Teach Middle East Magazine Nov-Dec 2015 Issue 2 Volume 3 | Page 30

Sharing Good Practice What role does Performance Management play in schools? By Paris Norris M ost great educators will agree that a qualification alone does not make you a teacher. When I acquired my driving license, it told me I was safe to drive on the road; but it was experience that let me develop an instinct to become a better driver. As with any other highly skilled profession, so it is with teachers who spend a career honing and adding to their craft. improvement plan that provides the tools to enable great learning. If the support structure around teachers isn’t conducive to improvement, they are going to do less well. To be successful, performance management has to be tailored to teaching and it has to find a language and tone to which teachers will relate and be inspired. Generally speaking, in the UAE, we’re moving away from a position where Performance Management is fundamentally a review tool to examine historic performance. Progressive schools recognise that Performance Management is a positive support tool that develops individuals and helps teachers to progress in their career. It’s not just about results; it’s about developing assets to get results. Here’s my 7-point checklist for performance management in education: Successful Performance Management should: • Identify knowledge and skill gaps to help you become better at a job • Provide a working environment that encourages you to enjoy your job • Present a reflective framework for detecting and achieving both personal and professional goals. • Let’s be clear; successful performance management won’t indulge continually underperforming teachers. In fact, it should deliver a structured 28 | Nov - Dec 2015 | | 1. Link Performance Management to your teacher’s Professional Development or CPD programme. Personalise seemingly abstract or arbitrary school strategy by linking it to their teaching experience. 2. Always adopt a forward-looking approach to setting targets and objectives. Targets set in isolation won’t get the same level of buy in from a teacher as goals linked directly to their own professional development. 3. Agree purposefully ambitious performance targets. Ensure they are achievable with clearly defined and understood professional rewards and timeframes. 4. Continuous communication is the key to successful performance management. Set aside weekly Class Time meetings to reflect on performance and define areas for improvement. Provide the time, how to and support to get there. 5. Develop a culture of support, in which ideas and great practice are shared and where outstanding performance is recognised and celebrated. Teachers are naturally inclined to share best practices amongst their peers an d to seek peer review. 6. Encourage reflective practice in which all teachers examine “what went well” and what would make it “even better if”. Create forums to share these practices. 7. Open yourself to improvement too. Throw away your inhibitions to improve and encourage your team to model their behaviour on you. Consider filming yourself in a lesson and reflect on where you stand in the classroom on your delivery and structure. We know this isn’t always how performance management is run in schools. It certainly isn’t always how teachers view it. To be effective there must be individuality, clarity, structure and support. If it is delivered in conjunction with a robust CPD plan it’s great – but if performance management is just a noose around someone’s neck it has no value.