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Classroom Configurations (Models) for Co-Teaching

Classroom Configurations (Models) for Co-Teaching

There are numerous configurations in which teachers can share classrooms.  Teachers should determine the most appropriate model for each lesson or activity based on student needs and instructional goals.  Six common models and their descriptions are shown below.


                                              
 

One  Teach, One Observe

 
 

Teachers

 
 

One  teacher is teaching the class (direct instruction); other teacher is  observing certain students for behavior, participation, comprehension,  etc.  Teachers plan ahead what  will be observed.

 
 

Students

 
 

Students  are together in whole group, usually listening to and participating in direct  instruction

 
 

Teachers should be sure to…

 
 

Trade  roles – one person should not be the observer all the time; not use this  model too often

 
 

Type of instruction

 
 

Mini-lesson,  “lecture,” read-aloud, direct instruction of whole group

 
 

Types of  objectives that work well with this  model

 
 

Presenting  new skill(s) or concept(s) to whole class; exposure to new skill(s) or  concept (s); listening to books read aloud to class; demonstration of  procedures or tasks

 
 

Advantages/

 

strengths of this model

 
 

Observer  can collect detailed information about specific students; observer can  reflect and share on overall success of lesson, or give feedback to  co-teacher trying a new strategy or activity; requires little joint planning

 
 

Disadvantages/

 

challenges of this model

 
 

If  used too frequently, does not utilize full potential of the observing teacher  and may undermine credibility with students

 

 

                                              
 

One  Teach, One Drift

 
 

Teachers

 
 

One  teacher is teaching the class (direct instruction); other teacher is drifting  and helping certain kids, explaining concepts, checking for understanding and  participation, etc.

 
 

Students

 
 

Students  are together in whole group, usually listening to and/or participating in  direct instruction or an individual task that all are doing

 
 

Teachers should be sure to…

 
 

Trade  roles – one person should not be the observer all the time; not use this  model too often

 
 

Type of instruction

 
 

Mini-lesson,  “lecture,” direct instruction of whole group, step-by-step test-taking or  activity

 
 

Types of  objectives that work well with this  model

 
 

Presenting  new skill(s) or concept(s) to whole class; exposure to new skill(s) or  concept (s); listening to books read aloud to class; demonstration of  procedures or tasks

 
 

Advantages/

 

strengths of this model

 
 

Teachers  can ensure the understanding of students who need extra support, even during  direct instruction; requires little joint planning

 
 

Disadvantages/

 

challenges of this model

 
 

If  used too frequently, does not utilize full potential of the drifting teacher;  may encourage students to become too dependent on the “helper” teacher

 

 

                                              
 

Station  Teaching

 
 

Teachers

 
 

There  are three stations:  two with  teachers and one for independent work

 
 

Students

 
 

Students  are grouped and rotate between the three stations

 
 

Teachers should be sure to…

 
 

Pay  attention to timing of rotation; teach students skills for working  independently

 
 

Type of instruction

 
 

Review,  independent work, presentation of new skill(s) or concept(s), pre-teaching  (possibly in students’ native language)

 
 

Types of  objectives that work well with this  model

 
 

Understanding  of and practice with new skill(s) or concept (s); oral language development  through dialogue/conversation, either social or academic; build background  knowledge prior to whole-group instruction

 
 

Advantages/

 

Strengths of this model

 
 

Each  teacher has responsibility for one part of class – relatively little joint  planning

 
 

Disadvantages/

 

Challenges of this model

 
 

If  used too frequently, does not utilize full potential of the drifting teacher;  may encourage students to become too dependent on the “helper” teacher

 

 

                                              
 

Parallel  Teaching

 
 

Teachers

 
 

Class  is split and teachers teach same content, one to each group.  May use different strategies or  materials, but have same lesson objectives for each group

 
 

Students

 
 

Students  in two groups, one with each teacher

 
 

Teachers should be sure to…

 
 

Pace  lessons similarly; be sure each teacher knows the material

 
 

Type of instruction

 
 

Drill  and practice activities, review, projects needing close supervision; “jigsaw”  of written materials; integrating use of different native languages

 
 

Types of objectives that  work well with this model

 
 

Oral  language development through dialogue/conversation, either social or  academic; building background knowledge; review skills

 
 

Advantages/

 

Strengths of this model

 
 

Students  are all working toward same objectives and/or standards, but instruction is  differentiated and targeted for students’ needs;

 
 

Disadvantages/

 

Challenges of this model

 
 

Possibility  of noise and distraction if both groups in same room; segregation and  division of class if used too often with same students in an “alternative”  space (e.g., hall, ESL room, library)

 

 

                                              
 

Alternative  Teaching

 
 

Teachers

 
 

One  teacher giving direct instruction, or leading bulk of class in an activity;  other teacher works with small group of students somewhere in the room

 
 

Students

 
 

All  together in whole group, except for small group, at a table or on carpet  somewhere else in the room

 
 

Teachers should be sure to…

 
 

Alternate  roles (small group and large group); vary which students participate in small  group

 
 

Type of instruction

 
 

Review,  independent work, presentation of new skill(s) or concept(s), pre-teaching  (possibly in students’ native language), re-teaching

 
 

Types of objectives that  work well with this model

 
 

Understanding  of and practice with new skill(s) or concept (s); oral language development  through dialogue/conversation, either social or academic; build background  knowledge prior to or after whole-group instruction

 
 

Advantages/

 

Strengths of this model

 
 

Intensive  oral language and instruction for small group facilitates differentiation,  even for very discrepant students

 
 

Disadvantages/

 

Challenges of this model

 
 

Possible  negative stigma if same group pulled all the time, or same teacher always  works with small group

 

 

                                              
 

Team  Teaching

 
 

Teachers

 
 

Teachers  share instruction of the whole group

 
 

Students

 
 

Students  are all together in one group

 
 

Teachers should be sure to…

 
 

Plan  together; maintain open communication and work toward high level of trust

 
 

Type of instruction

 
 

Direct  instruction, monitoring students working on projects independently or in  groups, class discussion, presentation of new skill(s) or concept(s)

 
 

Types of objectives that  work well with this model

 
 

Understanding  of and practice with new skill(s) or concept (s); completing work on project  or task (group or independent)

 
 

Advantages/

 

Strengths of this model

 
 

Teachers  complement each other’s skills and strengths so quality of instruction is  improved; teachers can learn from each other

 
 

Disadvantages/

 

Challenges of this model

 
 

Requires  high level of trust between teachers; requires similar styles or commitment  to making different styles work together

 


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