Instructional coaching is about helping teachers in K-12 education get better faster. How do you do that?
You, a principal or instructional leader, provide teachers with frequent coaching touch points throughout a school year.
You can do this in a variety of ways:
The key is that you are helping the teacher grow in their craft through continuous feedback. This ultimately improves classroom outcomes and makes teachers feel supported, positively challenged, and rewarded for their growth.
Unlike teacher evaluation, with instructional coaching, you don’t have to wait until the end of the school year to give your teachers feedback.
By having multiple coaching touch points throughout the school year, you can help teachers improve their practice when it matters most: when they’re in front of students.
Coaching is a method of providing feedback to teachers on a regular basis to help them grow professionally and improve classroom outcomes.
While evaluation has its place, many schools and districts have shifted to instructional coaching as a guided approach to providing feedback to teachers in a more human-centered and helpful way.
Coaching is a better way to support teachers, a better way to provide job-embedded professional development, and an all-around better way to get teachers better faster. Because when teachers are growing, so too is your school.
Good instructional coaching is composed of three touch points:
Strong instructional leaders use these touch points to build trust, accountability, and momentum across their school. Instructional coaching is about meeting teachers where they’re at, then working together to get them where they need to be.
From a school-wide perspective, coaching represents the gateway to the growth of your school.
Happy, supported teachers provide the energy that fuels that growth because they are, with your guidance, improving their practice every week.
But if your teachers are unhappy, either because they feel disconnected from their leadership or they aren’t being supported to grow professionally, the ability of your school to grow becomes limited.
When you build a culture of coaching in your school, you provide growth opportunities for all teachers, no matter where they are in their careers. Classroom observations are no longer only for end-of-year performance appraisals.
Coaching meetings are no longer scary, corrective interactions for new teachers. Action steps are no longer reserved for those on improvement plans.
Each classroom observation, coaching meeting, and action step now presents an instructional leader with the opportunity to:
Ultimately, this builds a stronger, more positive school community where everyone looks forward to showing up.