12 Charcateristic Sof Good Teachers
12 Charcateristic Sof Good Teachers
12 Charcateristic Sof Good Teachers
Laura J. Colker
What does it take to be an effective early childhood teacher? This is a question that has long gnawed at reflective teacher educators, idealistic teachers (especially those just beginning their careers), and worried families who place their young children in the care of another adult. Many educators feel that effectiveness as a teacher stems from a combination of knowledge, skills, and personal characteristics (Katz 1993). While aspiring teachers can increase their knowledge and develop their skills, their personal characteristicswhich involve the socioemotional and spiritual realms in addition to the cognitiveare likely to be more fixed. As Cantor (1990) notes, one can have both knowledge and skills, but without a disposition to make use of them, very little will happen. Having is not the same as doing. Because personal characteristics are rooted in feelings and beliefs, we can neither observe them directly nor assess them through traditional methods (Ostorga 2003), which makes them difficult to identify.
Tyler Hamlet
Nevertheless, teacher educators and administrators would benefit greatly from knowing the characteristics of an effective early childhood teacher, as they strive to improve the quality of the field. New teachers and those at a crossroads in their career would also benefit if they could confirm that the interpersonal and intrapersonal beliefs they possess are those demanded by the field.
Laura J. Colker, EdD, is a curriculum developer and teacher trainer in Washington, D.C. She is a contributing editor to NAEYCs new publication, Teaching Young Children. The information in this article was collected for a project Laura collaborated on with NAEYCs Carol Copple and Sue Bredekamp of the Council for Professional Recognition. ljcolker@aol.com
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in fact they are not the same. DaRosdetermine the characteristics correVoseles and Fowler-Hughey (2007) lated with teacher effectiveness. make the point that traits, unlike Teachers reported four key characdispositions, are unconscious behavteristics. According to these responioral habits. Skills such as being dents, effective teachers organized, having command of the Have a sound knowledge of subject classroom, and asking probing quesmatter. tions are teacher abilities but not Take a personal interest in each characteristics. student. A second problem with the current Establish a caring/loving/warm literature on teacher characteristics atmosphere. is that most of the lists of characterShow enthusiasm with students. istics were developed with teachers Principals offered a slightly different of students in grades beyond the list of characteristics they consider primary years in mind. Indeed, the most important. They said effective most common focus is on teachers in teachers higher education; none of the lists of desired teacher characteristics apply Conduct thorough instructional exclusively to early childhood teachplanning/organizing. ers. Such a list would certainly benefit Are child oriented. the field. Because early childhood Show enthusiasm with students. teachers need unique knowledge and A more recent study (Taylor & Wash skills, it is also likely that they need to 2003) at Lander University surveyed have characteristics that are unique 3,000 K12 teachers and administo them as a group. trators in seven school districts. A final limitation of the existing Participants completed a modified literature is that in most instances, Delphi survey, teacher educators are ranking the the ones attempting priority of disto define characterI had a need to positions indisistics of effective make a difference pensable to K12 teachers. While teachers. Survey there is value in this in childrens lives participants approach, disposiand ensure they identified the foltions compiled by lowing as the top experts working with got all the opportu10 characteristics practitioners do not nities and nurturing (in descending necessarily reprerank order) of an sent characteristics they needed and effective teacher: that practitioners deserved. enthusiastic, an themselves consider effective comimportant. Because municator, adaptcharacteristics able to change, a lifelong learner, cominvolve personal perceptions, consultpetent, accepting of others, patient, ing the beliefs of those doing the job organized, hardworking, and caring. is essential when drawing up a master list of characteristics common among effective early childhood teachers. In the literature, there are two A new survey exceptions in which researchers solicited practitioner perceptions. A study To begin to address the gaps in the at Ball State University (Johnson 1980) literature, I interviewed 43 early childsurveyed 227 Indiana public school hood practitioners to obtain their teachers and 14 school principals to perceptions about the personal char-
acteristics of effective early childhood teachers. These participants represent a wide range of backgrounds in terms of ethnicity, gender, geographic location, and experience. Although some respondents are no longer classroom teachers (they are mentor teachers, supervisors, trainers, and the like), all were early childhood teachers for a number of years. Because personal characteristics involve feelings and spirit as well as thought, I did not ask survey participants to simply compose a list of characteristics. Instead, I posed questions about what attracted them to the field of early childhood education, the skills they needed to do their jobs, the challenges they faced, and the rewards they reaped. By reflecting on their practice in this way, respondents described the characteristics of effective teachers. While this is by no means a perfect approach, it provides insight into a construct that is difficult to define and describe. What follows is a qualitative analysis of the responses provided by the 43 participants. I have organized their responses into 12 themes. The content is entirely the respondents; the analysis is mine.
teachers, termed teaching a calling: I had a need to make a difference in childrens lives and ensure they got all the opportunities and nurturing they needed and deserved. It was mostly a calling, much like the ministrybut I dont say that out loud to too many people. The need to make a difference in childrens lives was echoed by nearly every respondent, including longtime kindergarten teacher Joanna Phinney: I entered the field of early childhood education because I wanted to make a difference in the world. I felt that the place to start was with young children because you can make the biggest difference when children are young. If you ask early childhood educators who entered the field for idealistic
reasons whether they made the right career choice, youll find few regrets. In the group of 43 surveyed here, no one expressed regret. Heres what two prominent early childhood educators who were once classroom teachers said:
At a certain point in my career I was offered a position that would have been a promotion, but it was not in early childhood. I debated the decision carefully because I was a single parent of two young children at the time and could have used the additional money that came with the promotion. I chose to stay in early childhood education primarily because I knew my heart was with childrens programs. In the end, staying with childrens programs was the best decision. Even at the time I did not regret the decision because knowing myself as I do, it was more important for me to believe in the cause than to make money. Linda Smith, Executive Director, National Association of Child Care Resource and Referral Agencies I can honestly say that I have never, not once, reconsidered my decision to be an early childhood educator. Quite the contrary, I have often marveled at my luck. This profession has never disappointed me. Sometimes it is hard and I am not always successful, but I have an abiding belief in the value of my contributions. Early childhood education has definitely been my calling, and because of the good match, I have been able to apply my talents and skills in an arena that both needed and valued my insights. Linda Espinosa, Professor of Early Childhood Education, University of MissouriColumbia
Indeed, any job in early childhood education demands that you be able to deal well with change and unexpected turns.
sixth characteristic linked by study participants to successful teaching. Indeed, any job in early childhood education demands that you be able to deal well with change and unexpected turns. Whether its raining outside and you have to cancel outdoor play, or your funding agency has drastically reduced your operating budget, you need to be able to switch gears at a moments notice and find an alternative that works. Sometimes the challenges are both drastic and sudden. Fresh out of college, Ashley Freibergone of the study respondentshad been a kindergarten teacher for only a few weeks when she found herself welcoming evacuees from Hurricane Katrina into her Baton Rouge, Louisiana, classroom: I have 28 kindergarten children in my classroom, and it is my job to work with each of my students and present them with information that will help them to become readers, to master basic math facts, to know about the world around them, and to follow the classroom and school rules. I must do this leaving no child behind, teaching each individual student in the classroom, without a classroom
aide! Despite the pressures, Ashley adapted, doing what she had to for each child. Her flexibility exemplifies a vital character trait that respondents felt effective teachers must have.
that we love them and respect them and be willing to laugh when its funny...even when the jokes on us.
Conclusion
Reflecting on their practice, 43 early childhood educators identified characteristics they believe are integral to effective teaching. The resulting 12 characteristics include: (1) passion about children and teaching, (2) perseverance, (3) risk taking, (4) pragmatism, (5) patience, (6) flexibility, (7) respect, (8) creativity, (9) authenticity, (10) love of learning, (11) high energy, and (12) sense of humor. Interestinglyand not surprisinglysome of the identified characteristics parallel those already identified in the literature (patience, edge about recent research on teachauthenticity, and a love of learning, for ing. Respondents in this study regard example.) In other instances, practiboth teaching and learning as dynamic tioners identified characteristics not processes. typically seen in the literature (perseverance, risk taking, and pragmatism, 11. High energy. Though it may for example). A future research study have more to do with temperament could compare the findings; perhaps than disposition, many teachers felt it practitioners have identified trends important that teachers display high not yet picked up on by teacher energy. Most children respond posieducators. tively to teachers with high energy As acknowledged, data reported in levels, valuing their enthusiasm. As this article were not scientifically colLinda Espinosa observed, The energy lected nor are they meant to represent it takes to get up every day and work the view of the entire field. The article on behalf of young children and famidoes, however, report what selected lies is enormous. early childhood educators themselves believe are important characteristics 12. Sense of humor. A final vital for doing their work effectively. It is characteristic of effective teaching the difference between an expert tellpinpointed by respondents in the ing a parent how to be a good parent study was having a sense of humor. and a parent giving Learning should his perspective on be fun; nothing parenting. Thus, it conveys this mesYoung children are is not a question sage more than a shrewd judges of of which is betroom that is filled ter. Rather, it is an with spontaneous character; they know attempt to honor laughter. John whether a teacher is the practitioners Varga summarizes own views about the importance of authentic, and they this hard to define this characteristic respond accordingly. but important comin teaching: All ponent of teaching. children ask is
Karen Phillips
when resources are limited. It takes creativity to teach children from diverse backgrounds who might not approach education in the same way. It takes creativity to teach children with differing learning styles who think and learn in different ways. And most of all, it takes creativity to make learning fun. Creativity is a hallmark of an effective early childhood teacher.
References
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Johnson, M. 1980. Effective teaching as perceived by teachers and principals in selected Indiana school corporations. Ball State University doctoral dissertations. Abstract. Muncie, IN: Ball State University. www.bsu.edu/libraries/virtualpress/student/ dissertations/author_list.asp Katz, L.G. 1993. Dispositions: Definitions and implications for early childhood practices. Champaign-Urbana, IL: ERIC Clearinghouse on Elementary and Early Childhood Education. http://ceep.crc.uiuc.edu/eecearchive/books/ disposit.html Ostorga, A.N. 2003. The role of values in the development of dispositions. Paper presented at the Second Annual Symposium on Educator Dispositions, November 2021, in Richmond, Kentucky. Smith, R. 1980. A checklist for good teaching. Montreal, Quebec, Canada: Teaching and Learning Centre, Concordia University.
Taylor, B., & P. Wash. 2003. 3,000 educators respond to preferred dispositions. Paper presented at the Second Annual Symposium on Educator Dispositions, November 2021, in Richmond, Kentucky. Usher, D. 2003. Arthur Combs five dimensions of helper belief reformulated as five dispositions of teacher effectiveness. Paper presented at the Second Annual Symposium on Educator Dispositions, November 2021, in Richmond, Kentucky. Villa, K., with L.J. Colker. 2006. A personal story: Making inclusion work. Young Children 61 (1): 96100.
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