So you’ve decided you want to improve your school and boost your students’ academic achievement through teacher coaching. That’s great, and implementing instructional coaching is certainly the right way to do that!
Now comes the question: how will you successfully implement teacher coaching?
Make your vision a reality by breaking down your preparation into concrete steps. In today’s blog, we’ll outline four!
Set yourself up for success by creating a school culture that supports the pedagogical shift you plan to implement.
In the past, teachers have been afforded the respect and autonomy they deserve to build the best learning environments on their own. Then, toward the end of the year, an administrator may come in to give feedback as part of the evaluation process tied to performance management.
Unfortunately, this results in two serious negative outcomes, both of which impact student learning:
You can turn things around and pave the way for successful teacher coaching by initiating a school-wide cultural shift to a growth mindset for both students AND adults.
Educators who operate within this mentality understand that they have room to expand beyond their innate abilities through continual practice and study.
When your school culture operates with a growth mindset, teachers understand that coaching is not an evaluation but rather an integral component of a continual growth process.
Teachers and coaches will mutually understand that instructional coaching will happen on a regular basis for the purpose of improving teacher practice.
Two simple, concrete techniques can help facilitate your school’s transition to a growth mindset.
Yes, yellow sticky notes! You can make a big impact with a sticky note:
For best results, structure your feedback around the student. Use evidence to highlight how the teacher’s strengths positively affect student achievement. You can use this tactic to acclimate teachers to receiving feedback.
Regularly provide teachers with a glow (something they’ve done well) and a grow (an area in which they can improve). By simultaneously providing praise and suggestions for improvement, you’ll reframe feedback as part of a larger process of holistic, continuous learning.
These simple approaches will yield results if they are executed properly. Do that by being specific and consistent:
Over the years, we’ve seen hundreds of rubrics and coaching protocols. And while we’d love to debate the merits of every turn of phrase or choice of focus areas, we believe that such choices are best determined by school and district leaders based on the unique needs of their student and teacher populations.
Want to use something from Charlotte Danielson? Great! Want to learn from Paul Bambrick and the folks at Relay Graduate School of Education? Awesome! And if you prefer resources from Kim Marshall, Jim Knight, or John Saphier? That works, too!
Any and all of these approaches can work, given a commitment to growth and feedback.
Above all, the most important thing to implement teacher coaching is that you choose a style and stick with it — that is, choose a coaching framework and language of excellence that everyone speaks fluently.
The brilliance of Doug Lemov’s seminal work, Teach Like a Champion, is that he gave names to everyday moves that highly effective teachers make.
With this, an instructional leader could say something like “Great job with positive framing today. Tomorrow, let’s try unbundling concepts to improve ratio.” Because both teacher and coach are speaking the same coaching “language,” they both know precisely what this means and how it will impact student learning.
In the same way, highly effective schools and districts consistently refer to a framework of excellence and a set of moves or actions that will continually increase instructional proficiency.
First, consider your criteria. What makes a qualified coach?
According to Shane Safir, a writer, teacher coach, and facilitator who has worked in public education for over 20 years, “High-quality coaching lies somewhere at the crossroads of good teaching and educational therapy.”
Outline a job description that identifies specific skills, knowledge, and traits that a qualified coach will have. Effective coaches will be skilled at relationship building and establishing trust. They will also have extensive, in-depth knowledge of resources for teachers.
To ensure your coaches remain effective, plan for their professional development as well. Consider what training topics will be essential for your coaches, and make sure those topics will facilitate growth in the areas of skills and knowledge prioritized in your job description.
In planning out training for coaches, lock in follow-through by making a calendar, selecting facilitators for your coach trainings, and deciding how you will evaluate and measure the effectiveness of these training sessions.
To ensure your coaching program provides high-leverage professional development tailored to your teachers’ individual needs, you’ll need systems to track and measure progress.
To make your teacher coaching program as effective as possible, you’ll need tools to collect and measure both qualitative and quantitative data side by side in order to identify trends and build a robust picture of teacher growth. Choose systems that make this information easy to analyze, share, and use in decision-making.
When looking for the right programs, select for dynamic data analytics that can be constantly refined to support the increasing complexity of each school’s reporting needs throughout the year.
SchoolMint Grow offers solutions to all of the above questions and problems. Grow facilitates a variety of coaching styles and is highly customizable to your school or district.
To see our highly effective approach to coaching and observation, request a demo today!
You can also get a high-level look at the SchoolMint Grow platform in this video: