Purpose of the Teaching Trial
The teaching trial is a major component of the selection process of NGPRD. Before they can counsel other teachers, future mentors must demonstrate their own teaching capacities. Their credibility in their future career depends on it. Because teaching is a complex endeavor, this trial checks multiple dimensions, such as the usage of materials, the teaching strategies, how the candidate monitors students, control his class, manages his time, or plan his lesson, to name just a few.
Rules
The candidates who have successfully passed the writing tests will be invited to pass a teaching trial of 20 minutes.
For the teaching trial, the applicants will be asked to prepare a lesson on a topic of their choice and to deliver the lesson as they normally would in whatever context that they are used to doing so (for instance, it is a biology lesson for grade 10).
They can use any technique they want. This lesson should be designed as an example of their best practice.
The lesson will take place in a normal classroom setting, with a whiteboard and LCD projector. Apart from those, the applicants must bring their own material.
The lesson will be done in front of a small committee of instructors (4 to 6). For the duration of the lesson, the applicants can give committee members instructions as they would do to normal students, e.g., making them do exercises, group work, and so on. Examples are available on our website.
The lesson will be recorded on video for review. If we plan to use the footage for anything else, you will be asked for your consent in writing (you still have the right to refuse without any explanation).
Applicants will be evaluated on their teaching skills, such as the following:
- Clarity
- Content validity
- Use of pedagogical material
- Attitude and body language
- Ability to answer questions.
Recommendations to the Candidates
Styles of Teaching
For the candidates, the objective of the trial is to
demonstrate their best teaching practices. But also, to distinguish themselves
from other candidates. All sorts of teaching methods can be used during the
exercise. The NGPRD strongly believes that there is a multitude of valid
approaches, but that none of them is relevant all the time, for every student,
and for every subject. If you teach a physics lesson in grade 12, it will
probably not be the same approach as an English lesson in primary school. Inquiry-Based
Learning, collaborative learning, role-play, experiments, educational games are
just a few of the many options that the candidates can choose for the trial.
But in any case the teaching style should match with the learning
objectives of the lesson and be adapted to the intended level.
A word about Lecture Style
Many candidates have simply done a lecture during the trial.
Although this is sometimes a very valid method, for instance to provide solid
foundations to the students, it has some serious limitations, in terms of
learning outcomes, and doesn’t offer much opportunities to evaluate the general
performance of the teacher. It’s a teaching style that is quite relevant when
there is a lot of content to pass on, but can be detrimental, when the
objective is to develop skills and attitudes. Interactions between the students
and the teacher are reduced to a strict minimum. Maintaining student attention
is a real challenge, if it is used in a prolonged manner. Remember that the
attention span of an audience is limited to a few minutes and must be regularly
reset. Last but not least, during a lecture, checking for understanding is a
critical problem, if there is no practical activity to be done by the students.
In most cases, during the trial, lecturing was a choice by
default, that showed a lack of imagination on the teacher’s side, rather than
any mastery of the genre. Unless the candidate has put a lot of efforts in a
very high-quality content and masters the rhetorical aspect of the technique,
it is not recommended to use it during the trial.
Individual Performance
Many candidates have also implemented techniques that they
are not familiar with. Copying lesson plans on any platform (even from MoEYS)
results in poor performances that cannot fool the exam committee. It is naïve
to apply a method just because you think that it is the one that the examiners
want to see. As stated above, there is no method that is indisputably better
than any other.
In every respect, an authentic lesson is preferable. We
strongly recommend the candidates to choose a lesson and a style that they feel
comfortable with, i.e. that they have practiced successfully on several
occasions.
Besides, it’s a dangerous move in terms of career to enter a
program through an illusory performance or by cheating. This would create
untenable expectations in the future. Holding a position that we are not
competent for is the fastest path to a miserable life.
Lesson planning and material preparation
The conditions of the exam are quite tight. The time frame
is very strict and the classroom unfamiliar. A special attention should be put
on the material preparation of the lesson, in terms of lesson planning and
material to use. Unfortunately, some candidates didn’t know clearly what they
wanted to do. This gave a very bad impression about their commitment and their
seriousness.
The teaching trial offers a lot of choice to the candidates.
But it also means that they are fully responsible for their own decision and
their organization. We are expecting to find autonomous workers, long-life
learners and leaders. This might sound like big words, but it starts with the
little things that demonstrate professionalism.
Flexibility and confidence
A few candidates showed a lack of flexibility. They stuck to
their idea, without considering their surroundings. A good teacher is not just
someone who knows a lot or someone who can write a great lesson plan. It’s
someone who can adapt his lesson to his audience and who reacts well to the
many disruptions, incidents, and all the events that happen in the classroom.
Some candidates might be afraid of the committee members who
will mark them. We want to remind them that those members play the roles of
students, and should be treated as such during the lesson. The candidates are
entitled to give them instructions, to praise them and correct them as they
would do with their normal students.
Examples
Here are some good performances that allowed the candidates
to pass.
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