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Classroom Observation Tasks (Ruth Wajnryb) (z-lib.org)

Part One Introduction Why a book on observation?
of observers may watch different lessons for the same reason, or in the case of a videoed or demonstration lesson, many observers may be involved simultaneously. The data collected may later be collated for purposes of analysis and interpretation.
See Section 4 (pages 16-17) on how the tasks are organised.
Why tasks?
Because such a lot happens in the language learning classroom there are a lot to observe: teaching behaviour and learning behaviour, patterns of interaction, different learning styles, concentration spans, patterns of group dynamics, to name some. Sometimes what is happening is very overt, such as when a student asks a question and a teacher responds directly. Sometimes it is far more covert, such as when one student generalises from another's utterance and echoes an error. Often the connection between cause and effect is not immediately visible or retrievable.
Using an observation task helps the observer in two important ways:

  1. It limits the scope of what one is observing and allows one to focus on one or two particular aspects, such as listening only to a certain type of question, or charting one student's concentration for a ten-minute time span, or recording non-verbal signals.

  2. It provides a convenient means of collecting data that frees the observer from forming an opinion or making an on-the-spot evalua­tion during the lesson. The judgemental and interpretive side comes later, after the lesson, and will be based on the complete data that has been collected.


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