1 / 25

The Zen of Coaching: The Role of Achievement Coaches

The Zen of Coaching: The Role of Achievement Coaches. Central New Mexico Community College (CNM) Albuquerque, NM Barbara Burrows, Health, Wellness & Public Safety Patricia Gamboa, Math, Science & Engineering Kim Jeffries, Business & Information Technology

questa
Télécharger la présentation

The Zen of Coaching: The Role of Achievement Coaches

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. The Zen of Coaching: The Role of Achievement Coaches Central New Mexico Community College (CNM) Albuquerque, NM Barbara Burrows, Health, Wellness & Public Safety Patricia Gamboa, Math, Science & Engineering Kim Jeffries, Business & Information Technology On Course National Conference April 8-10, 2010

  2. History of Achievement Coaches at CNM • In 1996, first position was funded through Carl D. Perkins grant for the School of Applied Technologies • In 1997, each school funded one Achievement Coach through a TVI Works grant • In 2000, Achievement Coaches hired in BIT, SAGE, HWPS and AT

  3. Who are the Achievement Coaches at CNM? Achievement Coaches are a diverse group of professionals who bring a talent bank of knowledge, skills and abilities to support student success, retention and systems improvement efforts at CNM.

  4. Academic & Life Coaching • Study Skills • Test Taking • Balancing school, family & work • Success Plans • Graduation Planning • Career Coaching • Goal Setting • Stress Management • Time Management • Classroom Presentations and Workshops

  5. Information & Referral Campus & Community • Tutoring Services • Academic Advisement • Counseling Services • Faculty • Financial Aid • Health Services • Special Services • Other Achievement Coaches • Career Resource Center • Job Connection Center • Childcare • Domestic Violence Resources • Emergency Food & Clothing • Housing/Shelter/Rental Assistance • Human Services (Food Stamps) • Legal Assistance • Transportation

  6. Popcorn: Riding A Bike • Consultant • Therapist • Academic Advisor • Teacher • Coach

  7. Coaches motto. . . Coachees are creative, resourceful and whole Powerful Question: If I only noticed the creative, brilliant parts of my coachee, what would I have to let go of?

  8. COACH Model C= Competencies

  9. Here And Now

  10. Powerful Questions • Reflect active listening and understanding of the coachee’s perspective • Evoke discovery, insight, commitment, or action • Open-ended questions create greater clarity, possibility, or new learning • Move the coachee toward what he/she desires, not justify or look backward

  11. Using Powerful Questions • Get dumb and curious instead of taking the role of expert • It’s not important what you know, it’s what the coachee knows • You’re not responsible for their results

  12. Pair Sharing: Powerful Questions • Each person at the table picks up a powerful question • Partner with the person to your left • Take turns asking your partner your powerful question • Each person will have 2 minutes to respond • The person asking the question will only listen

  13. Coaching Video: Ruben • Designate someone at your table to be Ruben • Follow the Competencies section of the COACH Model • Spend 5 minutes selecting and asking Ruben 3 powerful questions • Use the coaching questions handout as a guide • Complete the Here And Now Section of the Strategizing For Success handout

  14. Then And There Only when you know where you want to go can you find a route to get there. Dr. Howard Adams

  15. COACH Model O = Outcome

  16. Change 3 Things • Partner with the person to your right • Designate a person A and a person B • Person A is the Observer • Person B is making the changes • Stand up back to back • Person B makes 3 changes • Face your partner • Person A: What 3 changes did you observe? • Repeat

  17. Coaching Video: Kristi • Use the Outcome section of the COACH Model and the powerful questions examples • Spend 5 minutes coaching Ruben in identifying his vision for his future • Record the goals and outcomes on the There And Then section of the Strategizing For Success handout

  18. COACH Model A = Action

  19. “Let not the fruit of action be your motive to action. Your business is with action alone, not with the fruit of the action.” Bhagavad-Gita

  20. The Gap • Use the Action section of the COACH Model • Spend 5 minutes coaching Ruben using the powerful question examples to form action steps toward reaching his goals • Complete The Gap section of the Strategizing For Success handout

  21. COACH Model CH = Checking

  22. Coaching Video: Aimee • Ask Ruben if all the goals were met, and his vision for his future were realized, what one word would he use to describe how he feels • Take Ruben’s word and write it on your pennant after the Equal sign • What two things would have to happen for the Outcome in the Success Formula? • Put those two words in the first two blanks on your pennant

  23. Student Success Formulas • Understanding the Material + Applying It to the Test = Accomplishment • Efficiency + Self Care = Successful • Good Prioritization + Acceptance = Reaching My Potential • Applying Knowledge + Acceptance = Competence • Study + Time = Learning & Understanding

  24. Success Plan

  25. Contact Us • Barbara BurrowsSchool of Health, Wellness & Public Safetybarbarab@cnm.edu • Patricia GamboaSchool of Math, Science & Engineeringpgamboa@cnm.edu • Kim JeffriesSchool of Business & Information Technologyfjeffries@cnm.edu

More Related