QUALITIES
OF A PROFESSIONAL TEACHER
All teachers should possess:
I. PROFESSIONAL ATTRIBUTES
II. PROFESSIONAL KNOWLEDGE AND
UNDERSTANDING
III. PROFESSIONAL SKILLS
PROFESSIONAL
ATTRIBUTES
Relationships
with children and young people
CC 1st
Have high expectations of children
and young people including a commitment to ensuring that they can achieve their
full educational potential and to establishing fair, respectful, trusting,
supportive and constructive relationships with them.
CC 2nd
Hold positive values and attitudes
and adopt high standards of behaviour in their professional role.
Frameworks
CC 3rd
Maintain an up-to-date knowledge
and understanding of the professional duties of teachers and the statutory
framework within which they work, and contribute to the development,
implementation and evaluation of the policies and practice of their workplace,
including those designed to promote equality of opportunity.
Communicating
and working with others
CC 4th
a.
Communicate effectively with
children, young people and colleagues.
b.
Communicate effectively with
parents and carers, conveying timely and relevant information about attainment,
objectives, progress and well-being.
c.
Recognise that communication is a
two-way process and encourage parents and carers to participate in discussions
about the progress, development and well-being of children and young people.
Relationships with children and young people
CC 5th
Recognise and respect the
contributions that colleagues, parents and carers can make to the development
and well-being of children and young people, and to raising their levels of
attainment.
CC 6th
Have a commitment to collaboration
and co-operative working where appropriate. Communicating and working with
others
Personal
professional development
CC 7th
Evaluate their performance and be
committed to improving their practice through appropriate professional
development.
CC 8th
Have a creative and constructively
critical approach towards innovation; being prepared to adapt their practice
where benefits and improvements are identified.
CC 9th
Act upon advice and feedback and be open to
coaching and mentoring.
PROFESSIONAL
KNOWLEDGE AND UNDERSTANDING
Teaching
and learning
CC 10th
Have a good, up-to-date working
knowledge and understanding of a range of teaching, learning and behaviour
management strategies and know how to use and adapt them, including how to
personalise learning to provide opportunities for all learners to achieve their
potential.
Assessment
and monitoring
CC 11th
Know the assessment requirements
and arrangements for the subjects/curriculum areas they teach, including those
relating to public examinations and qualifications.
CC 12th
Know a range of approaches to
assessment, including the importance of formative assessment.
CC 13th
Know how to use local and national
statistical information to evaluate the effectiveness of their teaching, to
monitor the progress of those they teach and to raise levels of attainment
CC 14th
Know how to use reports and other
sources of external information related to assessment in order to provide
learners with accurate and constructive feedback on their strengths,
weaknesses, attainment, progress and areas for development, including action
plans for improvement.
Subjects
and curriculum
CC 15th
Have a secure knowledge and
understanding of their subjects/curriculum areas and related pedagogy
including: the contribution that their subjects/ curriculum areas can make to
cross-curricular learning; and recent relevant developments.
CC 16th
Know and understand the relevant
statutory and non-statutory curricula and frameworks, including those provided
through the National Strategies, for their subjects/curriculum areas and other
relevant initiatives across the age and ability range they teach.
Literacy,
numeracy and ICT
CC 17th
Know how to use skills in literacy,
numeracy and ICT to support their teaching and wider professional activities.
Achievement
and diversity
CC 18th
Understand how children and young
people develop and how the progress, rate of development and well-being of
learners are affected by a range of developmental, social, religious, ethnic,
cultural and linguistic influences. S
CC 19th
Know how to make effective
personalised provision for those they teach, including those for whom English
is an additional language or who have special educational needs or
disabilities, and how to take practical account of diversity and promote
equality and inclusion in their teaching.
CC 20th
Understand the roles of colleagues
such as those having specific responsibilities for learners with special
educational needs, disabilities and other individual learning needs, and the
contributions they can make to the learning, development and well-being of
children and young people.
CC 21st
Know when to draw on the expertise
of colleagues, such as those with responsibility for the safeguarding of
children and young people and special educational needs and disabilities, and
to refer to sources of information, advice and support from external agencies
Health
and well-being
CC 22nd
Know the current legal
requirements, national policies and guidance on the safeguarding and promotion
of the well-being of children and young people.
CC 23rd
Know the local arrangements
concerning the safeguarding of children and young people.
CC 24th
Know how to identify potential
child abuse or neglect and follow safeguarding procedures.
CC 25th
Know how to identify and support
children and young people whose progress, development or well-being is affected
by changes or difficulties in their personal circumstances, and when to refer
them to colleagues for specialist support.
PROFESSIONAL
SKILLS
Planning
CC 26th
Plan for progression across the age
and ability range they teach, designing effective learning sequences within
lessons and across series of lessons informed by secure subject/curriculum
knowledge.
CC 27th
Design opportunities for learners
to develop their literacy, numeracy, ICT and thinking and learning skills
appropriate within their phase and context.
CC 28th
Plan, set and assess homework,
other out-of-class assignments and coursework for examinations, where
appropriate, to sustain learners’ progress and to extend and consolidate their
learning.
Teaching
CC 29th
Teach challenging, well-organised
lessons and sequences of lessons across the age and ability range they teach in
which they:
a. use
an appropriate range of teaching strategies and resources, including
e-learning, which meet learners’ needs and take practical account of diversity
and promote equality and inclusion
b. build
on the prior knowledge and attainment of those they teach in order that
learners meet learning objectives and make sustained progress
c. develop
concepts and processes which enable learners to apply new knowledge,
understanding and skills
d. adapt
their language to suit the learners they teach, introducing new ideas and concepts
clearly, and using explanations, questions, discussions and plenaries
effectively
e.
manage the learning of individuals,
groups and whole classes effectively, modifying their teaching appropriately to
suit the stage of the lesson and the needs of the learners.
CC 30th
Teach engaging and motivating
lessons informed by well-grounded expectations of learners and designed to
raise levels of attainment.
Assessing,
monitoring and giving feedback
CC 31st
Make effective use of an
appropriate range of observation, assessment, monitoring and recording
strategies as a basis for setting challenging learning objectives and
monitoring learners’ progress and levels of attainment.
CC 32nd
Provide learners, colleagues,
parents and carers with timely, accurate and constructive feedback on learners’
attainment, progress and areas for development.
CC 33rd
Support and guide learners so that
they can reflect on their learning, identify the progress they have made, set
positive targets for improvement and become successful independent learners.
CC 34th
Use assessment as part of their
teaching to diagnose learners’ needs, set realistic and challenging targets for
improvement and plan future teaching.
Reviewing
teaching and learning
CC 35th
Review the effectiveness of their
teaching and its impact on learners’ progress, attainment and well-being,
refining their approaches where necessary.
CC 36th
Review the impact of the feedback
provided to learners and guide learners on how to improve their attainment.
Learning
environment
CC 37th
a. Establish
a purposeful and safe learning environment which complies with current legal
requirements, national policies and guidance on the safeguarding and well-being
of children and young people so that learners feel secure and sufficiently
confident to make an active contribution to learning and to the school.
b. Make
use of the local arrangements concerning the safeguarding of children and young
people.
c. Identify
and use opportunities to personalise and extend learning through out-of-school
contexts where possible making links between in-school learning and learning in
out-of-school contexts.
CC 38th
a.
Manage learners’ behaviour
constructively by establishing and maintaining a clear and positive framework
for discipline, in line with the school’s behaviour policy.
b.
Use a range of behaviour management
techniques and strategies, adapting them as necessary to promote the
self-control and independence of learners.
CC 39th
Promote learners’ self-control,
independence and cooperation through developing their social, emotional and
behavioural skills.
Team
working and collaboration
CC 40th
Work as a team member and identify
opportunities for working with colleagues, managing their work where
appropriate and sharing the development of effective practice with them.
CC 41st
Ensure that colleagues working with
them are appropriately involved in supporting learning and understand the roles
they are expected to fulfil.
No comments:
Post a Comment