Thursday 24 February 2011

L.O., L.O. what’s going on here then?

Let it be said from the outset, I accept that lesson observations (LOs) are a fact of a teacher’s life, an unpleasant one for many but a fact nonetheless. I have developed a profound dislike of them, based on my experience over the last 15 years in my own setting. This does not detract from the inherent illogicality and weaknesses I can point to or reduce the concerns I have about the conduct and use of LOs, the dangers in relying on them for monitoring T+L and above all the abuse they are open to.

I entered teaching at a time when you would be observed as part of your training and probationary/NQT year, occasionally by the LA and perhaps by HMI. Then came Thatcher and the Tory education ‘reforms’ of the 80s, ushering in the era of ‘accountability’, amid a never ending series of upheavals and restructuring, a torch so shamefully picked up and, far from being thoroughly and deservedly doused, carried on by the Labour administrations of the Blair and post-Blair years. Serving as a fitting symbol of this whole period, OFSTED was formed as the new inquisition, ensuring schools implemented every facet of the increasingly centrist dogma emerging from government, unlike their HMI predecessors, who were feared and respected by schools, they became feared and despised. Inspections were no longer about finding out how schools were doing, they were about ensuring schools did what they were told. LAs, schools and teachers were shamefully quiescent through all of this, bullied into accepting more and more ridiculous intrusions and demands, hounded and harried by the implicit and explicit threats from inspections, SATs and those horrific league tables. The LO was an intrinsic part of this process, a valuable tool for driving change, to put it another way: school managements, LAs and OFSTED all bullied teachers with LOs.

The rationale underpinning the frequent and regular LO is:
‘it is proven to be the most effective practice in teacher education and development. Teachers learn best from other professionals and an ‘open classroom’ culture is vital: observing teaching and being observed.’ The importance of Teaching, The Schools White Paper 2010
This idea is echoed and extended in many contributions on the TES forums:
‘How is [the headteacher] going to learn what the quality of teaching is like unless they observe?’, (the purpose of the LO is) ‘to learn what the quality of teaching is’, ‘How exactly are [headteachers]to fulfil that responsibility [to monitor T+L]if they are unable to observe any lessons?’

My pre-emptive apologies go to those headteachers and PM reviewers reading this who conduct their LOs in the professional spirit of the ‘open classroom’. I would love to be able to say that I have found LOs stimulating or rewarding, a valuable tool of professional reflection and improvement. In the last 20 years I have been observed dozens of times for different purposes and in all of that time only 3 of those LOs came even close to that ideal. The rest suffered to a greater or lesser extent from the weaknesses which have brought me to my current position. My work as a union rep has served to reinforce and further inform that position.

The Heisenberg principle applies here: we know that the act of observation changes that which is observed. An LO can only tell the observer about the quality of teaching in an LO, more specifically that particular lesson, which is by definition not an ordinary lesson. I know of one case where an LO was conducted by 3 members of management: the headteacher had been the PM reviewer and consistently found fault with the teacher in question, using these observations as an argument against awarding the teacher a permanent TLR for the work they were doing in an ‘awaiting appointment’ TLR post. As the teacher approached Threshold progression a new PM reviewer was assigned and in the first LO the observer was monitored by the DH as part of the observer’s training and the HT attended to observe the DH in their monitoring role. How could the presence of these 3 senior managers not impact on the conduct of the lesson for both the pupils as well as the teacher? As a footnote: the observer graded the lesson good, the DH and HT insisted in feedback that it only be graded as satisfactory, pointing to illogical as well as inaccurate faults with the lesson. Despite their role being only to train the observer, the DH fed this judgement back to the teacher and it stood. This is an extreme case but serves as a graphic example of the Heisenberg principle. It also illustrates another key weakness of the LO: its unfair and irrefutable subjectivity.

A New Yorker once told me that it was impossible to walk the streets of the city for 30 minutes without infringing at least 12 city ordinances: I likewise defy anyone to conduct a lesson I could not find sufficient fault with to declare it only 'good' or even ‘satisfactory’ if I really put my mind to it, using any of the observation criteria I have ever seen. I have lost count of the hostile LOs I have been subjected to or been told about and in almost every case the ulterior motive or preconceived outcome was apparent. The introduction of performance related pay as a future development when Performance Management was being introduced was hotly, even vehemently denied and denounced as conspiracy theory but duly arrived as many of us predicted and now colours many an LO. Weak heads have the perfect weapon at their disposal to deny or delay pay progression beyond M6 – all they have to do is ensure PM observations are only satisfactory or just find a few faults to give justification to their ‘judgement’. There are many other factors which can colour the outcome of the LO, among them, personal antipathy, promotion of the macho, hard message culture encouraged in new managers, retribution, spite, keeping people on their toes regardless of the damage it may do to their self-esteem, plain egotism, bullying, ongoing campaigns to harry a person into leaving because they are ‘awkward’ in one way or another and even just the observer being slightly doo-lally: I have been involved with or heard firsthand accounts of all of these.

Challenging the judgement of an observer is almost impossible, precisely because it is a judgement. Objective LOs based on criteria are a myth – a comparison of the current OFSTED criteria with the comments from observers to justify judgments made based on them is confirmation enough. ‘Ah, but the observers are trained to use them, aren’t they?’ is one of the more naïve (or self-justifying) counter arguments I have heard. Indeed they are but a couple of hours in a training room with an LA or OFSTED trainer is not going to overcome the many personal, even deviant motives observers can and do take into the LO with them. Just how objective are the criteria used in LOs? My school has been unable to provide me with any reasonable description of what constitutes 'sufficient' use of AFL, a definition of how fast 'pace' is and how it can be measured etc etc. 1 pupil not excited by and enjoying a task, going off task or losing concentration during an introduction or missed out of questioning in a plenary can give excuse enough to downgrade a lesson. Training for observers does not get round these problems, it merely reinforces their credibility if anyone dares to challenge a judgement. One of the popular criteria used is subject knowledge but many managers conducting observations haven’t taught or planned consistently beyond perhaps 1 subject they like, sometimes in years. I know of numerous cases of negative judgements made on lessons based on a poor understanding of what is being taught. As an ICT specialist in a primary, I know that none of my observers could teach what I am teaching and some of them have found that hard to bear. Should a teacher have the grit to take their sense of injustice or outrage beyond the feedback session where do they turn? a complaint, judged by the head, filed away? a grievance or pay panel hearing, conducted by governors predisposed to support a headteacher, as most are? even when the teacher has a good case, it will all boil down to that ‘judgement’ in the end.

There is a widespread, unthinking presumption that observations raise standards of T+L which I find dangerous but it fits neatly into the look-good culture we have grown used to working in. The act of observing may point to a problem, assuming the observation is undertaken without prejudice, using the right tools, but it certainly does not improve the quality of anything. Weighing a pig does not make it heavier, nurturing it does – it may even turn out that the scales are badly wrong. For a teacher to improve their practice after an observation they need genuine vision, perceptiveness, analytical skills and use of experience by the observer resulting in sensitive feedback, advice, provision of INSET, mentoring and modelling. What many teachers actually get is negative feedback, admonitions to do better, perhaps some utterly useless refresher course (actually an open invitation to resign) and guess what, more observations!!

There is a further misconception that the LO is the only form of monitoring available to managers, beside flicking through planning. Monitoring could be about gathering information from various sources: the drop-in used properly (sadly not likely, it has emerged as another SIP box to tick or tool of harassment for inadequate management), peer observation, team teaching, modelling by senior staff (just having a larf) but what many teachers experience is an observer sitting in a lesson ticking a sheet or wandering around nit-picking, cherry-picking and finding fault.

The grading of observed lessons gives the lie to the open classroom claim. Just as SATs have nothing to do with children and their achievements but everything to do with generating numbers to fit into spreadsheets, so too lesson observations which are graded have nothing to do with school improvement or professional development. Grading is too easily used as a weapon against particular teachers, as a way of keeping staff from progressing beyond M6, as a tool for bullying or retribution, as a means of maintaining the illusion of control for a weak manager. Observing lessons is theoretically a way of checking on standards of T+L but it is a bit like saying a gun is for keeping the peace - it can be used like that but unfortunately often isn't and we need to keep an eye on that usage and especially the user.

Every year I take my car for an MOT, the second I drive out of the test centre, it is no guarantee or reassurance that anything on my car works or is safe. On the road I mingle with several million people who have been declared competent to drive by rigorous testing in an objective, skills-based test – I always stay very alert when moving among them. LOs are about as much use as any test result: tests only tell you about the ability of the candidate to take that test on that day, LOs tell you about a teacher’s performance in that LO, with that group of pupils, in that setting, at that time, assuming (and it is a huge assumption) that it was conducted fairly, reasonably, with professional skill and intent.

18 comments:

Anonymous said...

Hi. I came across this whilst pondering ways of helping me improve my much criticised performance in my first teaching practice, before attempting the second. If you can think of any suggestions, I'd be grateful, as yours is about the only really truthful account I have ever read of what is actually going on in schools, today. As a mature newcomer from a previous professional life, which equipped me with very advanced subject knowledge and teaching experience at a higher age range, I have been astounded not only by the bullying directed at student teachers but at the deplorable moral failure of others to condemn it. The `Emperor's new clothes' culture has effectively provided some youngish heads of department - who have inferior subject knowledge and tunnel vision - to bully anyone who unwittingly makes them feel threatened. This has led to a deluded and totally unenlightened perception that they are suitable educational leaders, whereas in fact they are hiding `behind the cloth' of a once worthy and respected profession which I probably won't be re-joining, after all.

becktonboy said...

By all means mail me on beckton.boy@hotmail.co.uk to let me know a little more about your situation before I offer any comment on it.
Don't let the actions and attitudes of a few weak managers put you off re-joining the greatest profession of all before you have considered other options.

yohan said...

very well reflected on, congratulations for putting into words the symptoms of our modern malaise. I also hope the first person who replied finds a way to share his experience in more favourable circumstances.

becktonboy said...

The other poster never did come back to me, ta for your reply, nice to know these thoughts get shared every now and then

Anonymous said...

Thanks for your comments here.I find myself nodding in agreement with many of your observation and having suffered competency proceedings from a head who himself was incompetent..and based solely upon a poor OFSTED I truly understand what you say.
The great shame is that there is no observer or agency to check on the observer to see if they are correct in judgement......I have even found LEA advisers colluding with heads n attempts t both cull favour and support what the Head wants rather than being impartial observers.
The one shame of your post is that it wont make one pennyworth of difference to the government or to any head or observer who cares to read it.
Well done for the article.

becktonboy said...

I entirely accept that government will take no heed of teachers - they have been framing legislation for decades with scant regard for our views. I post to give vent to my feelings and in the hope they will strike a chord with others. The tiniest pebble makes a ripple ....

Anonymous said...

The technology exists to have cameras in each classroom and to video every lesson. You could get a panel of peers and/or SLT to choose two or three twenty minute bursts at random and discuss how effective they were and how they might be improved. If people thought I was crap, I could always scroll throught to lessons in which I thought things went well. No Heisenberg and no extra preparation, just typical lessons. Judge me by my results and the quality of my everyday teaching. That would suit me fine.

becktonboy said...

Anonymous, I think you really need to consider the points I have been making in slightly greater depth:
The technology exists to have cameras in each classroom and to video every lesson. You could get a panel of peers and/or SLT to choose two or three twenty minute bursts at random and discuss how effective they were and how they might be improved.
Of course the technology exists but I would definitely not want to give management yet more opportunities to nit-pick and cherry-pick. If managements generally were of that quality, I don't think I would have been posting this blog in the first place!
If people thought I was crap, I could always scroll throught to lessons in which I thought things went well.
Have you ever tried to change an observer's judgement by pointing out the positives? ie get them to change that judgement thereby admitting they observed poorly - especially the kind of observers the blog highlighted?
No Heisenberg and no extra preparation, just typical lessons.
lessons would all have the Heisenberg principle at work....
Judge me by my results and the quality of my everyday teaching.
the kind of managers I have been talking about really aren't interested in that quality - they have their own agenda - and results, well, they are plastic.

Anonymous said...

I can justify every minute of every lesson I teach, even when I am taking time out to have a laugh with the kids.
What annoys me is when other staff don't give the kids a good deal ( one colleague in particular in my department ) and then once a year they pull out a half-decent lesson when performance management comes round. They can do it when they try - it's just that they don't usually bother.
That just isn't fair on the kids, or on the rest of us when our HoD makes us pick up the pieces when we take over at GCSE level from their inadequate teaching.
There might be poor managers who are poor because they are over-zealous with critical L.O.s, but there are certainly also poor managers who can't spot or deal with staff who, frankly, are taking the p*ss with their daily teaching responsibilities and constantly let the side down.
I'd welcome the default to be "everything, potentially, is observed". I have nothing to hide from HoD, SLT or parents - they could broadcast my lessons live for all I care - but the key thing is that those staff who aren't pulling their weight might get the kick up the backside they deserve.

becktonboy said...

While sympathising with your frustration over colleagues who don't pull their weight but can pull wool over eyes (seen it often enough to know what you are talking about), we just seem to be coming at this from different perspectives: I am more concerned about the widespread abuse of the LO and believe it is a tool not fit for stated purpose, as are too many of those conducting them

Hilary said...

I wish that more of the teaching profession, at all levels, were of a similar intelligence as you Beckton. What you have posted here is the very reason I am leaving not only teaching, but the country and emigrating to the other side of the world.

Too many years of being told I am carp, to fit someone else's agenda (whilst Ofsted tell me I am outstanding) in various different schools, or worse, that I'm good but have much to improve upon having just told me I was good at that specific thing, have left admittedly a bitter taste in my mouth, and have made me incapable of putting up with it any longer in order to do a job I love.

This country is killing itself, and unfortunately I see no way out, as to reverse what has come in would be admitting it was bad, and as all political parties are involved now throughout the years, that will never happen.

But at least reading this lets me know I'm not mad and not the only one who thinks these things. I doff my hat to you Sir.

becktonboy said...

Hilary
What a sad post: I hope you can keep in mind that it is was the inadequate people you worked with that brought you to this. Countries, systems even don't create these feelings. I can only wish you the best of luck in your new life and hope you find professional as well as personal happiness.

Anonymous said...

I found your blog very interesting. You have mail. I hope you don't mind me Emailing you at the above Email

Anonymous said...

Your blog totally describes a) what life was like at my previous college b) my current beliefs about observations.

I would also like to add that some judgements also depend on nepotism. For instance, managers were rarely graded badly, even when it was obvious that the lesson in question was inadequate (the college was a modern building so everyone could see what everyone else was doing).

By the way, I disagree with the person who commented that it's youngish HoDs who do the bullying. No, I was a young HoD and I was the one being bothered to the point where it affected my health in the end. Fortunately, I decided to leave the college rather than teaching as a career, as I still believe that I can do some good in the teaching word by refusing to do what these so-called mis managers do and showing them up for the fools that they are!

becktonboy said...

You make valid points, Anonymous.

Anonymous said...

Great points becktonboy.
I have experienced several observations as you describe - lessons being criticised without any ideas about how to improve. Sweeping judgments being made about my teaching based on 15 minutes of one lesson.
I think another key factor in the outcomes of observations is the preconceptions of the observer. If they have heard negative reports from others about your teaching, they look for evidence to support them.
The major problem I find is that the overall judgment is made on pupil progress - but how do you judge pupils' progress if you are in 20 minutes of a lesson? I have found that judgments are made about progress, or perceived lack of it, when the observer has absolutely no idea where the children were at the beginning of the lesson, or how they have progressed, and is only considering their own view of the work produced at the end of the lesson. When I explained the progress that had been made they brushed it off and carried on giving the perceieved negatives...
What I fail to understand is how managers can possibly think that this kind of negative feedback and intimidation using lesson grades is going to improve results - and isn't what their performance is judged on? Why don't they support teachers to help their school do well if they are so obsessed with pleasing ofsted?

yohan said...

you know, one year later and this post is still relevant and fresh as the day it was written.
Have a poem or two.... otherwise I don't know what to say to applaud you ...

WHY SO MANY?
2006

Why so many people
To tell other people what to do?

The minister tells them
And they tell him
He tells her and she tells you
And you tell me
Isn’t that a roundabout
The houses way
Of someone having their say
Over me?

DO YOU THINK ? INSPECTOR
April 2003.

Do you think I don’t know that?
Do you think I need you to tell me that?
Do you think I don’t like to put it aside,
move it around and do it differently some days?
Do you think I don’t want to play with it
in ways that sometimes go a little wrong ?
Do you think I can’t live with that?
Do you think all the perfect classes you see
are more than just a perfect show?
Do you think you could say something useful?
Do you think you could offer advice?
Do you think you could tell me
over-planning is bad for your health?
Do you think you could tell me
how play creates wealth and mental health?
Do you think Inspector?,
Do you think?

KatyS said...

Thank you so much for an insightful, refreshing post. I have recently suffered under some increasingly picky observations, the latest of which was a joint observation with my Head of Department and Assistant Head. It has become apparent that I was used as a tool to show that my HoD was over-generous with her LO gradings. Thank you for giving me a sensible degree of perspective.

Katy