What Is Co-Teaching?: Topics Included in This Chapter
What Is Co-Teaching?: Topics Included in This Chapter
What Is Co-Teaching?: Topics Included in This Chapter
Co-Teaching?
Topics Included in This Chapter:
What co-teaching is not
What is co-teaching?
What does co-teaching look like?
The elements of co-teaching
Importance of systemic supports
1
W e just found out that we are expected to co-teach. What is
co-teaching? What is it not? What elements or variables need to be
in place so that we know we are really co-teaching? Is there a process that
will help us successfully co-teach? The answers to these questions are dis-
cussed in this chapter.
3
4 INTRODUCTION TO CO-TEACHING
■ WHAT IS CO-TEACHING?
Co-teaching is two or more people sharing responsibility for teaching all of
the students assigned to a classroom. It involves the distribution of respon-
sibility among people for planning, differentiating instruction, and monitor-
ing progress for a classroom of students. Co-teaching is a fun way for
students to learn from two or more people who may have different ways of
thinking or teaching. Some people say that co-teaching is a creative way to
connect with and support others to help all children learn. Others say that
co-teaching is a way to make schools more effective. Co-teaching can be
likened to a healthy marriage or other committed partnership. Partners
must establish trust, develop and work on communication, share the chores,
celebrate, work together creatively to overcome the inevitable challenges
and problems, and anticipate conflict and handle it in a constructive way.
Supportive Co-Teaching
Supportive co-teaching is when one teacher takes the lead instructional
role and the other(s) rotates among the students to provide support. The
co-teacher(s) taking the supportive role watches or listens as students
work together, stepping in to provide one-to-one tutorial assistance when
necessary, while the other co-teacher continues to direct the lesson. This is
one of the two co-teaching approaches often favored by teachers who are
new to co-teaching.
Parallel Co-Teaching
Parallel co-teaching is when two or more people work with different
groups of students in different sections of the classroom. In parallel co-
teaching, the co-teachers teach, monitor, or facilitate the learning of differ-
ent groups of students, usually in the same room at the same time.
Co-teachers rotate among the groups, and sometimes there may be one
group of students that works without a co-teacher for at least part of the
time. Teachers new to co-teaching often choose to begin with this approach.
Complementary Co-Teaching
Complementary co-teaching is when co-teachers do something to
enhance the instruction provided by the other co-teacher(s). For example,
one co-teacher might paraphrase the other’s statements or model note-
taking skills with a document projector. Sometimes, one of the comple-
mentary teaching partners preteaches the small-group social skill roles
required for successful cooperative group learning and then monitors as
students practice the roles during the lesson taught by the other co-teacher.
As co-teachers gain confidence, complementary teaching and team teach-
ing approaches are added to their repertoire.
Team Co-Teaching
Team co-teaching is when two or more people do what the traditional
teacher has always done—plan, teach, assess, and assume responsibility
for all of the students in the classroom. Team teachers share the leadership
and the responsibilities. Co-teachers who team co-teach divide the lessons
in ways that allow the students to experience each teacher’s strengths and
expertise. For example, for a lesson on inventions in science, one co-
teacher whose interest is history will explain the impact on society. The
other co-teacher, whose strengths are more focused on the mechanisms
involved, explains how the particular inventions work.
The key to successful team co-teaching is that co-teachers simultane-
ously deliver the lessons. The bottom line and test of a successful
6 INTRODUCTION TO CO-TEACHING
Parity
Parity occurs when co-teachers perceive that their unique contribu-
tions and their presence on the team are valued. Treating each member of
the co-teaching team with respect is a key to achieving parity. Co-teaching
members develop the ability to exchange their ideas and concerns freely,
regardless of differences in knowledge, skills, attitudes, or position.
Soliciting opinions and being sensitive to the suggestions offered by each
co-teacher are especially important when there is a perception of unequal
status because of position, training, or experience. Parity between a teacher
and a paraprofessional, for example, could be demonstrated when the
paraprofessional uses his or her unique knowledge to enhance a lesson
developed with the teacher. Reciprocally, the teacher is in an expert role
when the paraprofessional imitates a teaching-learning procedure that the
teacher has demonstrated. The outcome is that each member of the co-
teaching team gives and takes direction for the co-teaching lesson so that
the students can achieve the desired benefits.
Cooperative Process
There are five elements that facilitate cooperative processes: face-to-
face interactions, positive interdependence, interpersonal skills, monitor-
ing co-teacher progress, and individual accountability. Each of the five
elements is now defined in more detail.
Face-to-Face Interactions
Face-to-face interaction is an important element for co-teachers as they
make several important decisions. Co-teachers need to decide when and
how often they will meet as well as how much time meetings will take
during school hours. They need to decide when others (e.g., parents, spe-
cialists, paraprofessionals, psychologists) should be involved. They also
need to develop a system for communicating information when formal
meetings are not scheduled (e.g., a communication log book at the teach-
ers’ desk, Post-it notes on the bulletin board of the classroom). Face-to-face
interactions are necessary for co-teachers to make these and other critical
decisions.
Positive Interdependence
Positive interdependence is the heart of co-teaching. It involves the
recognition that no one person can effectively respond to the diverse psy-
chological and educational needs of the heterogeneous groups of students
found in typical 21st-century classrooms. Co-teachers create the feeling
that they are equally responsible for the learning of all students to whom
they are now assigned and that they can best carry out their responsibili-
ties by pooling their diverse knowledge, skills, and material resources. To
establish positive interdependence, co-teachers can establish a common
WHAT IS CO-TEACHING? 9
goal, create rewards for and celebrate their success, and divide the labor of
the planning, delivery of instruction, and assessment.
Interpersonal Skills
Interpersonal skills include the verbal and nonverbal components of
trust, trust building, conflict management, and creative problem solving.
Such social interaction skills are needed for achieving the distribution of
leadership functions and for ensuring that all students are making ade-
quate progress. Individual co-teachers will find that they are functioning
at different interpersonal skill levels, depending on their previous training,
mastery of curriculum content, personality styles, communication prefer-
ences, and the number of colleagues with whom they are assigned to co-
teach. Effective co-teacher partnerships encourage each member to
improve his or her social skills by giving feedback and encouragement to
each other.
Individual Accountability
Individual accountability is the engine of co-teaching. It is clear that
co-teaching is effective based on the actual delivery of skills and knowl-
edge by each co-teacher as well as each one’s follow-through with respect
to agreed-upon commitments such as preparing differentiated materials
for a lesson. Individual accountability is a form of acknowledging the
importance of the actions from each co-teacher. Individual accountability
in co-teaching involves taking time to assess the individual performance
of each partner for one or more of four purposes. One purpose is to
increase partners’ perceptions of their contributions to the co-teaching
endeavor. A second purpose is to provide partners with recognition for
their contributions. Yet another is to determine whether any adjustments
need to be made in any of the partners’ co-teaching roles and actions. A
final purpose is to identify when one or more of the partners may need
assistance (e.g., some modeling or coaching, access to additional resources
or supports) to increase effectiveness in the performance of assigned
roles and responsibilities.
10 INTRODUCTION TO CO-TEACHING
You will see how the five elements of the cooperative process operate in
varying degrees for each of four approaches to co-teaching—supportive,
parallel, complementary, team teaching—that are defined in Chapter 3 and
illustrated in Chapters 4 through 7.