George Lucas Educational Foundation
Instructional Coaching

The Power of Educational Coaching

January 31, 2013
Photo credit: nashworld via flickr (CC BY-NC-SA 2.0)

I squirmed a bit in the center seat as I responded to questions. One educator after another around the circle asked me probing questions that made me think about my actions. I knew they understood me because they often rephrased what I said. Vocalizing my thoughts helped me to see clearly what my real issues were. Even still, I was hesitant to reveal my concerns, but at the same time I was curious to see where it would lead; I was being coached!

The issue on which they were trying to coach me was that, as school principal, I was uncertain on how to deal with a particular teacher's request. That day in the training, I volunteered to have the group of educators practice on me to help me unravel my quandary. As part of the coaching process, they asked questions, having me explain why I was concerned, and then attempted to get me to discover my true thinking and feeling on the subject.

Even though I knew exactly what they were doing, I was still experiencing the benefit of the reflective thinking their questions incited. At the end, I really did understand my motivations, and I had a plan. Best of all, I was the one that devised it, not them.

Coaching Defined

Coaching has been around a while at the leadership level, but it has taken its time in getting to the teacher level. I'm not talking about athletic coaching. I'm talking about educational coaching, instructional coaching, life coaching, learning coaching, leadership coaching -- pick your name.

Whatever you call it, it is more than a simple technique and it is more than a simple "play on words" of an old idea. It is a unique philosophy that deals with how best to implement radical and sustained change in educators. The autocratic way or if you like the "let me help you fix it" way, means that others dictate and direct a teacher's progress to teacher improvement with affixed consequences if it does not happen. Under this traditional system, ultimately, the teacher can blame his boss if the strategy that he was dictated to do does not work. Educational coaching is entirely different.

How It Works

Instructional coaching at the teacher level requires that the administrator and school leaders be trained to refrain from their natural tendency to provide the teacher with solutions to the problems he is facing. Rather, the administrator's role is to help the teacher identify the problems and bring their own solutions to light. By asking the teacher probing, open-ended questions, the administrator helps the teacher reflect and analyze an issue of the teacher's choosing and then asks the all powerful question: "What are you going to do about it?"

Employing this coaching strategy compels the teacher to accept responsibility for his behavior, which is a big step for a teacher who often only turn to students, parents, and prior teachers for the reason behind a student's lack of progress.

Why It Matters

This approach helps teachers focus on and change their own behaviors. And that real power of educational coaching is revealed when the administrator later follows up with the teacher about his plans by asking, "How did your solution work?" Celebrations ensue if they were successful, and if not, another poignant question, "Now what are your options?"

Educational coaching has powerful ramifications for the classroom. Through coaching, true teacher empowerment is possible, but perhaps most importantly, the skills that are modeled by the administrator on the teacher are exactly the constructivist skills that teachers can employ with their own students. If teachers are able to help students solve their own educational and personal problems in similar ways, teachers become less prescriptive in their attitudes towards students, and students feel more in charge of their learning and their lives.

How do you see teachers applying the skills of educational coaching in the classroom? Please share in the comments below.

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  • Administration & Leadership

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