Friday, August 25, 2017

Unfreezing Old Practices

Are you working with a teacher who is frozen in old practices?  Being stationary is never sufficient when it comes to teacher learning.  “Teacher preparation” in universities is merely the beginning of a career-long journey in instructional improvement.  Once in the classroom, our “texts” expand beyond books and articles on a required reading list.  Our students’ responses become texts that we “read” every day, along with other professional resources.

When confronted with a teacher who is immobile in the cycle of continuous improvement, we can “turn up the heat” in ways that warm, rather than burn, those with whom we are working.  One way we can warm the teacher to new ideas is by using a strength or a positive observation as a point of departure.  For example, if we find one question the teacher posed that invoked thoughtful responses from her students, we can lift this question from the lesson and hold it up for examination.  Warming in the glow of this acknowledgement, we can sponsor reflection that focuses first on examining the effective question, then expands to other aspects of teaching.

Preparing for a coaching conversation with overconfident Katie this week, I am looking for the positive lever to use to open the conversation.  I know she is a lifelong learner, I’ll say, because I saw her at a conference this summer.  What were her take-aways? What is she working on? How can I help?  Because Katie never wants to appear vulnerable, starting by applauding her conference attendance should circumvent an icy reception.

These first steps may not initiate significant departures from past practices, but hopefully they will mobilize the learning process for these teachers, unfreezing some of their less-effective habitual practices.  I hope that my honest acknowledgments of their strengths will set in motion coaching cycles that have positive impacts on student learning.


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

High fives for teachers:


Podcast on infusing social and emotional learning in the curriculum:


A Teacher’s Month by Month Guide to Growth Mindset:


Using blended learning in the ELA classroom:



What is effective teaching?  Join the discussion:


That’s it for this week.  Happy Coaching!

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