Friday, May 12, 2017

Cut Your Losses

This week, I did one of the most difficult things I’ve ever had to do as a coach.  I admitted failure. 

Admitting to failure is not in my blood.  I’m guessing it’s not in yours, either.  It is  not the stuff coaches are made of.  But after modeling, nudging, recommending, suggesting, praising, encouraging, and giving the situation much thought and consideration, I had to admit it was time to cut my losses.

“Cutting your losses” is only one of the idioms we use to describe this uncomfortable situation.  I was “cashing in my chips,” “throwing in the towel,” or, to take a more positive turn, “knowing when to fold ‘em.”   Perhaps the fact that there are so many idioms to describe this situation speaks to its difficulty. I had put in a lot of effort, but it was time to extricate myself from a situation where there seemed to be little hope for improvement. 

Nicole (name has been changed to protect the innocent!) is a novice teacher with whom I’ve been working all year.  ALL YEAR!  When growth and change weren’t happening in October and November, I scratched my head and tried something different.  When it still wasn’t working in December and January, I focused on one—little—thing—at—a—time.  Even building a case for the need to change was difficult, and in the end, that is probably where the biggest problem lay.  When someone doesn’t want to change, a coach can’t make it happen.  I knew that and had worked in ways both subtle and less so to build the desire.  But whenever there was a spark of desire for change, it seemed to extinguish quickly.

So, faced with the decision of continuing this fruitless effort or putting my energies elsewhere, I finally decided it was time to do the latter.

I couldn’t make this decision sooner because I was holding out hope.  And I didn’t want to walk away with little to show for my efforts.  Putting in a lot and ending up with nothing is just too awful for most of us to consider.  But I realized that continuing to pour so much energy into this teacher would almost certainly have the same results I’d seen in the past.  I realized it would likely mean more fruitless time and effort, more anguish on my part with little on hers. I realized I was missing other opportunities.  I was spending far too much time worrying about what I’d lose by moving on and not enough time considering what I could gain if I shifted my time and energy to a different focus. 

The next time you feel you are waging a losing battle, refocus on opportunities for effective change and growth that might be yours if you shift your attention.  I am all about growth mindset, but with so many demands for a coach’s time and talents, we have to consider where our time is best used and think about what we have to gain rather than what we have to lose. 

Although I will support Nicole whenever she asks, and I won’t pass up opportunities that may naturally present themselves, I’m no longer going to let this situation suck my time and energy.  The time to refocus on Nicole may come, but right now, letting it go is giving me some space to breathe, recharge, and recenter.  I already feel my energy increasing!  Difficult as it was, once I made the effort to refocus on impact, it became clear that cutting my losses was the right decision.  A focus on hopes and aspirations makes us more comfortable with mistakes and more comfortable with the losses we may endure along the way.


This week, you might want to take a look at:

Ideas for coaching resistant teachers (I haven’t given up!):



End-of-year reading celebrations and the “Not Newberry” impact:



Video with ideas for teaching fact and opinion:



This long article is worth the read—Effective interventions for kids who lack cognitive and emotional readiness to learn:



Spotlight on teaching literacy:


That’s it for this week.  Happy Coaching!

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