1 / 32

Coaching Impact: A Partnership Approach for Achieving Student Success

Coaching Impact: A Partnership Approach for Achieving Student Success. Highlights. NSSED Professional Development Model: Workshops, Coaching and Networking Why Coaching? What is Coaching? The Partnership Model in Coaching: Key Principles Our NSSED Coaching Team

chaeli
Télécharger la présentation

Coaching Impact: A Partnership Approach for Achieving Student Success

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. Coaching Impact: A Partnership Approach for Achieving Student Success

  2. Highlights NSSED Professional Development Model: Workshops, Coaching and Networking Why Coaching? What is Coaching? The Partnership Model in Coaching: Key Principles Our NSSED Coaching Team Getting the most out of the workshop, coaching and networking experience Looking Ahead: 2012-2013 Learning Opportunities

  3. NSSED Model for Professional Development

  4. Why Professional Development and Coaching? Wenglinsky, 2000 Sanders and Rivers, 1998 Distributed teachers according to their students’ achievement level Results: Top 20% of teachers boosted scores of low-achieving students by 53% compared to low achieving teachers 14% 2nd graders who performed equally, showed significant performance gap 3 years later depending on teacher quality 83rd percentile versus 29th percentile Studied 15,000 math and science students to determine what factors influenced their success or lack of. Result: Teachers who participated in professional development had students who outperformed peers by 107% Teacher Quality= Student Success

  5. RATE OF TRANSFER INTO CLASSROOM PRACTICE following peer coaching and professional development

  6. Instructional Coaching Research(Knight and Cornett, 2008) With Coaching observers saw evidence of use of unit organizers during 90% of their visits Without Coaching observers saw evidence of use of unit organizers during 30% of their visits

  7. Cognitive Coaching: A Synthesis of the Research (Jenny Edwards, 2001) Outcomes of Coaching: • Increase in test scores • Growth in teacher efficacy • Increase in reflective and complex thinking among teachers • Increase in teacher satisfaction with career and position • Increase in professional climate at schools • Increase in teacher collaboration • Increase in professional assistance to teachers • Increase in personal benefits • Benefit to people in fields other than teaching

  8. What We Know Coaching Impacts… Teacher Attitudes Teaching Practices Teacher Efficacy Student Achievement

  9. What is Coaching? “Coaching is about unlocking potential in order to maximize potential. It’s about bringing out the best in people”. ~Jim Knight

  10. What is Coaching? A short video…..

  11. What do Coaches do?

  12. Empower

  13. Connect Research into Practice

  14. Provide Tools for Teaching

  15. Partnership Principles for Coaching

  16. Words to reflect on…. “ The principles you live by create the world you live in; if you change the principles you live by, you will change your world.” ~ Blaine Lee, The Power Principle “Partnership carries the intention to balance power between ourselves and those around us.” ~ Peter Block, Stewardship

  17. EQUALITY Coaches and Teachers are Equal Partners

  18. CHOICETeachers Should Have Choice Regarding What and How They Learn

  19. VOICE Professional Learning Should Empower and Respect the Voices of Teachers

  20. REFLECTIONIs an Integral Part of Professional Learning

  21. DIALOGUEProfessional Learning Should Enable Authentic Dialogue

  22. PRAXISTeachers Should Apply Their Learning to Their Real-Life Practice as They Are Learning

  23. RECIPROCITYEach learning interaction is an opportunity to learn

  24. Meet Our NSSED District Services Coaches Amy Cohen Jill Bose-Deakins Stephanie Bauer Janet Jancaus Jenny Knudson Maggie O’Hara Lindsay Kiraly (Schrand)

  25. Meet Our NSSED ELS Instructional Coaches Meagan Dunn Lynn Clarke Kim Grzymala Kristen Kinsey

  26. How to Get the Most Out of Your Workshop Experience • Check the NSSED Professional Development Calendar • Look for Monthly Postcards • Make sure you are registered and receive a registration email • Arrive on time • Be prepared • Give it your best attention • Take notes • Ask questions • Set up one goal for application • Seek out coaches and/or sign up for follow-up coaching opportunities • Be kind to yourself

  27. How to Get the Most Out of Your Coaching Experience • Set aside time to initially meet with your coach to discuss the area of need and to determine a goal • Give your coach a list of all support staff and team meeting times • Document next steps and who’s responsible • Set up times for coaches to observe when they are most likely to see a problem and when they most likely would not • Ask questions • Take a risk • Watch yourself on video • Seek out other professional learning opportunities • Be kind to yourself

  28. How to Get the Most Out of Your Networking Experience • Discuss successes and challenges related to topic • Ask questions • Share resources • Be open to others’ perspectives

  29. Networking Groups Social Workers Psychologists Special Education Teachers Autism I-Tech

  30. 2012-2013 Workshop Highlights Caroline Musselwhite- Literacy for Students with moderate to severe disabilities Direct Instruction Marilyn Montiero- Autism Assessment Kansas Strategies Sara Ward- Executive Functioning Social Thinking- A Social Curriculum for Students with High Functioning Autism

  31. 2012-2013 Workshop Highlights Caroline Musselwhite- Literacy for Students with moderate to severe disabilities Direct Instruction Marilyn Montiero- Autism Assessment Kansas Learning Strategies Sara Ward- Executive Functioning Social Thinking- A Social Curriculum for Students with High Functioning Autism Jim Knight Randy Sprick Technology

  32. For Questions or Comments…. Kim Brown Coordinator for Professional Development and Coaching kbrown@nssed.org 831.5100 x 2401 Mary Kober Professional Development/ Support Services Specialist mkober@nssed.org 831.5100 x2201

More Related