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| Professional
development
Boston schools make coaching a team sport by Maureen Kelleher |
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TEACHER TRAINING
Professional development takes center stage Test your professional development IQ Doing teacher training right Seen as a model, Manley plan falls short
Chicago audit triggers change Ward teachers get one prep day a week Home-grown solutions to common problems |
Coaching teachers is all the rage in professional development these days. In Boston, it has taken a new twistfrom personal training to team building. Coaches who once worked only one-on-one with teachers now are working with several at a time as well.
This year, 26 schools recognized for strong instructional practice are piloting collaborative coaching and learning, where a group of teachers meets regularly with a coach to learn, practice and refine mutually agreed-on instructional techniques. About a dozen more schools heard good things about the pilot and began collaborative coaching on their own this spring. The district expects all 130 schools to be using collaborative coaching by September 2003. You see an immediate impact on consistency of instruction, says Mary Russo, principal of Murphy Elementary. Its the most powerful form of coaching Ive seen. Collaborative coaching was not on the agenda when Boston launched its instruction-focused reform efforts in 1996. Instead, it grew out of those efforts, which included creating school-level instructional leadership teams, having teachers work in groups to analyze student work and requiring schools to choose one of several models for teaching reading. Boston had been making progress with its initial reforms: Test scores were up, and student work was improving. However, school faculties were not taking the initiative to plot their own continuous improvement, as school leaders had hoped. We thought we were still wasting a lot of money and time, says Ellen Guiney, executive director of the Boston Plan for Excellence, the citys public education fund and a critical friend of the school district. After four years, we saw [teachers using] strategies, but we didnt see school capacity building. We didnt see teachers owning the course of studies. We didnt see the reflective practitioner. And the question was, why? Gloria Woods, a former Boston principal now with the Boston Plan, had some ideas why. Woods had directed the citys reform efforts in half its schools. After a few years supervising literacy coaches, she realized that one-on-one coaching wasnt enough to transform entrenched school cultures and teacher habits. We had been in some schools for three or four years, and the coach had not visited one-third of the classrooms, she recalls. Teachers were not ready, or they were resistant. Coaches were seeing the same teachers for four years because other teachers wouldnt open their doors. Woods says that the districts push to get teachers working in groups to examine student work pried open some doors. (See CATALYST, December 1999.) It started moving teachers out of isolation, she says. That was really hard work, really painful work, but I think it paid off in terms of establishing the culture. That sort of set the stage. I cant imagine going in with collaborative coaching when you have teachers who havent been out of the classroom with their practice for 25 years. An outside evaluator found that group examination of student work was taking place in only about half of Bostons schools. Even so, the district moved into collaborative coaching largely to accelerate implementation of a new reading programReaders Workshop and Writers Workshop, developed by Lucy Calkins of Teachers College, Columbia University. In the past, schools chose from a menu of literacy models. How it looks Still at issue is the principals role. During professional development for Boston principals last fall, Calkins insisted that they participate in collaborative coaching sessions as chief learner. But the Boston Teachers Union fears getting principals involved blurs the line between feedback and performance review. Some will say this is collegial feedback, not evaluative, says union president Edward Doherty, but he doubts it works that way in practice, when you get the teacher, coach and principal together and the coach is saying, Well so and so did poorly. Superintendent of Schools Thomas W. Payzant says hell talk with the union about its concerns. We probably should have reached out and had more conversations with [Doherty] about what was coming around the coaching models. Its been an evolution, he says. Mary Russo cautions fellow principals against jumping to the conclusion that a resistant teacher is an uncaring teacher. The fear, I think, is coming from the teachers desire not to fail, she observes. Earlier in her career, she says, she didnt fully understand that. If she had it to do over again, she says, I would have been more of a coach, facilitator, and less of a supervisor. Meanwhile, in Year One, collaborative coaching is strictly voluntary. Barbara Neufeld, an evaluator hired by the Boston Plan, says it is going well. They like taking control of their learning. Were hearing stories of teachers doing [collaborative coaching] and then raising professional development questions for themselves. The potential is there to make more schools like this. Carol Ostiguy, a 5th-grade teacher at Mason Elementary, notes that in addition to having the opportunity to reflect on ones own teaching and observe peers in action, just having more adults in the room has been a plus. I have a lot of children who have very short attention spans, she says. With seven people in the classroom, every table had at least one person who could help them with questions. For a minute, I just stepped back and thought to myself, This is like a dream. People may have initially felt that they might be evaluated by their peers, says Meaghan Concannon, literacy specialist at Quincy Elementary, but it was quickly learned that everybody was pretty much in the same boat. However, Ostiguy cautions that teachers need to be willing to accept criticism or at least to let it roll off their backs. You cant take it personally, she says. If your colleague says, I cant believe Isaac didnt know about nonfiction as genre, you cant take offense. I could have walked away from that saying, I dont like this coaching. I have to keep an open mind. Hits several birds Secondly, collaborative coaching incorporates another district priority, evaluating student work. Boston requires schools to set aside 90 minutes per week for examining student work; next year, it will allow schools to use that time for collaborative coaching sessions. The Boston Plan argues that, ultimately, collaborative coaching will result in an improved cost-benefit ratio for the district. The group believes that once instructional leadership is developed in schools faculties, coaches can be phased out. Its the biggest bang for the instructional buck, says Woods. An overview: Boston on the move |
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