assessing applicant dispositions
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Assessing Applicant Dispositions. After today, you will be able to answer: What are dispositions? Why are they important to me? To students? How do I measure dispositions while interviewing?. Your Favorite Teacher. What is the first thing that comes to mind?. Your Worst Teacher. - PowerPoint PPT PresentationTRANSCRIPT
After today, you will be able to answer:
• What are dispositions?• Why are they important to me?
To students?• How do I measure dispositions
while interviewing?
Assessing Applicant Dispositions
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What is the first thing that comes to mind?
Your Favorite Teacher
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What is the first thing that comes to mind?
Your Worst Teacher
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Your Favorite TeacherCaring Warm Helpful
Fun Genuine Enthusiastic
Knowledgeable Responsible Sharing
Committed Energetic Positive
Friendly Enjoyable Lively
Humorous Interesting Interactive
Kind Good Moral
Enhancing Protective Accepting
Stable Effective Efficient
Understanding Embracing Well-Informed
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He really enjoyed teaching and cared about students.
She looked for the good in each of us.He could teach something and make it fun.She held our interest with her lively, humorous
manner and her thorough knowledge of the subject.
He believed in me.She challenged us.He saw us as unique and treated us with respect.She really knew her subject and had a passion
for it.
Your Favorite Teacher
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Your Worst TeacherRude Humorless Monotone Uncaring
Cold Hearted
Ridicule Lectures Intimidating
Impersonal Ill-informed Unimaginative Uninspiring
Unfriendly Sarcasm Boring Mean
Which would I prefer to hire: A teacher that is good or a teacher that is getting better? Why?
Thought of the Day
“Good is the enemy of great”“In a good-to-great transformation, people
are not your most important asset. The right people are.
Why try for greatness?Doing something you love and care aboutDoing something related to your interests
and beliefsMaking a positive impact on othersImpossible to imagine not trying to make
it great
Good to Great by Jim Collins
Knowledge Teaching
Skills Dispositio
ns
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Favorite Teacher Characteristics?
75%
19%
6%
Findings from “Great Teachers, Great Memories” National Survey on Favorite Teachers
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Dispositions are often defined as one’s natural mental and emotional outlook or mood, including:attitudes, beliefs, interests, appreciations, values, and modes of adjustment.
Dispositions: Just What Are We
Talking About?
Dispositions toward one self: upbeat, non self-centered, identified
Dispositions toward others: people are able, worthy and dependable
Dispositions about purpose: see the big picture, keeps perspective, priorities
General frame of reference: put people first, builds relationships
Understanding Dispositions
PERCEPTUAL RATING RUBRICS PERCEPTIONS OF SELF:
IDENTIFIEDThe educator feels a oneness with all people. S/He perceives him/herself as deeply and meaningfully related to persons of every description.
UNIDENTIFIEDThe educator feels generally apart from others.His/her feelings of oneness are restricted to those of similar beliefs.
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ABLEThe educator sees others as having capacities todeal with their problems. S/He believes others arebasically able to find adequate solutions to events intheir own lives.
UNABLEThe educator sees others as lacking the necessarycapacities to deal effectively with their problems.S/He doubts their ability to make their owndecisions and run their own lives.
LARGERThe educator views events in a broad perspective.His/her goals extend beyond the immediate tolarger implications and contexts.
SMALLERThe educator views events in a narrow perspective.His/her purposes focus on immediate and specificgoals.
PEOPLEThe educator is concerned with the human aspectsof affairs. The attitudes, feelings, beliefs, andwelfare of persons are prime considerations inhis/her thinking.
THINGSThe educator is concerned with the impersonalaspects of affairs. Questions of order, management,mechanics, and details of things and events areprime considerations in his/her thinking.
7 6 5 4 3 2 1
PERCEPTIONS OF OTHERS:
PERCEPTIONS OF PURPOSE:
7 6 5 4 3 2 1FRAME OF REFERENCE:
7 6 5 4 3 2 1
Human Relations Incident (HRI)Classroom ObservationInterviewSelf-Assessment
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Using Perceptual Rubrics
I would like you to think of a significant past event, which involved yourself in a teaching role with one or more other persons. That is, from a human relations standpoint, this event had special meaning for you. In writing about this event, please use the following format:
FIRST: Describe the situation as it occurred at the time.
SECOND: What did you do in the particular situation?
THIRD: How did you feel about the situation at the time you were experiencing it?
FOURTH: How do you feel about the situation now? Would you wish to change any part of it?
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Human Relations Incident (HRI)
Begin the interview with usual questionsTreat answers as self-reported informationGet beyond rehearsed remarks and engage in
conversation on topics that interest themUse reflective listeningAllow candidates to ask questionsThere are no absolute right or wrong answers
The Dispositions Interview
Describe your “perfect day?”
What kind of problems do people bring you?
Dispositions About Self
How would your colleagues describe you?
Tell about a situation in which you helped a person or taught a significant lesson.
Dispositions Toward Others
If your life works out the best you can imagine, what will you be doing in 5 years?
How do you maintain a balance in your life between work and play?
Dispositions Regarding Frame of Reference
After today, you will be able to answer:
• What are dispositions?• Why are they important to me?
To students?• How do I measure dispositions
while interviewing?
Assessing Applicant Dispositions
Please visit Dr. Mark Wasicsko’s “Assessing Educator Dispositions: A Perceptual Psychological Approach” materials at http://coehs.nku.edu/educatordispositions/resources.php
Materials used for principal training from this site included:Assessing Dispositions - A Self-Instructional Tr
aining Manual Dispositions Training Post-Test (ver. 1.3)
Additional Resources
Collins. J. (2001). Good to great: Why some companies make the leap and others don’t. New York, NY: HarperCollins Publishers, Inc.
Combs, A.W., Soper, D.W., Gooding, C.T., Benton, J.A., Dickman, J.F., & Usher, R.H. (1969). Florida Studies in the Helping Professions. (University of Florida Social Sciences Monograph #37). Gainesville, FL: University of Florida Press.
Disposition. (n.d.). In Dictionary.com online. Retrieved from http://dictionary.reference.com/browse/disposition?s=t.
Snygg, D., & Combs, A. (1949). Individual Behavior. New York: Harper & Row Publishers.
Wasicsko, M. (n.d.). Assessing Educator Dispositions: A Perceptual Psychology Approach. Highland Heights, KY: Northern Kentucky University.
Wasicsko, M.M. (1977a). A research‑based teacher selection instrument. Columbus College. (Eric Document No. ED 193 193). Retrieved from http://coehs.nku.edu/content/dam/coehs/docs/dispositions/resources/Manual103.pdf.
Wasicsko, M. (1977b). The effect of training and perceptual orientation on the reliability of perceptual inferences for selecting effective teachers (Doctoral Dissertation). Available from Dissertations & Theses database. (UMI No. AAT 7729293)
References
ResourceNational Network for the Study of Educator Dispositions
http://coehs.nku.edu/educatordispositions/