Observing Instructional Practice: Can we Consistently Measure Teaching Quality Constructs?
Listed in
This article is not in any list yet, why not save it to one of your lists.Abstract
Classroom observation systems can be an important tool for understanding teaching quality. The broad range of possible instructional practices raises questions about whether rubrics invariantly measure the intended teaching quality constructs equally well across each lesson. This paper argues for exploring measurement invariance across lessons in observation systems. Adopting an understanding of measurement invariance that emphasizes alignment between a conceptualized construct and the measurement of that construct, we conceptualize teaching quality using the Protocol for Language Arts Teaching Observation (PLATO). PLATO’s focus on individual items is misaligned to traditional measurement invariance approaches so we emphasize the importance of detailed, qualitative considerations of how rubric operationalizations of a construct may or may not capture the intended teaching quality construct equally well across lessons with different characteristics. We discuss the affordances and limitations of this way of considering measurement invariance and argue for the importance of ensuring measurement invariance across lessons.