Team teaching involves a group of instructors
working purposefully, regularly, and cooperatively to help a group of students
of any age learn. Teachers together set goals for a course, design a syllabus,
prepare individual lesson plans, teach students, and evaluate the results. They
share insights, argue with one another, and perhaps even challenge students to
decide which approach is better.
Teams can be single-discipline,
interdisciplinary, or school-within-a-school teams that meet with a common set
of students over an extended period of time. New teachers may be paired with
veteran teachers. Innovations are encouraged, and modifications in class size,
location, and time are permitted. Different personalities, voices, values, and
approaches spark interest, keep attention, and prevent boredom.
The team-teaching approach allows for more
interaction between teachers and students. Faculty evaluates students on their
achievement of the learning goals; students evaluate faculty members on their
teaching proficiency. Emphasis is on student and faculty growth, balancing
initiative and shared responsibility, specialization and broadening horizons,
the clear and interesting presentation of content and student development,
democratic participation and common expectations, and cognitive, affective, and
behavioral outcomes. This combination of analysis, synthesis, critical
thinking, and practical applications can be done on all levels of education,
from kindergarten through graduate school.
Working as a team, teachers model respect for
differences, interdependence, and conflict-resolution skills. Team members
together set the course goals and content, select common materials such as
texts and films, and develop tests and final examinations for all students. They
set the sequence of topics and supplemental materials. They also give their own
interpretations of the materials and use their own teaching styles. The greater
the agreement on common objectives and interests, the more likely that teaching
will be interdependent and coordinated.
Teaching periods can be scheduled side by side or
consecutively. For example, teachers of two similar classes may team up during
the same or adjacent periods so that each teacher may focus on that phase of
the course that he or she can best handle. Students can sometimes meet all
together, sometimes in small groups supervised by individual teachers or
teaching assistants, or they can work singly or together on projects in the
library, laboratory, or fieldwork. Teachers can be at different sites, linked
by video-conferencing, satellites, or the Internet.
Breaking out of the taken-for-granted
single-subject, single-course, single-teacher pattern encourages other
innovations and experiments. For example, students can be split along or across
lines of sex, age, culture, or other interests, then recombined to stimulate
reflection. Remedial programs and honors sections provide other attractive
opportunities to make available appropriate and effective curricula for
students with special needs or interests. They can address different study
skills and learning techniques. Team teaching can also offset the danger of
imposing ideas, values, and mindsets on minorities or less powerful ethnic
groups. Teachers of different backgrounds can culturally enrich one another and
students.
Advantages
Students do not all learn at the same rate.
Periods of equal length are not appropriate for all learning situations.
Educators are no longer dealing primarily with top-down transmission of the
tried and true by the mature and experienced teacher to the young, immature,
and inexperienced pupil in the single-subject classroom. Schools are moving
toward the inclusion of another whole dimension of learning: the lateral
transmission to every sentient member of society of what has just been
discovered, invented, created, manufactured, or marketed. For this, team
members with different areas of expertise are invaluable. Of course, team teaching is not the only
answer to all problems plaguing teachers, students, and administrators. It
requires planning, skilled management, willingness to risk change and even
failure, humility, open-mindedness, imagination, and creativity. But the
results are worth it.
Teamwork improves the quality of teaching as
various experts approach the same topic from different angles: theory and
practice, past and present, different genders or ethnic backgrounds. Teacher
strengths are combined and weaknesses are remedied. Poor teachers can be
observed, critiqued, and improved by the other team members in a
nonthreatening, supportive context. The evaluation done by a team of teachers
will be more insightful and balanced than the introspection and self-evaluation
of an individual teacher.
Working in teams spreads responsibility,
encourages creativity, deepens friendships, and builds community among
teachers. Teachers complement one another. They share insights, propose new
approaches, and challenge assumptions. They learn new perspectives and
insights, techniques and values from watching one another. Students enter into
conversations between them as they debate, disagree with premises or
conclusions, raise new questions, and point out consequences. Contrasting
viewpoints encourage more active class participation and independent thinking
from students, especially if there is team balance for gender, race, culture,
and age. Team teaching is particularly effective with older and underprepared
students when it moves beyond communicating facts to tap into their life
experience.
The team cuts teaching burdens and boosts morale.
The presence of another teacher reduces student-teacher personality problems.
In an emergency one team member can attend to the problem while the class goes
on. Sharing in decision-making bolsters self-confidence. As teachers see the quality
of teaching and learning improve, their self-esteem and happiness grow. This
aids in recruiting and keeping faculty.
Disadvantages
Team teaching is not always successful. Some
teachers are rigid personality types or may be wedded to a single method. Some
simply dislike the other teachers on the team. Some do not want to risk
humiliation and discouragement at possible failures. Some fear they will be
expected to do more work for the same salary. Others are unwilling to share the
spotlight or their pet ideas or to lose total control.
Team teaching makes more demands on time and
energy. Members must arrange mutually agreeable times for planning and
evaluation. Discussions can be draining and group decisions take longer.
Rethinking the courses to accommodate the team-teaching method is often
inconvenient.
Opposition may also come from students, parents,
and administrators who may resist change of any sort. Some students flourish in
a highly structured environment that favors repetition. Some are confused by
conflicting opinions. Too much variety may hinder habit formation.
Salaries may have to reflect the additional
responsibilities undertaken by team members. Team leaders may need some form of
bonus. Such costs could be met by enlarging some class sizes. Nonprofessional
staff members could take over some responsibilities.
All things being considered, team teaching so
enhances the quality of learning that it is sure to spread widely in the
future.
The
learning outcome is the same for all students; however, the instructional
methodology is different. Team taught
lessons that are well planned exhibit an invisible flow of instruction with no
prescribed division of authority. Using a team teaching strategy, both teachers are
actively involved in the lesson. Team Teaching where the members of the team
co-teach alongside one another and share responsibility for planning, teaching,
and assessing the progress of all students in the class. Some
co-teaching approaches (e.g., complementary and team teaching) require greater
commitment to, comfort with, and skill in collaborative planning and role
release (i.e., transferring one’s specialized instructional responsibilities
over to someone else). It is recommended that collaborative teams select among
the co-teaching approaches, as needed, based up the curriculum demands of a
unit or lesson and student learning characteristics, needs, and interests.


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