how to implement a systematic approach to improve teaching

Leads to concrete improvements in teaching already during the first term

This guide is for schools, school districts and municipalities. It is about the core of school improvement: focus on improving teaching through lesson observations, collaborative learning and effective feedback to teachers.

It contains a plan that leads to concrete improvements in teaching already during the first term. A plan for how to implement systematics during two academic years with the goal of developing both teaching, student results and job satisfaction.

The guide deals with the key challenges for systematic ways of providing feedback to teachers:

  • Trust
  • Time & Priorities
  • Evidence-based systematics
  • The quality of the feedback

Download the white paper here

 

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2.12 Leadership in the classroom – an observation form by Marcus Samuelsson

BRAVOLesson initiates cooperation with Marcus Samuelsson, leg. teacher in craft and professor of education at the University Högskolan i Väst, Trollhättan Sweden. Marcus has researched the leadership of the classroom. Now we offer a package with his new evidence-based observation form in combination with three copies of his book Lärandets ordning och reda.
Price for the whole package 3,740 SEK per school, excluding VAT and shipping. The observation form can then be used in BRAVOLesson.
Click the button below for a sample of what it contains.
The basis of observation has the following elements: 1. Procedures, rules and procedures,
2. Relationships, 3. Teaching climate,
4. Expectations and motivation as well
5. Disciplinary interventions.
NOTA BENE! This only show parts of the first element.

Teacher leadership in the classroom – New BRAVOLesson partnership with Professor Marcus Samuelsson

Successful teachers manage to both teach their students to learn and to develop both knowledgeably and socially. Research shows that this success is the result of these teachers’ carefully planning, implementing and reviewing their teaching –classroom leadership.
Marcus Samuelson, leg. teacher in craft and professor at Högskolan i Väst, has researched successful leadership in the classroom. He has recently published a book with practical guidance for classroom leaders. He states there is always a leader in the classroom, if it´s not the teacher, then students take over that role.

New evidence-based observation form
Marcus and BRAVOLesson have now released a new evidence-based form for lesson observations and feedback to teachers. A tool that helps to develop teaching by focusing on the key characteristics of successful classroom leadership.

Package of three copies of the book and
the observation form inside BRAVOLesson
BRAVOLesson is now starting a collaboration with Marcus Samuelsson and together with him we offer a package with the new observation form in combination with three copies of the book Lärandets ordning och reda.
The observation form can then be used inside BRAVOLesson.

Check out parts of the observation form

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Hallstahammar municipality introduces digital support for lesson observations for all teachers and principals

Since 2016, the principals in Hallstahammar have worked with systematic lesson observations and coaching together with their teachers. Teachers feel encouraged and get support in developing their leadership and teaching.

The municipality is now building on this work. All teachers and principals are given access to a web-based solution for lesson observations and collaborative learning. By digitising their work and further systematising it through simple tools they expect further school development.

The principals can develop and execute their pedagogical leadership more systematically. “We see that BRAVOLesson can streamline our work and involve teachers more in the conversation around lesson observations.” Anna Landehag, primary school director at Hallstahammar.

Other new customers include:

Kunskapsskolan i Tumba. Within Kunskapsskolan, they have two different observation templates: one for lessons and one for the mentor meetings between a teacher and their students. These observation templates will now be used by all teachers when they continue to work on systematically developing their teaching.

Filipstad municipality. Filipstad is one of the few municipalities that has improved student results in recent years. A significant reason for this is systematic lesson observations since 2010. Now they take the next step as all the principals will start using BRAVOLesson to develop teaching together with their teachers.

Online tools to improve teaching and learning 

 

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Now we open the classroom doors! Stockholm 26/4

Welcome to our national conference on the most untapped opportunity for Swedish schools…to increase job satisfaction and improve student results via feedback to teachers.

The conference’s main focus is on how teachers, school leaders and principals work systematically to develop teaching. This is to help students achieve their goals. It will also cover how to work with collaborative learning and lesson observations. Furthermore, additional focus will be paid to practical research and how national initiatives support for systematic career development in schools.

You are not born to a good teacher. Good teachers develop over time on their own and together with collaboration. The teaching profession is an art that becomes better and better over time. It is about having a degree as a base and then: experience, feedback, training, observing other skilled teachers, absorbing new insights from research, experimenting, developing personal experience, further feedback and training.

In other words, systematic observations, documentation and shared reflection are building structures for developing learning which is one of the most important assignments for leadership.

But only 11 percent of teachers in primary and secondary schools receive feedback on their teaching according to a Novus 2016/2017 study. An OECD survey TALIS (by 2013), found that 32 percent of teachers in Sweden have never received any feedback on their teaching.

Target audience: teachers, principals, decision makers, researchers and authorities.

Location: Musical, Nybrokajen 11, Stockholm, i.e. the premises of the Royal Swedish Academy of Music where the Nobel Prize award ceremony took place in the early 1900’s.

Date: 26/4 kl. 08.30 – 17.00.

Panel participants: Johanna Jaara Åstrand, Lärarförbundet (Teacher Union), Åsa Fahlén, Lärarnas Riksförbund (Teacher Union) and Matz Nilsson, Skolledarförbundet (School Leadership Union) will all be participating in the conference.

Organisers: Foundation DIU, Future Learning and BravoLesson/Successful Schools

Contact persons: Peter Becker, DIU, contact number: 070-710 4453 and Mats Rosenkvist, Successful Schools, contact number: 070-957 4780

Fee: 3,950 kr including coffee, lunch and documentation (excluding VAT). Register two or more participants at the same time from the same school/organisation and the fee is reduced SEK 3,450 kr. Price from 180403 is SEK 4,950 and 4,450.

Limited number of seats available.

Read more about the conference and sign up your team here.

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Another three school districts have chosen BRAVOLesson for all schools

We are happy to welcome many new customers during the autumn and along the start of a new term. We are pleased that more and more individual schools choose to focus on better and better teaching.

Schools that previously had licenses for the principals choose to connect with individual accounts for all teachers. With BRAVOLesson, they have ambitions to improve collaborative learning and improve teaching together.

In addition, three school districts/municipalities in Sweden – Filipstad, Perstorp and Säffle – BRAVOLesson will be used by all principals as part of their focus on systematic school improvement.

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Creating “magic” in the classroom. Don´t miss this video! Bring it with you into 2018!

We believe in better and better teaching in 2018.

Watch this video and listen to a very inspiring speech by former teacher Christopher Emdin. He believes that “magic can be taught”. Teachers should benchmark with barbershops, rap concerts and the black church and the practice to teach in a magical, inspiring and engaging way.

Click here to get to the video.

We at BRAVOLesson wish everyone a Magical and Merry Christmas and an Inspiring New Year!

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Meet us at BETT – 24-27 Januari 2018

Do you want to discuss how to improve teaching – lesson observations and collaborative learning? Meet BRAVOLesson at BETT in London. You will find us together with our partner Derventio Education at stand G:390.

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Flow chart for focus on better and better teaching

It is possible to improve both the teaching and the students’ results! Teaching can be improved… Focusing on what really happens in the classrooms is, among other things, what research has shown to be one of the characteristics of successful schools.

40 percent of all teachers in the OECD countries have never given or received any feedback (Source: OECD)

A systematic approach to lesson observations, collaborative learning and feedback to teachers is an almost untapped opportunity to improve student outcome in Sweden where only 11 percent of teachers in primary and secondary schools get feedback according to a survey carried out by Novus.

There is no reason to wait. Start NOW and harvest soon. Other schools, school districts and local authorities have already done so.

Download our flowchart to focus on better and better teaching. Share it with others and discuss.

Online tools to improve teaching and learning 

 

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