220 likes | 375 Vues
Literacy Coaching at NRC 07 & Next Steps for the Study Group by Nancy Shanklin & Kristin Rainville. What have we heard? What does it make us think about?. Does coaching make a difference? (our group’s sense of important Qs to ask).
E N D
Literacy Coaching at NRC 07 & Next Steps for the Study Groupby Nancy Shanklin & Kristin Rainville What have we heard? What does it make us think about?
Does coaching make a difference?(our group’s sense of important Qs to ask) • What is changing practice? T knowledge, Coach knowledge, S learning • Replicate studies – Esp. Northern Ill study. Analyzes logs in relation to student data. • PD plus coaching; just coaching?; just PD no progress • Auckland – see coaching as PD. National. Principals are different in New Zealand • Linda Dorn’s work and data • Partner up • Change in T knowledge • Consistent training model – linked to ideas in Reading Recovery
Does coaching make a difference?(our group’s sense of important Qs to ask) • Teacher identity; voices of teachers • Administrators and coaches working together that relationship • S achievement • Sustainability • Link to policymakers • Preparation of coaches – high impact schools; multi dilemma cases. • Logs – how to make good, have reflection; logs not prescriptive • Role vs. structure—look at the structures that schools constrain or not ($, time)
Raphael, Taylor, & Au(HRR Preconvention) • Work of literacy coaches is part of the work on school reform around literacy.
Mraz, Kissel, Kavel, Wood, Watson, & Algozzine (North Carolina Group) • Used Likert scale survey and interviewed • Interested in differences of perceptions of coaches’ role from teachers, principals, and coaches • Principals: Management & Program Implementation • Ts : Raised Qs about evaluative role of coaches • Ts and principals differ as to whether coaches ought to work with students
Gross Case Study of PA High School • People not hired & in place at the start of the project • Lack of clarity about the coach role • Many people left • Negative examples can be helpful
Rainville • Coaching is situated: Power, positioning & identity (vs just “context”) • There are many ways to work with resistance (read & response) – set up alternate structures • Remember all 3 of these coaches had consistent, strong PD & STILL there are differences in how they were able to implement
Toll • 4 potential different coach roles • Plus there is a “fresh perspective” • This is defined as a partnership with shared power • Emphasis in her work is on the relationship between the coach and the teacher
Rodgers & Rodgers • Q: How do skilled coaches coach teachers? How do coaches analyze their coaching? • Case study: 20 cases collected over 5 years, each coach observed once over a two day period, field notes during this, interviews followed. • There is a need to understand the role of emotions in adult learning better. • Questions about moving from a coach’s demonstrating to a GRR model. Real value of demonstration is probably providing teachers with alternative cases to fuel analysis and reflection.
Rodgers & Rodgers (cont.) • Coaches did not have a predetermined plan for interacting. • Coaches tried to involve teachers in inquiry but it was difficult. • Conclusion: Suggests that the potential to shift expertise lies in the interactions between the coach and teacher
Some important observations • Role of literacy coach vs identity • “Model” of literacy coaching vs coaching as a process • Conclusion: Fluidity and complexity of coaching initiatives and coaching work
Reading First – Bean & Zigmond • Confidentiality is important • Changes in leadership really affect coaching support and evaluation • Even in schools not making progress, coaches are still doing the same role – Something else is causing no change to take place
Bean et al • Have data from 19 coaches and have analyzed 5 • Five approaches to coaching: resource, mentor, manager, helper, and responder • The content in which coaches work has a major impact on how they function - # of teachers served, # struggling readers in the school, support of principals, buy in of teachers
Elish-Piper & L’Allier • 12 LCs, 121 teachers, 3,029 Ss • Coaching logs and student test scores • Coaches spent 48% of their time working with Ts • Total gains on DIBELS were significant for K-3. • Number of coaching hours focused on conference was found to be statistically significant in relation to students’ total gain for K, 1, and 2. (Used HLM)
Sturtevant, Calo, Rutherford, Pratt-Fartro • What would be most rewarding about being an LC? Impacting Ss, Impacting Ts, Focus on Reading, Professional Challenge, Affecting Change • What would be most challenging? Resistant Ts, balancing the roles of a LC, finding the time to coach and teach, meeting the needs of so many people with ranging expectations
Literacy Collaborative Report from Yrs 1 & 2 of New Study, Fountas, Pinnell, Scharer, Bryk, Biancarosa, et al • Learn about all of the partners and projects by going to: • http://www.iisrd.org • http://irepp.stanford.edu/projects/pd.htm • See observational instruments that they have developed: http://www.iisrd.org/documents/DLLT_Rubric_2007-08_FINAL.pdf
Literacy Collaborative Report from Yrs 1 & 2 of New Study, Fountas, Pinnell, Scharer, Bryk, Biancarosa, et al • Bryk et al’s design for this study is really worth studying • Have found changes in teachers’ practices • Also, the more coaching, the more change in teaching • Also increases in student achievement using DIBELS • Will present more results at AERA, March 08
What will really move the field of literacy coaching forward? • Research on work with administrators • Paul Carson • Linda Carr • Kristin Rainville • Research on school climate & vision for literacy reform; social capital • Kristin Rainville • Linda Carr • Pam Chomsky-Higgins • Potential of skills in a school; how different does it make a coach’s role
What will really move the field of literacy coaching forward? • Roles of coaches • as static or fluid • What are shared understandings about the role of the coach? • Expectations in the role/quality of those in the coaching role; how has the role of the coach influenced the role of the reading specialist; how does this impact preparation? • Role of the coach in working with RTI
What will really move the field of literacy coaching forward? • Classroom observation instruments and attitude/beliefs instruments to assess changes in teacher’s beliefs & instruction from coaching • Nature of the PD--about adult learning a coach needs to know
What does the study group want to work on? • Coaches work with other special professionals – resource teachers, other offices, school psychologists; bilingual and special education teachers; RTI (instructional support team & coaches role in it) • MS/HS coaching – especially with content teachers Check Langer Partnership for Learning Look at other instructional coaching – especially math • Distribution of leadership when a coach is present (Hathaway & Risko) • Capacity beyond the coach; when the coach leaves • CHAT – Cultural, historical activity theory • Home grown efforts – small schools • Connect to student achievement – Susan L’Allier • How do you describe quality/effective coaching – Judy, Susan, Beth • What is the expertise? Working and doing ? Not all one on one How do you capture this (LeAnne); video,
Additional Observations • Publication of research & important work needs to happen more quickly • Where are the outlets for publication? • Mentoring and learning • Serve as critical friends for each other • Keep eyes out for places that can be outlets • Send out places where we are trolling • So what link to S achievement; T practice; T knowledge • Is important chance for school-based and university researchers to work together