Co-teaching
Co-teaching is when two educators work together to plan, organize, instruct and make assessments on the same group of students, sharing the same classroom.[1] This approach can be seen in several ways. Teacher candidates who are learning to become teachers are asked to co-teach with experienced associate teachers, whereby the classroom responsibilities are shared, and the teacher candidate can learn from the associate teacher.[2] Regular classroom teachers and special education teachers can be paired in co-teaching relationships to benefit inclusion of students with special needs.[3]
Recently, in Ontario the Full-Day Early Learning Kindergarten Program has been implemented where an Ontario Certified Teacher and a Registered Early Childhood Educator co-teach in a kindergarten classroom.[4]
To evaluate the effectiveness of co-teaching, partnerships can use the Magiera-Simmons Quality Indicator Model of Co-Teaching, which gives standard definitions for co-teaching skills through 25 quality indicators and a rating scale.[5] Co-teaching is often evaluated on the amount of shared leadership is present, the amount of co-planning time, honest communication between the two educators, and how much respect and trust is present in the relationship.[6]
Models
There are several models of co-teaching, identified by Friend and Cook (1996), including:[7][8]
- One Teach, One Support: One teacher leads instruction, while the other provides support to students who need additional help or enrichment, gathers observation data, or provides classroom management.
- Parallel Teaching: Each teacher, or teacher and student teacher, plan jointly but each teaches the same information to different halves of the classroom at the same time.
- Alternative Teaching: One teacher manages most of the class while the other teacher works with a small group inside or outside of the classroom. The small group does not have to integrate with the current lesson.
- Station Teaching: Both teachers divide the instructional content, and each takes responsibility for planning and teaching part of it. In station teaching, the classroom is divided into various teaching centers. The teacher and student teacher are at particular stations; the other stations are run independently by the students or by a teacher’s aide.
- Team Teaching: Both teachers are responsible for planning and share the instruction of all students. The lessons are taught by both teachers who actively engage in conversation, not lecture, to encourage discussion by students. Both teachers are actively involved in the management of the lesson and discipline.
Research
Research on the effectiveness of co-teaching has yielded mixed results.
As a delivery model for special education services, one study found important strategies were infrequently observed in this model, and the special education teacher played a subordinate role. Thomas E. Scruggs, Margo A. Mastropieri. George Mason University. "Co-Teaching in Inclusive Classrooms: A Metasynthesis of Qualitative Research" Exceptional Children July 2007 vol. 73 no. 4 392-416 [9]
Another study reviewed student outcomes via a resource room model and co-teaching. It found resource room delivery superior in terms of academic progress.[10] Other research has shown that the results of co-teaching benefit both the educators and the students.[11][12] but the study lacked long-term data.
One author reviewed eight studies of students impressions of co-teaching, and found the majority preferred receiving services outside of the classroom for part of the day, noting they formed a better relationship with their special education teacher and understood content better in specialized instruction within a resource room.[13]
External links
References
- ↑ Hartnett, Joanie; Weed, Rahila; McCoy, Ann; Theiss, Deb; Nickens, Nicole (2013). "Co-Teaching: A New Partnership During Student Teaching" (PDF). SRATE Journal. 23 (1): 1–12.
- ↑ Cherian, Finney (1 January 2007). "Learning to Teach: Teacher Candidates Reflect on the Relational, Conceptual, and Contextual Influences of Responsive Mentorship". Canadian Journal of Education / Revue canadienne de l'éducation. 30 (1): 25–46. doi:10.2307/20466624.
- ↑ Friend, M.; Cook, L.; Hurley-Chamberlain, D.; Shamberger, C. (2010). "Co-teaching: An illustration of the complexity of collaboration in special education.". Journal of Educational and Psychological Consultation. 20 (1): 9–27.
- ↑ The Full-Day Early Learning – Kindergarten Program 2010-11 (PDF) (draft version ed.). Toronto: Ontario, Ministry of Education. 2010. ISBN 978-1-4435-3497-0.
- ↑ Simmons, R. J.; Magiera, K. (2007). "Evaluation of Co-Teaching in Three High Schools within One School District: How Do You Know when You Are TRULY Co-Teaching?". TEACHING Exceptional Children Plus. 3 (3): 1–12.
- ↑ Bacharach, Nancy L.; Heck, Teresa Washut; Dahlberg, Kathryn (March 2008). "What Makes Co-Teaching Work? Identifying the Essential Elements". College Teaching Methods & Styles Journal. 4 (3): 43–48. ISSN 1548-9566.
- ↑ Some approaches to team teaching, Marilyn Friend and Lynne Cook, 1996. Retrieved 2016-04-03
- ↑ 5 Co-Teaching Formats, Curry School of Education, University of Virginia. Retrieved 2016-04-03
- ↑
- ↑ Murawski, W. (2006). Student outcomes in co-taught secondary English classes: Howc an we improve?Reading & Writing Quarterly, 22, 227–247
- ↑ Chanmugam, Amy; Gerlach, Beth (2013). "A Co-Teaching Model for Developing Future Educators' Teaching Effectiveness" (PDF). International Journal of Teaching and Learning in Higher Education. 25 (1): 110–117. ISSN 1812-9129.
- ↑ Walther-Thomas, C. S. (1 July 1997). "Co-Teaching Experiences: The Benefits and Problems That Teachers and Principals Report Over Time". Journal of Learning Disabilities. 30 (4): 395–407. doi:10.1177/002221949703000406.
- ↑ Students' Perceptions of Inclusion and Resource Room Settings.Sharon Vaughn.Journal of Special Education. Summer 1998 vol. 32 no. 2 79-88