Title: Principal as Coach
1Principal as Coach
- Merging transformative and shared instructional
leadership
2Working with teachers to make tacit knowledge
more explicit
- develop a common language -- not a best way --
fosters teacher efficacy which is influenced by
organizational efficacy
3What is tacit knowledge?
- Wagner and Sternberg state that tacit knowledge
is practical rather than academic informal
rather than formal, usually not directly taught
difficult to transfer, share, trade, or
communicate. Although some tacit knowledge could
be taught directly, much tacit knowledge may be
disorganized and relatively inaccessible, making
it potentially ill suited for direct instruction.
4Most frequently perceived problems of Beginning
Teachers - 1984
- Classroom discipline
- Motivation of students
- Dealing with individual differences
- Assessing student work
- Relations with parents
- Organization of class work
- Insufficient materials and supplies
- Dealing with individual differences
- Relations with colleagues
- Heavy teaching load
- Planning of lessons
- Effective use of teaching methods
- Determining level of student learning
- Knowledge of school policies
- Knowledge of subject
- Relation with administrators
5The Principal Principle
- The more the principal and assistant principal
understand the innovations being implemented the
greater the chances they will support those
innovations being implemented the further they
are away from it the less likely it is they
will provide the needed resources. Oh, and one
more thing if those at central office do not
understand and show their support, the less
likely the principal will show support. - Organizational efficacy begets teacher efficacy.
6Observing Teachers
- What lenses do you employ when you go in to
observe a teacher whether it is for sixty
seconds or sixty minutes?
7Seven Possibilities
- Classroom Management
- Instructional
- Curriculum
- Assessment
- Personality
- Stage in Career Cycle
- Conceptual Flexibility of the Teacher
8Instructional Intelligence
- The ability of teachers (and at times students)
to integrate the existing wisdom related to how
we learn, what we are to learn, how we assess,
how we instruct, how we go about change and how
we go about systemic change. - Ignoring anyone of these is unwise.
9Instruction classified
- Instructional concepts
- Instructional concepts that are skills
- Instructional concepts that are tactics
- Instructional concepts that are strategies
- Instructional concepts that are instructional
organizers
10Seamless Tacit
Cant be shared
11Intentional Explicit
Can be shared
12Blooms Taxonomy
- Knowledge/Recall
- Comprehension/Understanding
- Application
- Analysis
- Synthesis
- Evaluation
13Blooms and Objectives
- What does this objective tell you?
- By the end of grade six students will demonstrate
their understanding of four types of motion
reciprocal, oscillating, rotational, and linear. - If you dont know then forget being an effective
instructional/assessment/curriculum coach.
14By the end of grade six students will demonstrate
their understanding of four types of motion
reciprocal, oscillating, rotational, and linear.
- Tells you that they will be assessed at the
Comprehension level of Blooms Taxonomy -- be
able to describe in their own words and give
examples - Tells you implicitly that you have to teach it at
the analysis level -- compare and contrast - Tells you it is inductive thinking because they
have to be able to classify types of motion to
get than understanding. SO.
15What instructional methods push analysis (the
level of thinking) and inductive thinking (the
type of thinking)?
- Venn Diagrams, Fish Bone Diagrams, Mind Maps,
Concept Maps, Concept Attainment, Concept
Formation - BUT
16What about these factors?
- What Concepts and Skills do the teachers require
to enact those methods? - What other strategies could be connected to
enhance those strategies? - Should the students work alone or in small
cooperative groups or some combination of the
two? - Do the students have the skills and disposition
to take advantage of what the teacher may decided
to select, integrate,and enact?
17A peak at questioning what do you think about
when you hear these in a classroom?
- Who can tell me
- David what is the
- Hands up if you can
- Can anyone
- Could someone
- Why does
- Any ideas of how
18A peak at questioning what do you think about
when you hear these in a classroom?
- No hands please, think to yourself
- Share with your partner and I will randomly call
on - I will ask you to tell me what your partner told
you. - Be prepared to explain what you hear this person
say. - Thumbs up if you agree down if you disagree be
prepared to tell me why.
19Factors Impacting Questioning
- Complexity of Thinking
- Academic Engaged Time
- Use of Wait Time
- Responding to Student Responses
- Knowledge of Results
- Shifting from Covert to Overt
- Fear of Failure
- Public vs Private Failure
- Distribution of Responses
- Accountability and Level of Concern
20Johnsons 5 Basic Elements
- Individual Accountability
- Face to Face Interaction
- Collaborative Skills
- Social, Communication, and Critical Thinking
skills - Processing the Collaborative and Academic Task
- Positive Interdependence (9 types)
21Positive Interdependence (9)
- Goal (like the objective or academic task)
- Resource (shared)
- Sequence (beware - classroom management)
- Role -- (academic/social - only use if necessary)
- Incentive (what each group can get)
- Outside Force (time, standards, gravity)
- Environmental (hoola hoop, centre, desk)
- Identity (group name, handshake)
- Simulation (at times this is also a strategy)
22Small Group Cooperative Learning Structures
- Think Pair Share (Lyman)
- Pairs Share (Kagan)
- Place Mat (we dont know)
- Round Robin (Kagan)
- Inside Outside Circles (Kagan)
- Community Circle (Gibbs - Tribes)
- Three Step Interview (Kagan)
- Four Corners (Kagan)
- Teams Games Tournaments (De Vries)
- Jigsaw (Aronson)
- Team Analysis (Elson)
- Academic Controversy (Johnsons)
- Group Investigation (Thelan/Dewey)
Least Complex/Powerful
Most Complex/Powerful
23CBAM (Concerns Based Adoption Model)
- Levels of Use
- Non-User
- Orientation
- Preparation
- Mechanical
- Routine
- Refined
- Integrative
- Levels of Concern
- No Concerns
- Awareness
- Information
- Personal
- Impact on Students
- Collaborative
24Lets crawl inside this Vygotskys zone of
proximal development provides a construct to
understand the interactions between individuals
and their contexts actual development level is
determined through problem solving under adult
guidance or in collaboration with more capable
peers how does this connect to Levels of Use in
CBAM?
25Two Dimensions of Classroom Management
- What we do to prevent misbehaviour or to
encourage appropriate behaviour - What we do to respond to students when they make
the decision (intentionally or unintentionally)
to misbehave
26Observing and Chatting with Teachers
- A focus on how instruction, assessment,
curriculum, how kids learn, change and systemic
change play out in the everyday world of the
classroom and not forgetting that if kids are
climbing the walls, this is all in vane.
27Five Types of Teacher Chats
- A Conference - encourage one or two key ideas -
usually one - B Conference - extend that idea into a new area
- C Conference - respond to an area identified by
the teacher - D Conference - respond to an area identified by
the observer - E Conference - interact with ideas as the lesson
is happening - at times like co-teaching
28A Conference
- Introduction - bring voice into room, set the
tone -- similar to the idea of inclusion in
Tribes - Phase I teacher identifies what worked and what
they might do different next time - Phase II identify one key area and discuss it --
why it is important - Thank the teacher
29B Conference
- Introduction (same as A Conference)
- Phase I (same as A Conference)
- Phase II (same as A Conference)
- Phase III explore how that skill could be
employed in different ways/subjects - Thank the teacher
30C Conference
- Introduction (same as A Conference)
- Phase I (same as A Conference)
- Phase II (same as A Conference)
- Phase III explore an area identified by the
teacher as a concern or something they would like
to learn - Thank the teacher
31D Conference
- Introduction (same as A Conference)
- Phase I (same as A Conference)
- Phase II (same as A Conference)
- Phase III explore an area identified by the
observer as a concern or as a possible new area
to explore - Thank the teacher
32E Conference (students, teacher and observer
interact)
- Agree on a time and a focus
- Identify how long you are going to be in the room
- Teacher or Observer can stop at an appropriate
time to ask a question, or to talk about how they
thought it went -- this can involve students - Teacher can also ask the observer to teach a part
or to re-teach a part to see what the kids
preferred etc. Can at times include
co-planning/co-teaching
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