Teacher education programs are charged with providing a standard of measurement for the attainment of effective teaching skills and with helping students develop skills for continued self-analysis and growth. Teacher education programs need to create a pedagogical process that allows preservice teachers to develop their observation skills in order to identify specific teaching behaviors, effective and otherwise. Through observation techniques, specific teaching behaviors can be quantified in a number of different categories and hierarchies, e.g., "approval/disapproval," "complete patterns of instruction," etc. Many of these teaching behaviors have been selected for inclusion on evaluation forms as a way to analyze the content and effectiveness of teaching and to provide a "reality check" for self-analysis of videotaped classroom teaching. The research literature on effective music teaching suggests a variety of teacher behaviors that correlate with perceived instructional effectiveness. Additionally, the literature suggests that preservice music teachers can be trained to identify those effective behaviors while observing others and themselves, and that they can demonstrate those behaviors on demand if they have had proper instruction and practice in this area.Research has shown that although music education experts can reliably evaluate the effectiveness of instruction, they do not always agree on the factors upon which they based their decisions (Colwell, 1995;Duke, 1999). "It happens that everyone somehow 'knows' what good teaching is yet [they] have difficulty correctly identifying its component parts" (Madsen, Standley, Byo, & Cassidy, 1992, p. 24). While preservice teachers are able to globally rate effectiveness on a Likert-type scale, they are unable to observe specific behaviors accurately without assistance. Without training in observation procedures, undergraduate preservice teachers focus on their instructional intentions rather than their instructional behaviors, and tend to place more importance on distracting mannerisms and issues regarding their appearance (Madsen et al., 1992). Further research (Colprit, 1997) indicates that when preservice teachers observe videos of their own instruction without guidance, they often attend to inconsequential behaviors and factors rather than those generally associated with instructional effectiveness.