Classroom Observation: When Teaching Turns Into a Test

When classroom observation stops feeling like support and starts feeling like a test, something in the system is wrong.

For those who’d rather listen.
I Wonder as I Wander • Darem Placer

A public school teacher recently died during a classroom observation. The details are still being reviewed. What remains clear is this: the moment was not just about teaching. It was heavy. It mattered. And it happened inside a system many teachers quietly fear.

On paper, classroom observation sounds harmless. It is supposed to help teachers grow. Support. Coaching. Improvement.

In real life, it often feels very different.

Before the observation, there is already pressure. Lesson plans must be perfect. Objectives must align. Activities must fit the time. Even teachers who have taught the same lesson for years suddenly feel unsure. Teaching becomes scripted. Natural rhythm disappears.

During the observation, someone sits at the back of the room with a checklist. Every move feels watched. Every word feels measured. The teacher becomes hyperaware of pacing, questioning, classroom control, and time. Even calm teachers feel their heartbeat speed up. It is no longer just teaching. It feels like performing.

After the observation comes the part that defines everything.

In a healthy system, feedback feels human. Strengths are acknowledged. Weak points are discussed with care. The goal is growth.

In a toxic system, feedback feels like judgment. Lists of faults. Little empathy. No context. The teacher feels reduced to a score.

This is where anxiety lives.

What many people do not see is what teachers carry into that room. Fatigue. Back-to-back classes. Paperwork. Family worries. Sometimes health issues no one knows about. Observation does not happen in a vacuum. It lands on a person who is already tired.

That is why saying “it is just an observation” misses the point.

Observation should feel like support, not surveillance. Coaching, not interrogation. Teaching already demands emotional labor. It should not require fear to prove competence.

If an observation makes a teacher feel unsafe, the problem is not the teacher. The problem is the system.

Teaching grows best where trust exists. Not where people feel they are waiting to fail.

What stays after that?
I Wonder as I Wander.

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Alone with a Piano includes I Wonder as I Wander.

⌨ ᴛʸᵖⁱⁿᵍ ᴏᵘᵗ ᵒᶠ ᵗʰᵉ ʙˡᵘᵉ ᵈᵃʳᵉᵐ ᵐᵘˢⁱᶜ ᵇˡᵒᵍ

The High Cost of Free School

Free tuition sounds like victory. But for many students, hidden costs and harsh realities still keep them out of school.

Why Some Students Don’t Enroll Even When Public School Is Free

“Free already, yet they still refuse.”

That’s what teachers, principals, and even parents often say. In public schools, tuition is free from Kindergarten to Grade 12. Sounds like a win, right? But still, millions are not enrolling.

Here’s why—it’s not as simple as refusing.

It’s Free… But Not Really

Tuition is free, yes. But students still need to cover transport fare, lunch, school supplies, uniforms, projects, and printouts. For low-income families, that cost is already overwhelming.

They Have to Work

Many high school students choose work over class—farming, construction, stores, or anything that brings immediate cash. Survival comes first. Education can wait, or sometimes… never happen.

They Feel Left Behind

The pandemic disrupted everything. Without gadgets, internet, or help with modules, many fell behind. Now they think, “Should I return? What if I am the weakest one there?” That fear alone keeps them away.

School Is Too Far

Some students live hours away on foot, with no jeepney, no bike, no ride. If it rains or the heat becomes unbearable, they skip school. Eventually, they drop out completely.

They’re Not Learning Anyway

Some schools lack resources—no books, no laboratories, no real support. Teachers give their best, but it is still not enough. Students then ask, “Why attend if I’m not truly learning?”

It’s Too Hot

Classrooms often reach 40°C. No fans, no proper ventilation. Just sweat and stress. Some faint, others stop going altogether. This isn’t laziness—it’s exhaustion from extreme heat.

They Gave Up During the Pandemic

Many became disconnected and never returned. For them, school now feels optional. Worse, they believe it is already too late to go back.

So… What Now?

If we want students to return, free tuition alone is not enough.

We need:
• Free transport, food, and school supplies
• Catch-up classes for those who fell behind
• Climate-ready classrooms with proper ventilation and design
• More guidance counselors and student support teams
• Real opportunities for learners who must also work

At the heart of it:
Make school free, yes. But also—make school possible, livable, and truly for everyone.

And for those who can go to school: be grateful. Millions long to study but never get the chance. If you have a seat, even just enough for fare and snacks—don’t waste it.

Use what you have. Make it count. That is enough.

ᴛʸᵖⁱⁿᵍ ᴏᵘᵗ ᵒᶠ ᵗʰᵉ ʙˡᵘᵉ ᵈᵃʳᵉᵐ ᵐᵘˢⁱᶜ ᵇˡᵒᵍ