"Teaching repertoire" refers to the range of materials, skills, and knowledge that a teacher uses to instruct students. It includes the various methods, techniques, and resources a teacher relies on to effectively educate their students.
As a result, the tests tend to leave the best teachers — those with wider teaching repertoires who are able to move students beyond the basics — at a disadvantage, while putting pressure on the entire school system to focus on low - level skills. (ascd.org)
Teachers often have a limited teaching repertoire, and students find many lessons uninteresting and easy to disengage from. (soundout.org)
And there is some evidence (Gaffney & Anderson, 1991) to suggest that the reflection teachers engage in during these training sessions shows up as changes in their classroom teaching repertoire; that is, they work differently with groups in their classrooms because they possess new knowledge about learning to read. (ciera.org)