Title: COACHING SKILLS FOR HIGH IMPACT TEACHING
1COACHING SKILLS FOR HIGH IMPACT TEACHING
Friday, January 09, 2015
PowerPoints available to download at
www.geoffbarton.co.uk
2COACHING SKILLS FOR HIGH IMPACT TEACHING
- Education coaching its impact on whole-
school, teacher and pupil performance - Essential coaching skills for the classroom
- Developing the micro-skills of teaching
- Structuring effective lessons
- Top tips
3COACHING SKILLS FOR HIGH IMPACT TEACHING
- SESSION ONE
- Education Coaching
- Its impact on whole-school, teacher and pupil
performance
4COACHING SKILLS FOR HIGH IMPACT TEACHING
- Whole-school culture
- Some opening assumptions
Michael Fullan 20 years in teaching is
1 year, repeated 20 times
5COACHING SKILLS FOR HIGH IMPACT TEACHING
- Whole-school culture
- Some opening assumptions
- Good teaching is a set of learnable skills, not
a God-given gift - Performance management is about performance
- We should encourage experimentation and
occasional disasters - We should be intolerant of mediocrity
- A genuine evaluation culture builds reflection
- Real change comes from within
6COACHING SKILLS FOR HIGH IMPACT TEACHING
Whole-school culture Some opening assumptions
How?
7COACHING SKILLS FOR HIGH IMPACT TEACHING
Whole-school culture Some opening assumptions
- Have a clear view of what the essential skills
of teaching / tutoring / behaviour are - Map them out
- Build everything else around them
8COACHING SKILLS FOR HIGH IMPACT TEACHING
1
Peak performance will happen when you permit your
imagination to study, explore and grow.
Motivation is training or programming the
creative mind to desire or expect the best, plan
and work for the best. Whatever you do in life,
you are going to work hard for it, so you might
as well choose to work hard for what you really
love and want to do. Education means awareness
and use of what works. Things that work have a
pattern, and this can be learned thoroughly and
applied
9COACHING SKILLS FOR HIGH IMPACT TEACHING
- SESSION TWO
- Essential Classroom Coaching Skills
- Listening, modelling thinking skills
- Performance coaching to raise pupils
aspirations - Techniques for change Overcoming barriers to
learning
10The Magic of Goal Setting
2
- Research shows that people who have achieved
success in different walks of life had precisely
written goals or well formed outcomes-WFO in
(NLP literature) - SMART - Specific, Measurable, Achievable,
Realistic,Time-phased - Why does goal setting work?
- We think and behave in a way consistent with our
beliefs - Get pupils to write down goals and review them
regularly (create the opportunity)
11How our brain works
5, ex 2
- The Reticular Activating System (R.A.S.)
- Thoughts (Self-talk)
- Comfort zone(Feelings and emotions)
12Coaching works
5 ex 3
- Value of beliefs and attitudes
- Reticular Activating System (R.A.S) and
observations - ?Thought forms and self-talk (Neuro-linguistic
Programming) - Feeling and emotions (comfort zones)
13Links between beliefs, thoughts, feelings and
experience
7 bridge
14Techniques for change
7
- Positive listings and reflection- a simple
strategy to reinforce positive beliefs, thoughts,
feelings and perceptions - Reframing - a powerful strategy for changing
negative feelings and the effect on performance - Create powerful anchors as expressive holding
forms
- Pattern breaking (distraction from the negative,
attention on the positive technique) - Imagination a natural ability to bring to mind
what is seen, heard and felt - Rational analysis an objective analysis of
objects - Learning Log - (contact book, diary, visual
journal) - Music and Symbols (Image, logo-NIKE, theme songs,
anthems)
15Emotional barriers and solutions
7/8
- Negative memories (Trigger recurrence of
negative performance memories -will lead to
negative self-talk emotional discomfort, the
R.A.S. will notice things that are negative, poor
results that reinforce the memory) - Negative expectations - pupils project negative
expectations of their future - A limiting belief (can be challenged then
create a better one) - Inappropriate emotions (fear, anxiety etc
triggered by an external threat)
- Other damaging thought patterns as barriers
jealousy, Self sabotage, unrealistic
competitiveness, mindless gossip and lack of
discipline - Judgemental beliefs and attitudes Educated
desire means programming for positive results,
self-confidence and high self- esteem. - Goal setting for desired outcomes using a
solution focused approach or systematic
approach to a Well-formed outcome
16The Magic of Goal Setting
8
- Research shows that people who have achieved
success in different walks of life had precisely
written goals or well formed outcomes-WFO in
(NLP literature) - SMART - Specific, Measurable, Achievable,
Realistic,Time-phased - Why does goal setting work?
- We think and behave in a way consistent with our
beliefs - Get pupils to write down goals and review them
regularly (create the opportunity)
17COACHING SKILLS FOR HIGH IMPACT TEACHING
Friday, January 09, 2015
PowerPoints available to download at
www.geoffbarton.co.uk
18COACHING SKILLS FOR HIGH IMPACT TEACHING
- SESSION THREE
- Developing the Micro-skills of Teaching
- Creating a self-evaluation culture
- What are the skills and qualities that effective
teachers have? - How to make these explicit and build staff
development around them?
19COACHING SKILLS FOR HIGH IMPACT TEACHING
- Part One Creating a self-evaluation culture
20COACHING SKILLS FOR HIGH IMPACT TEACHING
- Creating a self-evaluation culture
- My 3 gurus
Carol FitzGibbon (Durham) Get data into school
life, without necessarily doing anything with it
21COACHING SKILLS FOR HIGH IMPACT TEACHING
- Creating a self-evaluation culture
- My 3 gurus
John MacBeath (Cambridge) We should measure
what we value, not value what we can measure
22COACHING SKILLS FOR HIGH IMPACT TEACHING
- Creating a self-evaluation culture
- My 3 gurus
David Reynolds (Exeter) Aim to be a
high-reliability organisation
23COACHING SKILLS FOR HIGH IMPACT TEACHING
- Such complex social organizations as air traffic
control towers continuously run the risk of
disastrous and obviously unacceptable failure. - The public would heavily discount several
thousand consecutive days of efficiently
monitoring and controlling the very crowded skies
over Chicago or London if two jumbo jets were to
collide over either city. - Through fog, snow, computer-system failures, and
nearby tornadoes, in spite of thousands of
flights per day in busy skies, such a collision
has never happened above any city, a remarkable
level of performance reliability
24COACHING SKILLS FOR HIGH IMPACT TEACHING
- By contrast, in the U.S., one of the most
highly educated nations on earth, within any
group of 100 students beginning first grade in a
particular year, approximately 16 will not have
obtained either their high school diploma or a
General Education Development certificate 12-13
years later. - In Britain, just under half of all 16-year-old
pupils will not have the benchmark of 5 or more
high grade public examination passes in the
national system. Obviously, many nations have
even lower levels of educational performance.
25COACHING SKILLS FOR HIGH IMPACT TEACHING
- Creating a self-evaluation culture
Therefore, for me, Whilst coaching is about
teacher development Its also about student
entitlement to good teaching
26COACHING SKILLS FOR HIGH IMPACT TEACHING
21-27
- Creating a self-evaluation culture
- Forms of self-evaluation
- Student performance data - results, targets, etc
- Ethos data
- Questionnaires and focus groups
- Faculty reviews - inc observation sheets plus
27COACHING SKILLS FOR HIGH IMPACT TEACHING
8 -13
- Creating a self-evaluation culture
Bedding this in as genuinely SELF-evaluation
28COACHING SKILLS FOR HIGH IMPACT TEACHING
How might you use these approaches in your own
school?
29COACHING SKILLS FOR HIGH IMPACT TEACHING
- The essential skills of good teachers
TALKING POINT What do you think are the 3 most
important ingredients of good teachers ? and
bad?
30COACHING SKILLS FOR HIGH IMPACT TEACHING
2-5
- The essential skills of good teachers
- How to customise these for your school
- How to spell out the essential skills explicitly
- (staff handbook, differentiated training (eg
literacy grid), review cycle, observation sheets - How to develop a shared approach to observation,
with protocols, and specific issues as focus - using observation triads, questions rather than
comments
31COACHING SKILLS FOR HIGH IMPACT TEACHING
- The essential skills of good teachers
How do you feel the lesson went? Why did you
start the lesson with activity X? How many
students do you think took part in the
discussion? Were you conscious of whether boys or
girls answered? Why did you stand where you did
for the plenary?
32COACHING SKILLS FOR HIGH IMPACT TEACHING
8 -13
How to provide differentiated training?
33Eg Essential Literacy
34COACHING SKILLS FOR HIGH IMPACT TEACHING
- What are the good features of coaching in your
school? - How well do you articulate a shared view of
effective learning teaching? - How do you ensure consistency across teams?
- How do you develop the teaching skills of people
at different phases? - What are your points for action?
35COACHING SKILLS FOR HIGH IMPACT TEACHING
Friday, January 09, 2015
PowerPoints available to download at
www.geoffbarton.co.uk
36COACHING SKILLS FOR HIGH IMPACT TEACHING
- SESSION FOUR
- Understanding Structuring Effective Lessons
- Using coaching to improve behaviour
- Personalised learning coaching making it work
in your classroom
37COACHING SKILLS FOR HIGH IMPACT TEACHING
- What do we know about effective behaviour
management?
Young people today think of nothing but
themselves. They have no reverence for parents or
old age. Peter the Hermit, 1274
38COACHING SKILLS FOR HIGH IMPACT TEACHING
6/7
Good behaviour management is a prerequisite for
effective teaching and learning Again, we can
identify what effective teachers do We shouldnt
tip-toe round the issue A heavy focus on systems
can create problems Keep it simple, and
light Dont use charismatic teachers as
mentors Take a long-term approach not quick hits
3916
What we know from research into behaviour
management
Proactive schools have better behaviour early
intervention and preventative measures.
There are higher rates of difficulty and
exclusion in schools with lower confidence in
their ability to handle the problem.
Schools that form tight communities do better
spectrum of adult roles, engaging students
personally and getting them involved. These
schools have a more diffuse teacher role, with
frequent contact between staff and students in
contexts other than the classroom.
The action teachers take in response to a
discipline problem has no consistent
relationship with their managerial success in the
classroom. However, what teachers do before
misbehaviour occurs is shown to be crucial.
In well-disciplined schools, teachers handle all
or most of the routine discipline problems
themselves. Indeed, the over-use of hierarchical
referrals is a characteristic of high excluding
schools.
Reactive approaches to difficult behaviour can
and do make matters worse.
One of the most worrying assumptions is that if
mild punishment does not prove effective, then we
should try more severe punishment. In other
words, one is led into a false escalation, rather
like the postcard notice The beatings will
continue until morale improves.
Schools make a difference pupils behaviour does
NOT simply mirror behaviour at home.
Teachers engage in 1000 interactions or more a
day. It is closest to being an air traffic
controller. Teachers therefore react and make
quick decisions. If they do not have a way of
coping with the busyness they can experience
tiredness and stress.
Collaborative approaches lead to better behaviour
rather than individual teachers isolated.
Schools that promote self-discipline and active
involvement do better.
Chris Watkins, Institute of Education
40COACHING SKILLS FOR HIGH IMPACT TEACHING
14/15
- Before
- Set out expectations
- Model the behaviour and language you expect
- After
- Give students choices
- Avoid the public arena by being prepared to
defer issues
41COACHING SKILLS FOR HIGH IMPACT TEACHING
What are the implications for your own school?
42COACHING SKILLS FOR HIGH IMPACT TEACHING
- SESSION FOUR
- Understanding Structuring Effective Lessons
- Using coaching to improve behaviour
- Personalised learning coaching making it work
in your classroom
43Learning performance strategies
9 reminder
- Promoting positive communication or rapport
- Developing Self-esteem
- Increasing motivation setting learning goals,
and the steps to get there i.e. performance
goals - write it down - Raising achievement is key
- Framing positive expectations
- Giving immediate and Positive feedback
- Listening / questioning
- Modelling, Thinking skills
- Making learning count (link to career, hobby and
life goals) - Accessing VAK
- Group work Learning together
- Promoting recognition and responsibility for
each pupil / learner - Creating interesting and meaningful activities -
Mind map, Games, - Providing more choices
- Use curiosity / anticipation
- Promoting active reflection
44COACHING SKILLS FOR HIGH IMPACT TEACHING
- SESSION FIVE
- Top Tips for Effective Coaching
- The coaching process
- Creating a coaching culture
45TOP TIPS COACHING
11
- Talk with them and listen, use the insight gained
to modify your relationship, expectations and
presentation - Be genuinely interested in your pupils
- Learn alongside your pupils - Treat them as equal
learners and prepare your lessons as you would if
you were going to coach your team to win every
time. - You must have a very high expectation of all your
pupils and replace all negative judgemental
attitudes with a positive alternative and just
observe and comment accurately on observation. - Define and focus your coaching goals use the
R.A.S to set up a desire (passion) for learning
something new everyday, observe and note how you
did it identify your learning patter
46TOP TIPS A COACHING CULTURE
- Start from your students entitlement to good
teaching - Build a culture of constant, ongoing evaluation
- plus a strong emphasis on SELF-evaluation
- Develop a shared view of the essential skills
teachers need - Develop a house style to develop them and
relentlessly aim for consistency
47COACHING SKILLS FOR HIGH IMPACT TEACHING
Friday, January 09, 2015
PowerPoints available to download at
www.geoffbarton.co.uk