I’m not sure if this is the first time someone referred to
the process of developing a Teacher Performance Assessment for student teachers
as “building the plane as we fly it” but there is a Powerpoint slide from a May 30, 2012 presentation by Illinois State University Associate Dean
Amee Adkins with a picture of a plane and those words on the slide. Since then
the analogy seems to have entered into the edTPA world, and at least here in
New York, it’s looking as though the plane will be making a crash landing. I
think part of the problem is not just the rush to implementation, but an
inherent contradiction. Is edTPA a “test” you either pass or you don’t, or is
it a “process” with integrity, a meaningful way to capture a teacher’s
knowledge and skills? A test with a cut score is about a
competition, with strict rules and regulations, winners and losers. A process that aims for an authentic way
to capture what real teachers do means there must be some degree of dialogue,
collaboration, sharing of ideas and resources.
The reason I am writing about this is I was looking at the
online community of the edTPA AACTE website yesterday and found a question
about whether peer editing was “allowed” and the answer was that “peers cannot
provide feedback on the edTPA a candidate plans to submit.” About a week later
someone else posted in the same threaded discussion that at the NYSATE/NYACTE
meeting last October in Albany participants were told by SCALE that peer
support on the edTPA portfolio was acceptable. This time there was a more
explicit explanation that gets right to the heart of the contradiction I am
worried about:
“Teaching is a collaborative profession and candidates learn
to teach in contexts of support and constant communication with faculty,
cooperating teachers and peers. Conversation between candidates, instructors,
and peers about their teaching should not be restricted. However, peer editing
and feedback that provides direct edits of the candidate’s writing or specific
suggestions that provide candidates with alternative answers to edTPA prompts
is outside the acceptable support guidelines.” (Fry, 22 Apr 2014)
You see, it’s very hard to have your test and process too.
You can make the candidate sign a statement that says: “I am the sole author of
the commentaries and other written responses to prompts and other requests for
information in this assessment.” Does this mean that no one, not a classmate, a
relative, a cooperating teacher, a supervisor or faculty member provided any
“specific suggestions” for one of the prompts in the edTPA portfolio commentary
templates? How would anyone know if they did?
Besides, part of the way that the edTPA has been sold to the
teacher educators who have to help candidates get through the process is to
reassure them that candidates will support each other, and will have support
from their cooperating teachers. Here are a few examples:
The Making Good Choices document for candidates on p. 8 states:
"While your cooperating teacher must not choose a learning
segment for you, his/her input can be useful in guiding you to consider all of
the relevant factors in your selection."
St. Olaf College in
Minnesota says here:
“In
summary, educators and peers providing support to candidates completing the
edTPA should take care that it reflects the understanding of the candidate with
respect to the teaching and learning during the learning segment documented and
is an authentic representation of the candidates’ work.”
They also say: “Before teaching the unit that
contains the learning segment, the candidate submits a unit plan to the host
teacher and college supervisors.”
And they
infer that others will look at the video:
“This
video will be seen by the candidates, their college supervisors, their host
teachers, and up to two scorers who are trained to score the edTPA.”
In a presentation by Joan Lesh, edTPA Coordinator at the
University of Washington, Powerpoint slides refer to “peer sharing” and “collegial discussions to
mirror real world collaboration.”
Tennessee
Tech University Associate Professor Nancy J. Kolodziej’s Prezi on an edTPA seminar involves descriptions of extensive peer review and feedback.
In a
presentation on edTPA lessons learned from faculty at The College at Brockport,
SUNY they wrote of “peer review in student teaching seminars” and they write to cooperating teachers in the
guidelines on edTPA: “While the edTPA needs to be the work of the candidate, it
will be important to provide feedback and suggestions and ask critical
questions as the teaching candidate reflects on his/her lessons.”
SUNY New Paltz has an edTPA Candidate Community site on Blackboard and edTPA Study Halls.
Washington State University’s edTPA guidelines state:
“Although you
may seek and receive appropriate support from your university supervisors,
cooperating/master teachers, university instructors, or peers during this
process, the ultimate responsibility for completing this assessment lies with
you.”
In an edTPA training session with Beverly Falk, CCNY and
Nicole Merino, SCALE on 9/9/13 they wrote:
“There are other ways to support writing as well. University of
Washington for example holds a writing “boot camp” during the student teacher
experience itself. They take a few days during student teaching time when
students are invited to come to campus to complete the writing for edTPA.
Faculty are available to give them feedback on their writing. It is not a time
for review and edits of candidate work. It’s time dedicated to doing the
writing so that students get it done early rather than waiting until the end.
Waiting till the end has a detrimental effect on their writing. It can be
helpful to involve the University Writing Center as well.”
In a
presentation on Ethical Coaching – an edTPA Summit by Kathleen Ofstedal of St. Cloud State
University in Minnesota, she describes a “Peer Analysis Worksheet” and provides
a list of explicit guiding questions that teacher educators can use to coach
candidates through the edTPA process but cautions in a footnote: *Do not
tell Candidates what to say in their edTPA. Do not edit their writing. Do not
intensively coach those who are weak and may not pass. Do not suggest specific
changes, instead, ask good questions.
Today there were new guidelines for supporting candidates
posted on the edTPA AACTE website. The older version had a table indicating acceptable and unacceptable forms of support. The new one seeks to clarify the differences by providing additional examples of acceptable
types of support and those that are unacceptable but stops short of an explicit
veto of peer editing. It also states as unacceptable: “Uploading candidate
edTPA responses (written responses or videotape entries) on public access
social media websites” and there was an additional reminder in my email today
about that issue, so I decided to see what’s happening on Twitter with an edTPA search. I don’t think the feel good propaganda of edTPA as authentic learning
process is working:
Yo, that edTPA bull*&@+ needs to be cut ASAP
Stressed. Stressed. Stressed. Stressed. Stressed. Stressed.
Oh, and stressed. #saveme
edTPA can kiss my butt!
“The edTPA is my favorite!” #SaidNoOneEver
F(*& the edTPA
If I think about the edTPA anymore, my head will LITERALLY
explode. Literally, folks, LITERALLY my head will blow up #noonewantstoseethat