The CLASS describes ten dimensions of
teaching that are linked to student achievement and social development. Each of
the ten dimensions falls into one of three broad categories: emotional support,
classroom organization, and instructional support.
Emotional support refers to the ways teachers help
children develop warm, supportive relationships, experience enjoyment and
excitement about learning, feel comfortable in the classroom, and experience
appropriate levels of autonomy or independence. This includes:
·
Positive
climate — the enjoyment
and emotional connection that teachers have with students, as well as the
nature of peer interactions;
·
Negative
climate — the level of
expressed negativity such as anger, hostility or aggression exhibited by
teachers and/or students in the classroom;
·
Teacher
sensitivity —
teachers’ responsiveness to students’ academic and emotional needs; and
·
Regard
for student perspectives —
the degree to which teachers’ interactions with students and classroom
activities place an emphasis on students’ interests, motivations, and points of
view.
Classroom organization refers to the ways teachers help
children develop skills to regulate their own behavior, get the most learning
out of each school day, and maintain interest in learning activities. This
includes:
·
Behavior
management — how well
teachers monitor, prevent, and redirect misbehavior;
·
Productivity — how well the classroom runs with
respect to routines, how well students understand the routine, and the degree
to which teachers provide activities and directions so that maximum time can be
spent in learning activities; and
·
Instructional
learning formats —
how teachers engage students in activities and facilitate activities so that
learning opportunities are maximized.
Instructional support refers to the ways in which teachers
effectively support students' cognitive development and language growth. This
includes:
·
Concept
development —
how teachers use instructional discussions and activities to promote students’
higher-order thinking skills and cognition in contrast to a focus on rote
instruction;
·
Quality
of feedback —
how teachers expand participation and learning through feedback to students;
and
·
Language
modeling — the extent to
which teachers stimulate, facilitate, and encourage students’ language use.
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