In many professions, it’s part of the training to plan, not just for success, but also for breakdowns. Pilots learn emergency procedures. Athletes visualize how they’ll respond under pressure. Military personnel have a wartime plan. They don’t wait for things to go wrong to decide what they’ll do. Visualizing in advance is the best preparation, and teachers need that preparation, too. But too often, our planning conversations stay focused on the best-case scenario:
*What questions will you ask?
*How will the task be structured?
What will you do when it doesn’t go as planned?
I’m not actually suggesting that the classroom will be a warzone, of course, but you understand the metaphor! When things unravel quickly, teachers benefit from having thought things through in advance. A wartime plan means having an intentional response to predictable challenges—a way of thinking ahead about how to navigate those inevitable moments. Rather than being caught off guard, teachers can respond with confidence.
Teachers need to ask themselves, in advance, “What will I do when things get hard?” They begin building the habit of asking this question when you regularly ask, ““What will you do when things get hard?” Then, we move the practice from abstract planning to mental rehearsal by asking for visualization that brings those thoughts to life. Asking a teacher what they might do is a good starting point, but the mental imagery of visualizing a hoped-for outcome prepares the teacher’s mind for the challenge.
Without a plan for these messy moments, even experienced teachers hesitate. When there’s not a clear next step, it’s easy to default to ineffective habits or to lose valuable instructional time while deciding what to do.
In your next planning conversation, consider creating space for this kind of thinking. After discussing the flow of the lesson, you might ask:
“In this lesson, when might things get messy?” Then invite the teacher to visualize that moment and talk it through in detail. Ask follow-up questions that help them see themselves in action. Over time, these pauses build a habit of proactive thinking that teachers carry into their independent planning.
Just like in the classroom, the goal of instructional coaching isn’t to eliminate difficulty. It’s to be ready for it. As instructional coaches, we encounter our own challenging moments. There are conversations that feel tense and sessions that drift away from their purpose. In these situations, we are also susceptible to hesitation and uncertainty and can benefit from a wartime plan.
Did you know My Coaches Couch is also a podcast? (with different content) Find it in your favorite podcast app or at MyCoachesCouch.podbean.com.
Want
more coaching tips? Check out my book, Differentiated Mentoring &
Coaching in Education: From Preservice Teacher to Expert Practitioner,
available from Teachers
College Press! I’m so excited to share
it with you! You can use the code: FNDS26 for
15% off. Click here and I’ll email you the free Book Group Study Guide that
includes questions, prompts, and activities you can use as you share the book
with colleagues. I hope you’ll love this
book as much as I loved making it for you!
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This week, you might want to take a look at:https://choiceliteracy.com/article/pausing-for-renewal-throughout-the-day/
https://www.edutopia.org/article/6-cool-visual-thinking-activities-that-strengthen-student-writing
3 ways to help students manage emotions:
https://blog.heinemann.com/3-coping-skills-activities-to-help-kids-manage-emotions
Ideas for coaxing poems (April is National Poetry Month – coming right up!):
http://www.poemfarm.amylv.com/search/label/Coaxing%20Poems
Book guide for the picture book, Big:
https://choiceliteracy.com/course/big-book-guide/








