NSDC Coaches Academy - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 42
About This Presentation
Title:

NSDC Coaches Academy

Description:

Develop an understanding of the roles and responsibilities of ... Chapter 6 teal. Chapter 7 lime green. Chapter 8 salmon. Chapter 9 lime green circle ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:294
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 43
Provided by: joellen6
Category:
Tags: nsdc | academy | coaches | teal

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: NSDC Coaches Academy


1
NSDC Coaches Academy
Memphis City Public Schools Heather
Clifton Presenter
2
Participant Outcomes
  • Develop teacher leaders to serve as instructional
    coaches in schools.
  • Develop an understanding of the roles and
    responsibilities of instructional coaches.
  • Build the individual capabilities of
    instructional coaches so that they can work
    comfortably in a variety of roles and with a
    variety of teachers.
  • Understand the CBAM (Concerns-Based Adoption
    Model) and develop skills to manage change and
    handle resistance.
  • Develop the communication/relationship skills of
    instructional coaches so that they can influence
    school culture and build trusting and productive
    relationships with their clients.

3
Participant Outcomes
  • Develop skills to work collaboratively with other
    school resource personnel.
  • Create partnership agreements to use with
    principals and with teachers.
  • Understand how to facilitate data conversations
    to make instructional decisions.
  • Develop questioning skills that promote deep
    thinking and reflection.
  • Explore an array of job embedded facilitation
    strategies to use in variety of coaching
    situations.
  • Explore professional development learning
    designs.
  • Design a 30 day planning guide to begin the role
    of an instructional coach.

4
Personal Goals
  • After hearing about the content that will be
    addressed this week, consider your own personal
    participation.
  • What do you hope to learn?
  • How will you contribute to your own learning and
    to the learning of others?

5
Working Agreements
  • Appreciation for one another.
  • Exchange ideas freely.
  • Influence what we can.
  • Opportunity to reflect.
  • Unite in purpose.

6
Grounding
  • Introduce yourself
  • Name
  • Location
  • School
  • Describe your interest in the topic of coaching

7
Learning Buddies
  • Make learning buddy appointments with 6 other
    people in the room. Connect with people you
    dont work with on a close basis. Write your
    partners names on your sheet on the lines by
  • 200 600 1000
  • 400 800 1200

8
Fears and Hopes
  • What worries, troubles, or concerns you about
    taking on this new role as instructional coach?
  • What hopes, wishes, or intentions do you have
    about being an instructional coach?
  • Share your thoughts with a table mate.

9
Coaches Self-Assessment
  • Read the list of qualities of effective
    instructional coaches.
  • Place a next to the ones you believe are your
    strengths.
  • Place a next to those you want to target for
    continued improvement.
  • Place a ? next to those you arent sure about.

10
With ONE Partner
  • Generate and share several strategies for
    developing your knowledge and skills in at least
    one target area.
  • Reciprocate.

11
Multiple Roles and Responsibilities of
Instructional Coaches
12
Essential Questions
  • s In what areas do coaches demonstrate expertise?
  • s What knowledge, skills, and behaviors do
    effective coaches demonstrate?
  • s What attitudes/beliefs do coaches have?
  • s How do my current knowledge, skills, attitudes,
    and behaviors stack up?
  • s What are the primary roles and responsibilities
    of coaches?
  • s How will know if I am successful as a coach?

13
Coaches act as
  • Resource providers
  • Data coaches
  • Curriculum specialists
  • Instructional specialists
  • Mentors
  • Classroom supporters
  • Learning facilitators
  • School leaders
  • Catalysts for change

14
Data Coach
  • Purpose
  • To ensure that student achievement data is used
    to drive decisions at the classroom and school
    level

15
Classroom Supporter
  • Purpose
  • To increase the quality and effectiveness of
    classroom instruction

16
Resource Provider
  • Purpose
  • To expand teachers use of a variety of resources
    to improve instruction.

17
Mentor
  • Purpose
  • To increase the instructional skills of the
    novice teacher and support school-wide induction
    activities

18
Learning Facilitator
  • Purpose
  • To design collaborative, job embedded, standards
    based professional learning

19
School Leader
  • Purpose
  • To work collaboratively (formal and informal
    leaders) to plan, implement, and assess school
    change initiatives to ensure alignment and focus
    on intended results

20
Instructional Specialist
  • Purpose
  • To align instruction with curriculum to meet the
    needs of ALL students

21
Curriculum Specialist
  • Purpose
  • To ensure implementation of adopted curriculum

22
Change Catalyst
  • Purpose
  • To create disequilibrium with the current state
    as an impetus to explore alternatives to current
    practice

23
Examining the Roles and Responsibilities
  • Meet with your assigned team to explore the roles
    you have been assigned.
  • For each role, identify its core function, the
    knowledge and skills needed to be successful in
    this role, and the challenges associated with
    this role. Complete the chart on p. 7-8.
  • Prepare to share what you
  • have learned with others.

24
Group Assignments
  • Chapter 2 yellow
  • Chapter 3 pink
  • Chapter 4 orange
  • Chapter 5 purple
  • Chapter 6 teal
  • Chapter 7 lime green
  • Chapter 8 salmon
  • Chapter 9 lime green circle
  • Chapter 10 lime green check mark

25
Roles and Responsibilities of Coaches
26
Your Work
  • Make a pie chart that indicates how your time is
    divided among the various roles.
  • Be ready to explain your chart to a partner.

27
200 Learning Buddy Task
  • Consider the nine roles of coaches.
  • Compare and contrast the 9 roles with your
    responsibilities. (Share your pie chart.)
  • Discuss which roles might
  • Gain entree more quickly
  • Be best at the beginning of the year
  • Be more appropriate for a novice teacher
  • Be more appropriate for an experienced teacher
  • Hasten improvement in instruction
  • Others. . .

28
Essential Questions
  • What are the types of change?
  • What is the process of teacher change?
  • What are the stages of concern?
  • How will I recognize and respond to various
    stages of concern?
  • How will I recognize and respond to resistance at
    its earliest stages?
  • What stage(s) of concern am I demonstrating now
    about my role as an instructional coach?

29
Change in Your Role and Responsibilities
  • Write a few sentences about how you feel about
    being an instructional coach. Be specific. Write
    in complete sentences. Be honest.

30
Concerns-Based Adoption Model -- Definitions
  • Concerns Feelings, reactions, attitudes--NOT
    necessarily anxiety, worry, or fear
  • Innovation Any program, product, or process new
    to an individual
  • Intervention Actions or event(s) which influence
    the use of an innovation

31
CBAM Assumptions
  • Change is a process, not an event.
  • An organization does not change until the
    individuals within it change.
  • Innovations come in different sizes.
  • Interventions are the actions and events that are
    key to the success of the change process.
  • Facilitating change is a team effort.
  • The context of the school or organization
    influences the process of change.

32
Recognizing the Stages of Concern
IMPACT
TASK
SELF
33
Stages of Concern Jigsaw
  • Read the descriptions of the stages you have been
    assigned. Together with your team, complete the
    table on page 16 about your stages. Disregard the
    last column on Strategies/Actions for now. Well
    come back to it.
  • Prepare to share what you have learned with
    others. Each team member will be responsible for
    sharing all of your information.
  • Regroup as directed to share and learn about all
    the Stages of Concern.

34
Recognizing the Stages of Concern
35
Interviewing to Determine Stages of Concern
  • What do you know about the innovation?
  • To what degree are you using it?
  • What problems or concerns do you have about it?

36
Carousel Brainstorm
  • Identify strategies/interventions that might be
    useful for you to use when teachers express
    concerns at each stage. Write them on the charts.
  • When you get to a new chart, review what has been
    written and add additional ideas.

37
Factors in Managing Complex Change
Adapted from Ambrose, D. (1987). Managing Complex
Change. Pittsburgh, Pa. The Enterprise Group,
Ltd.
38
Causes of Resistance
  • Form level-alike teams.
  • Think about people you know who resist change.
    Describe ways people exhibit resistance. What
    does it look like and sound like?
  • Use p. 18 to record some notes.
  • Identify what you think are some of the causes of
    their resistance.
  • Consider possible ways to handle their resistance.

39
Resistance
People in Groups 8 will be innovators. 17 will
be leaders. 29 will be early adopters. 29 will
be late adopters. 17 will be resisters. (E.
Rodgers)
What are the implications for instructional
coaches?
40
Fullan Resource
  • Review the 12 causes of resistance Michael Fullan
    identifies (see pp. 20-21).
  • Find one that parallels with one of your causes
    of resistance.
  • Review the strategies Fullan recommends for that
    cause.
  • Identify which ones you might use as an
    instructional coach.

41
Tips for Coaches3 Step Process for Responding
to Resisters
  • Acknowledge the resistance (honor it).
  • Understand or seek to understand the cause of it.
  • Coach rather than advise.

42
Exit Slip 3-2-1
  • On an index card write
  • 3 ideas you can use immediately
  • 2 comments about the days design
  • 1 question you have
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com