Meeting and Exceeding Student Expectations of Teachers: A Way to Achieve “Good” Teaching

Go into most public school classrooms and you will see a sign, usually in the front of the classroom, listing what the teacher expects of students in classroom behavior.

classroom_rules_5_ps_poster-p228321548498618001tdar_210

Experienced teachers advise new ones to make these rules explicit and enforce them from day one. Folk wisdom among veteran teachers is that expecting these behaviors and equitably acting on the rules will lead to an orderly classroom. The prerequisite for any learning to occur. So most new and experienced teachers, believing this advice and wanting a well-managed classroom, list classroom rules early in the semester. A few adventurous (and experienced) teachers have students construct the rules since they are well aware of acceptable classroom behavior from previous teachers.

In addition to behavior, what teachers expect of students academically influences achievement. Researchers have established that when teachers have high or low expectations of what their students can achieve–especially low-income and minority students–those expectations color what students do achieve (Journal of Teacher Education-1987-Good-32-47).

The point is that teacher expectations of student behavior and academic performance matter.

What is often missing from the advice given to teachers, however, is what goes on in students’ heads as they see a new teacher (novice or veteran) for the first time. Students also have an informal list of what behaviors, knowledge, and skills they expect of their teachers. And just like teacher expectations, student expectations matter.

Expectancy theory, as academics call it, involves motivation and choice–if I expect something I want to happen, I will choose that action that best achieves what I want. And that is true of student motivation and choosing what to do (or not do) in a classroom or lesson.

Beginning in kindergarten (or preschool), over the years students develop views of what a “good” teacher (and teaching) are.  By the time, students are in high school, they have implicit models in  their heads of who “good” teachers are and what they do in organizing and teaching a class.

By “good”  high school teacher, for example, most students mean one who mostly leads a teacher-centered, subject-driven academic class. For students meeting teachers for the first time, “bad” means the teacher tries to be friends with students, uses techniques (e.g., abandoning the textbook, peer grading of quizzes) that are seldom used by other “good” teachers. They tolerate student misbehavior.  In short, “bad” teachers cannot maintain minimum order in the classroom.

None of this is means that students’ pictures of “good” teachers are correct. Only that students already have  images of what they believe is institutionally “good” for them.

So if a novice teacher  (or veteran who transfer to another school) believes that students have blank slates when they meet each other for the first time, they are whistling the wrong tune. Let me give examples of student expectations of teachers that I have encountered over the years.

*”Good” teachers know more facts and concepts than students do about the subject.

*”Good” teachers answer student questions clearly and correctly.

*”Good” teachers take time to explain complicated content.

*”Good” teachers do not publicly humiliate students.

*”Good” teachers assign homework from the text.

*”Good” teachers clamp down on late-comers to class

*”Good” teachers break up fights between students and protect weak students from being bullied.

*”Good” teachers do not permit students to copy from one another when expecting each student to do his or her work.

*”Good” teachers do not let students sleep in class.

For novices and veterans new to a school to ignore what students have learned about teachers and teaching for many years sitting in classrooms is ultimately condescending since teachers are dismissing important student beliefs and knowledge. It also makes much harder the long-term task of developing strong relationships with the class as a whole and individual students–both essential for learning to occur.

There is a catch, however, when new and veteran teachers meet student expectations.

To do only what students expect is to be trapped by their traditional expectations of what a “good” teacher is. The tightrope act teachers have to negotiate is to initially meet what students expect–“good” teaching–then move beyond those beliefs to begin reshaping their expectations of “good” teaching to appreciate and learn from a far larger repertoire of classroom approaches and develop the personal relationships essential for learning to occur.

So, the essence of what I suggest for new and veteran teachers meeting their students the first time is straight-forward: know what students expect of “good” teachers and teaching, meet those expectations,  and then, once strong relationships have been formed with students, move beyond them so students can enlarge their picture of what “good” teachers and teaching are.

images-1

9 Comments

Filed under how teachers teach

9 responses to “Meeting and Exceeding Student Expectations of Teachers: A Way to Achieve “Good” Teaching

  1. Pingback: Meeting and Exceeding Student Expectations of T...

  2. {I’m trying to post this from West Africa and the connection is not the greatest so please forgive if I send this more than once.}
    In the long run all of these are true, and I might give the same advice to a new teacher that you do, yet I *hope* you’ll grant that every one of these rates exceptions *from veteran teachers sometimes during the first days of class!*
    *”Good” teachers know more facts and concepts than students do about the subject. Every good teacher I’ve known has had moments when he or she feigned ignorance to allow the students to be smarter than the teacher. In some cases setting this example in the first week seemed prudent to me. It’s an instinctual thing, I think, depending on the group and the situation.

    *”Good” teachers answer student questions clearly and correctly. Sometimes this can be the worst thing to do. Sometimes I let kids see the answer without me giving it.

    *”Good” teachers take time to explain complicated content. See previous answer.

    *”Good” teachers do not publicly humiliate students. Of course.

    *”Good” teachers assign homework from the text. I’m going to sick Alfie Kohn on you for this one. Most of the best teachers I know don’t use textbooks. Yes, I get your point here about what students expect. But I can’t let this one stand without a strong “maybe”.

    *”Good” teachers clamp down on late-comers to class. I’m certain you know that there are situations where this is the worst thing you can do. Every kid is different, but overall, yes, I accept your point.

    *”Good” teachers break up fights between students and protect weak students from being bullied. Yes, and yes.

    *”Good” teachers do not permit students to copy from one another when expecting each student to do his or her work. Clamp down on laziness and theft, yes, but in my world it isn’t always clear. Sometimes I like the fact that Sally “helped” her neighbor. I just want her to do it more subtly, not blatant copying but helping, yes.

    *”Good” teachers do not students to sleep in class. Again, there are exceptions. Johnny’s mom just tossed him out of the house and made him move in with dad.
    “There are great truths and there are trivial truths. The opposite of a trivial truth is obviously false. The opposite of a great truth is also true.” Neils Bohr.

    • larrycuban

      Jerry, thanks for noting the exceptions for “good” teachers. Of course, there are these exceptions to the rule that you nicely note. Often, when teachers aware of student expectation images not only meet those expectations initially but move beyond them to create different images of “good” teaching–as you note–than those students exoand their awareness of “goodness” in teaching. The Bphr aphorism is apt.

  3. Gary Ravani

    One cautionary note here is that thoughtful discussion can rather quickly descend into “the soft bigotry of low expectations” riff that was the bedrock of NCLB. Needless to say that was all a tragic ruse used to justify not having a thoughtful discussion of why the US has close to the highest child poverty rates in the industrialized world. And then to NOT have an even more thoughtful discussion about why the wealthy and corporations should not be paying the kinds of taxes that, in those other industrialized nations, supports children, parents, and schools.

    Again, there are pretty good reasons to support the assertion that teachers have about 10-14% influence on measurable student achievement. There’s the other 90-86% of the effects that deserve a lot more of the focus of thoughtful discussion, as well as pragmatic focus on programs to deal with those effects. I cannot find good evidence to suggest “expectations,” per se, rise to much of any kind of priority on the list of the key topics of “thoughtful discussion.”

  4. Anabelle Narce

    If you are a good teacher you must explain clearly your topic so that your students can understand about it.

Leave a reply to Anabelle Narce Cancel reply