Friday, February 26, 2021

Questions for Digging Deeper

Coaches use questions as tools to support planning, problem-solving, and reflection. 
Broad questions like, “What did you notice during the lesson?” can be followed up with questions that dig deeper, like, “Why do you think that is?” to encourage closer examination. Deep questions encourage the teacher to sift through ideas and information. Consider how questions like the following might encourage critical thinking and support insight:
 
·       What would need to change in order for that to happen?
·       When have you done something like this before?
·       What does this remind you of?

Deep, probing questions can explore opinions, ask for predictions, investigate processes, reconsider conclusions, target capabilities, make connections, recognize patterns, force one to look ahead, surface new questions, uncover concerns, provide perspective, challenge assumptions, and look at long-term benefits. Pause and think of a question or two that corresponds to one of these roles.
 
Another opportunity for asking probing questions is to have a reflective conversation with a teacher about a lesson that you didn’t observe. You will want to ask authentic, targeted questions such as, “How did students respond when…” because you weren’t there and you want to know! The teacher will dig into her memory so that she can give you a full picture of the lesson. Following up with specific why and how questions will help the teacher examine and evaluate the learning. Deep, specific questions about a lesson you didn’t observe can build a teacher’s capacity for reflection.
 
Deep questions penetrate surface answers and take thinking to a more precise level. During a planning conversation, when a coach asks, “What might you hear students saying if they understand that concept?” she invites consideration of the measurement of learning targets. Her question takes what the teacher has just said (about her goals for students) and encourages the teacher to dig deeper (how are you going to know they’ve got it?). Similarly, in a reflective conference after a lesson, a coach might follow up on a teacher’s comment, “They just don’t get it!” with the probing question of, “What are some examples of students’ confusion?” In these examples, questions lead to concrete examples of what could be and what has been that clarify the teacher’s understanding. Questions that ask for concreteness or request clarification can be used whether or not you’ve observed the lesson. Our precise questions invite precise responses and express our genuine curiosity about the complexity of teaching.
 
This week, you might want to take a look at:
 
Golden rules for engaging students:
 
https://www.teachthought.com/pedagogy/6-golden-rules-for-engaging-students/
 
 
Prompts for when young readers get stuck:

http://www.ascd.org/publications/educational-leadership/nov20/vol78/num03/When-Young-Readers-Get-Stuck.aspx


How teachers can maintain the brain energy for their important work:

 
http://www.ascd.org/ascd-express/vol16/num03/bandwidth-is-the-key-to-energy-effectiveness-and-engagement.aspx
 
 
Video of a hybrid math class, along with Q & A for teachers:
 
https://www.teachingchannel.com/blog/hybrid-instruction
 
 
How to showcase the impact of your coaching:
 
https://blog.teachboost.com/showcasing-the-impact-of-instructional-coaching
 
That’s it for this week.  Happy Coaching!
 
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Saturday, February 20, 2021

Asking the Miracle Question


Solution-focused coaching encourages teachers to center their thinking on fixes and possible futures rather than dwelling on problems or past mistakes. I use a list of questions that take this forward-thinking approach:

·       What would need to change in order for that to happen?  For example,

o   What would have to change for students to work more for themselves and less for you?

o   What would have to change so that students talked more to each other, and less to you, during whole-class discussions?

·       How else might you do?  For example,

o   How else might you vary the introduction to the lesson to keep students excited about their practice?

o   How else might you help students visualize that concept?

·       What are some other ways that might be done? For example,

o   What are some different ways you might check for understanding?

o   What are some other ways you might support him?

·       What are some of the things you might try?

·       What might you have to do to get your students there?

·       What might the benefits be?

·       What is missing?

Questions like these have worked well for coaching teachers forward.  But this week I learned about a question that I can’t wait to try. It’s called “the Miracle Question,” and I think I know why!  

The miracle question or “problem is gone” question, asks the teacher to envision and describe in detail how the future will be different when the problem is gone!  The conversation goes something like this: “Imagine that, in the middle of the night, a miracle happens and the problem we were talking about is solved!  But, because it got solved while you were sleeping, you have no idea that the problem no longer exists.  What would you notice? What are the small changes that would give you hints about the miracle? 
 
As teachers give a moment-by-moment account of what the day would be like with this miracle in place, they begin to uncover steps they might take to make it so!  Envisioning that this hoped-for future has already arrived can help the details of a plan fall into place.  I’ve done something like this using the Back-to-the-Future protocol for long-range planning with groups, and it was worked remarkably to help us think about what we want our organization to be like in five or ten years. It’s even fun to start talking in the present tense, pretending this hoped-for future is already in place.  Based on my success with the Back-to-the-Future protocol with groups, I’m excited about using the Miracle Question for shorter-term individual coaching conversations. In fact, I’ve been asking myself the Miracle Question: What will it be like if I use the Miracle Question in my coaching conversations next week?

This week, you might want to take a look at:
 
Risks of using the “at-risk” label:
 
https://theconversation.com/why-its-wrong-to-label-students-at-risk-109621
 
 
Ideas for teaching high-frequency words:
 
https://twowritingteachers.org/2019/11/06/snap-word-train/
 
Fixing broken classroom routines:
 
http://www.ascd.org/ascd-express/vol13/1321-handley.aspx
 
 
Why coaches should model learning:
 
https://barkleypd.com/blog/leaders-modeling-professional-learning/
 
 
Ed Tech and virtual reality:
 
https://www.verizon.com/about/news/ed-tech-trends
 
 
That’s it for this week.  Happy Coaching!
 
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Tuesday, February 16, 2021

Coaching Out of Deficit Mindsets


Trigger words are words that make someone pay attention; they compel a person to act. They are a tool for advertisers, and they can be an invitation for coaches.  

A trigger word that gets my attention and compels me to act is “lazy.” When I hear this word used to describe students, I first have to swallow a bit of anger that tends to rise up. I hate to hear that label applied. Children come into the world full of curiosity and energy. Sometimes schools or situations reduce that drive. But, if that’s happened, it is teachers’ job to reignite that fire. Labelling students as lazy is not a step in that direction.

The “lazy” label came up last week as I was working with a group of fourth-grade teachers. The emotions triggered by that word put my mind in such a fog that I don’t have a clear memory of how I responded. But (unfortunately), this was not the first time I have worked to coach teachers out of this negative mindset.

A couple of years ago, as a group of eighth-grade math teachers sat around the planning table, I asked, “What do you know about these eighth graders as mathematicians?”

“They’re lazy,” a teacher replied.

I probed and prompted until the teacher changed her stance: “"You know, sometimes they're hesitant because they don't have the skills. They don't remember."  This more-productive comment led to a long discussion about working memory and opportunities for practice and partner work that could strengthen students’ skills.

I later got an email from the district’s instructional leader, who had been in the room during the conversation. “I really don’t like the (teachers’) first response to be that (the students) are lazy,” she said, and continued: “Unfortunately, I think you heard a version of that in each building. You did a great job helping teachers see the students’ responses in a different light.”

Thankfully, I had been able to turn that situation around a bit. But my foggy-brained response this week got me thinking that I needed to have a well-prepared approach for coaching teachers out of negative mindsets. That’s why I was thrilled when I learned about a 4-step process for speaking up against bias. It works for that important topic, and I could see that I had unknowingly used this approach in previous conversations with teachers. Naming and knowing the four steps will help me support teachers better when they express negative mindsets about students.  Here are the four steps:

1)    Interrupt. In the conversation with eighth-grade math teachers, this meant stopping the planning conversation to address the mindset. Interrupting means taking time out to address a concerning comment before moving on.  It could sound like, “Just a second, could we back up and talk about something I heard?” 

2)    Question.  The goal here is to understand why the teacher made the comment. It might sound like, “I wondered why you called students ‘lazy’? What makes you say so?” By asking a question, you are giving the teacher a chance to explain and maybe even recognize on their own the negative mindset they are speaking from.

3)    Educate. This would be the time to explain how the term perpetuates unhelpful thinking. Related to “laziness,” I could share what Carol Dweck, who has extensively studied the growth mindset, said: “Everyone is born with an intense drive to learn…They never decide it’s too hard or not worth the effort…They walk, they fall, they get up. They just barge forward. What could put an end to this exuberant learning? The fixed mindset.” Negative mindsets, in teachers and in the students themselves, get in the way of learning.

4)    Echo. The final stepped in this process is to amplify other voices that address the issue. According to Learning for Justice, this especially means amplifying voices of those who are being negatively described. In the “lazy” example, this might mean asking students about what motivates them, or even asking how they would feel if a teacher called them, “lazy,” and then reporting these findings back to the teacher community.  I haven’t tried this step, but it sounds promising!

Now that I’m prepared with a step-by-step process to address negative mindsets, I think I’ll have a cooler head the next time I hear a trigger word that makes me want to stop a teacher in her tracks. And actually, that’s exactly what I should do! These steps can coach teachers out of judgment frameworks and into more productive frameworks for teaching and learning.

This week, you might want to take a look at:
 
What education leaders can do to reduce teachers’ stress:
 
http://www.ascd.org/ascd-express/vol15/num13/educator-stress-is-a-leadership-challenge-heres-what-leaders-can-do-about-it.aspx
 
Designing student-centered learning from an empathy-based approach:
 
https://katielmartin.com/2021/01/24/are-we-designing-for-learning-or-for-school/
 
 
Teaching activities with Jamboard:
 
https://classtechtips.com/2020/12/30/jamboard-activities/
 
 
Real books in kids’ hands during face-to-face and remote learning:
 
https://teachersbooksreaders.com/2020/11/04/choice-still-matters/
 
 
Why coaches should model learning:
 
https://barkleypd.com/blog/leaders-modeling-professional-learning/
 

That’s it for this week.  Happy Coaching!

Was this helpful?  Please share!
Want to know about new posts? Click “Follow” (bottom right)
Follow on Facebook at: facebook.com/mycoachescouch or Twitter @vscollet for more coaching and teaching tips!  You can also find me at VickiCollet.com

 

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