4.9 Classroom Observation as Professional Development
What does it consist of?
Classroom observation is a professional development strategy in which teachers deliberately observe other professionals teaching in order to analyse methodology, classroom management, interaction patterns and instructional decisions.
It is not about judging performance, but about learning through structured reflection.
Observation is a core component of teacher training programmes such as CELTA and DELTA, and is strongly supported by institutions such as the British Council and by reflective teaching models described by Jeremy Harmer.
Why is it valuable?
Observing other teachers allows professionals to:
expand their repertoire of techniques
notice alternative ways of explaining language
improve classroom management
reflect on their own teaching habits
become more aware of teacher talking time and student interaction
Seeing methodology applied in real classrooms often has a stronger impact than reading about it.
Professional growth happens when observation is followed by reflection and practical application.
Recommended professional resources
Reliable, research-informed platforms:
British Council (TeachingEnglish section)
Cambridge English (Teacher resources)
IATEFL (conference talks and professional talks)
ELT Journal (research-based articles)
Internal resources such as Teaching learning videos, you can find them in: Shared folder<TEACHER TRAINING<Teacher training
Teachers should prioritise recognised institutions over unverified social media content.
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