Why video cameras and teacher evaluation do not mix
I wrote a post the other day about Bill Gates’ plan to videotape America’s teachers as part of a teacher evaluation system, an enterprise that he said could cost up to $5 billion, but, he believes, is worth it. Here is veteran educator Anthony Cody to explain why it isn’t.
Cody spent 24 years working in Oakland schools, 18 of them as a science teacher at a high needs middle school. He is National Board certified, and now leads workshops with teachers focused on Project Based Learning. He is also a co-founder of the new Network for Public Education with education historian and activist Diane Ravitch and others.
By Anthony Cody
Bill Gates’ latest big idea is the creation of a new $5 billion teacher evaluation system that includes the placement of video cameras in every classroom in America. (I wrote about it here.) The folks at the Gates Foundation seem a bit dismayed at how this
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Author reads with D.C. students, then writes about them
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