Two teachers co-plan and co-teach a lesson, then meet afterwards to reflect on what went well and what could improve.
Collaboration
Teachers attend a meeting because it is required, but they spend most of the time filling out forms.
Artificial Collegiality
A teacher always closes the classroom door, prepares lessons independently, and avoids discussing teaching methods with others.
Individualism
Teachers from different subjects rarely interact, but math teachers work closely only with other math teachers.
Balkanization
Teachers are required by the principal to attend weekly meetings and complete standardized reports, but they feel the meetings are mostly formal and not very useful
Artificial Collegiality
A teacher shares worksheets with colleagues but does not engage in deeper discussions about teaching strategies.
Individualism
Two teachers design a project together, observe each other’s lessons, and share feedback to improve student learning.
Collaboration
Teachers from the English department work closely together but rarely interact with science or math teachers
Balkanization
Teachers in different grades argue about priorities and rarely collaborate across levels.
Balkanization
A group of teachers voluntarily form a “book club” to discuss new teaching methods and reflect on practice.
Collaboration
The school principal introduces mandatory lesson plan templates that all teachers must use, even if they don’t like them.
Artificial Collegiality
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