Effective support must be provided for colleagues who are underperforming, but in order to ensure improvements take place, high quality training to help those in charge of performance management and appraisal is crucial.
The Sutton Trust recently published a report on the findings of their survey, ‘What makes great teaching?’ Top of the list, with strong evidence of impact on student outcomes, is quality of ‘instruction’, which includes elements such as effective questioning and use of assessment by teachers, as well as specific practices such as:
If you boil the report to its most basic of outcomes - having a high quality teacher in the classroom has a positive impact on the achievement and progress. In fact, evidence suggests that it can improve pupil progress by around 40%!
Effective support must be provided for colleagues who are underperforming, but in order to ensure improvements take place, high quality training to help those in charge of performance management and appraisal is crucial. The downloadable in-house training course tackling staff underperformance provides strategies for managing challenging conversations.
Firstly, you will need to know how to identify colleagues who are underperforming - not as easy as it sounds - and formulate an action plan for supporting them to improve their practice.
Once this is done, it is important to seek out and enact constructive, positive solutions to underperformance and take on the encouraging role of the mentor. Taking this role as coach and mentor can be a difficult one for many, and knowing what support to provide to establish improvements is not always a natural skill, but one which must be learned from appropriate professional development.
Inevitably, not every colleague will make the required improvements. Difficult conversations are sure to ensue; tears and anger are not unlikely. Dealing with the emotions of others in a sensitive way is vital. For example:
It’s never easy dealing with underperforming staff, so the key is: