What would you think of a teachers organization that fights the principal in wanting lesson plans?
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Lesson plans or evidence of planning in a format appropriate
to the teacher’s assignment, shall be furnished by each classroom teacher upon request from the teacher’s immediate administrator. No special format for a lesson plan shall be required.
When asked in the past, I have simply printed out my calendar where I keep quick notes about suggested units. It is usually not exact as I go with what the kids need.
If the cta got involved it, the expected format must be different than what the contract states.
good luck!
You’d need to be more specific here and give the complete picture. What school was this? Why were the teachers at that school so against the idea of having to submit lesson plans? How did the local teachers association handle the situation? How did the situation get to be such a problem that the CTA had to get involved?
It sounds like little more than a building issue and a matter of personal preference on the part of the principal. Some principals require lesson plans up to one week in advance; some don’t. This variation can even happen within the same district where the HS principal requires them, but the MS principal does not.
As a teacher, I would only fight our principal on the issue of submitting lesson plans if the principal’s required format resulted in an unreasonable amount of time and paperwork. Otherwise, I and other teachers could easily submit the plans we already do…so long as the principal was willing to accept as many different formats as there are teachers in the building.
The only time I could see a principal being justified in requiring such detailed plans is if the teacher was not getting the job done. The principal would best serve his/her staff if requiring plans was done on an individual basis for teachers who are under an improvement plan. If teachers are ever unprepared for classes, this misconduct should be reflected in their evaluations and handled with appropriate disciplinary action–including termination of contract if necessary.
Otherwise, without knowing any specific details, it sounds like a situation that’s been blown way out of proportion.
It’s not that the teachers organization is afraid of having to do the work- it’s the reason behind it being done in the first place. While I think teacher accountability is important, I also think we’re professionals and should be treated as such. We all have different methods to our madness, and that doesn’t always include detailed lesson plans. To require all teachers to submit them means you don’t trust what they’re doing and you expect them all to be going about it the exact same way.