You
were hired as an instructional coach because you have solid knowledge of
content and pedagogy, as well as a deep reservoir of classroom experience.
During a coaching conversation, an important questions to ask yourself is, which
parts of that repertoire do you share—and when?
Just
because we could offer suggestions doesn’t mean we should.
The discernment lies in knowing what to bring forward.
Honoring
Teacher Choice
Growth
sticks best when the arc of change is set by the teacher. An important part of
a coach’s job is to pay compassionate attention to the clues teachers give us
about their readiness and to honor their judgment and choices.
The
teacher sitting across from you is the most reliable source of information to
guide your recommendations. The questions she asks tell you what she’s thinking
about, what she’s wrestling with, and what she’s ready to try. When a colleague
poses a specific question, her question reveals her focus. It shows you where
her energy is.
Instead
of offering just one option in response to a teacher’s question, consider offer
a few alternatives for the teacher to consider. Offering choice develops
teachers’ power and efficacy. Being asked to decide rather than being told what
to do signals, “I believe in your professional judgment.” That matters.
There’s
also a motivational benefit. Research shows that offering choice increases
engagement and persistence. When a teacher chooses, she’s far more invested in
making that choice work. It becomes her goal—not yours.
A
Self-Selected Journey
I
saw this clearly in my work with Stephanie. I had observed her lesson on
crafting engaging beginnings in narrative writing. She used a PowerPoint to
introduce four techniques writers use to hook readers. During our debrief, we
started with celebrations. I asked what happened in the lesson that she was
especially pleased with.
Stephanie
felt good about student behavior. She had added all-respond opportunities and
varied her voice when she noticed attention slipping. She paired each writing
“hook” with a physical action to help students remember. The lesson met its
objective: students were introduced to the techniques.
And
yet—she was disappointed. Students weren’t enthusiastic. She felt like she had to
work hard to keep them with her.
Before
our meeting, I had jotted down a few reflections. Many of them pointed to
engagement:
·
Make
connections with students’ experiences and interests.
·
Limit
rote repetition; emphasize thinking.
·
Create
opportunities for inquiry and discussion.
Because
Stephanie had already named engagement as a concern, the door was open. We
talked through these ideas conversationally. I would float one out and ask,
“What do you think?” After some discussion, I asked her to choose a goal. What
would she like to work on next?
Stephanie
grabbed onto inquiry and discovery, but expressed hesitation. “It will be
hard,” she said. “I like to have more control.”
We talked a bit about how she might balance
her need for control with her students’ need for discovery. Inquiry didn’t have to mean
chaos or a sprawling research project. It could be bounded and managed so that she
still felt control. Stephanie was seeing how her hope for more enthusiasm and
her need for control could co-exist.
We also explored why inquiry felt uncomfortable. Had she experienced
discovery-based teaching herself? Did she have models? Not really. No wonder it
felt risky!
But
by the end of our conversation, Stephanie was energized. She wasn’t complying
with a coach’s recommendation—she was stepping into her own professional
curiosity.
Who
Decides?
Who
decides the next step in improving instruction?
Just
as Stephanie’s students needed opportunities for discovery, Stephanie needed
space to inquire into her own teaching. She identified the concern. She
selected the goal. We explored ideas together. Rather than positioning myself
as the expert, we considered instructional improvement together. I offered
options, not directives.
When
teachers’ voices lead the conversation, they see their strengths and name where
they need to grow. When I focus my recommendations on the next step that a
teacher has identified, we can come up with a tangible plan to achieve their
goal. As instructional coaches, we have expertise to share. The art is in
knowing when and how to offer it.
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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
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week, you might want to take a look at: