Title: SURVEY of MS
1SURVEY of MS HSLITERACY COACHES
- Nancy L. Shanklin,Univ. of Colorado-Denver HSC
- Michelle Jones, PEBC
- Anne Patterson, PEBC
- Study sponsored by CCIRA
2Survey
- Zoomerang, open late March May, 2005
- 127 Completed
- 87 Female 13 Male
- 96 Caucasian 4 Minority
- 28 Suburban, 26 Suburban/Rural Mix
- 20 Urban, 6 Rural
3Size of schools
- 250-500 Students 25
- 501-750 Students 27
- 751-1000 Students 13
- 1001-1500 Students 12
- 1501-2000 Students 16
- 2001-2500 Students 4
424. For how many years have you been an educator?
- 3-5 6
- 6-8 6
- 9-11 13
- 12-15 13
- 16-20 18
- 21-25 19
- 26 26
5Grade Levels of Secondary Literacy/Instructional
Coaches
- Middle School 35
- High School 39
- Middle and high school 6
- Elementary and middle (Gr. K-8) 17
- Elementary, middle, high (K-12) 4
6Nature of Coaching Positions
- Full-time Literacy/Instructional Coach 60
- .5 Literacy/Instructional Coach 18
- Other
21
7In charge of how many schools?
- One School 75
- Two Schools 15
- Other 10
8How did you obtain your position?
- My principal asked me 27
- I was chosen by a 20
- building committee
- I responded to a position 38
- announcement to work in
- a school new to me
- Other 15
9How is your position funded?
- District Supported 66
- Title I Funded 10
- Federal or State Grant 6
- Other 19
10What is your preparation to be a coach?
- Undergraduate minor in reading 8
- English/LA teacher with an interest in adolescent
literacy, but no formal training 20 - Other content or specials teacher with an
interest in adolescent literacy, but no formal
training 14 - Extensive district professional development
training in literacy prepared me for this role
49 - Some coursework in adolescent reading/literacy at
the MA level 25 - MA and endorsement in reading at the K-6 level
13 - MA and endorsement in reading at the 7-12 level
13 - Other, Please Specify 29
11Construction of Your Coaching Role
- 100 self-constructed 14
- 75 self-constructed 25 prescribed 18
- 50 prescribed 50 self-constructed 45
- 25 self-constructed 75 prescribed 16
- 100 prescribed 6
12The people you are coaching are
- Primarily Volunteers 46
- Primarily Required 54
13Number of study groups, department meetings,
inservices you present per month
- 0-2 33
- 3-4 31
- 5-6 15
- 7-8 10
- 9-10 11
14Total Time per Coaching Session
- (Planning, Preconf., Obs., Postconf.)
- 1-2 Hours 65
- 2-3 Hours 26
- 3-4 Hours 9
15Number of Ts Coached Per Week
- O-2 46
- 3-5 32
- 6-8 17
- 9-11 2
- 12-15 2
- 16-20 1
16Additional Duties as many as apply
- Attending district meetings 94
- In charge of professional development 71
- Administering literacy assessments 67
- Data analyst 67
- On school decision-making team 61
- Doing ILPs/CBLA 58
- Ordering materials 58
17Additional Duties as many as apply
- CSAP organization 48
- Doing data entry 46
- Prep school accountability report 34
- In charge of book/resource room 33
- Substitute teaching 28
- Parent liaison 22
- Lunch or recess duty 12
- Other, Please Specify 25
18What support from other teachers?
- Commitment to examining 67
- improving teaching
- if a coach works with you
- Valuing of coach's work to 67
- improve student achievement
- not other school tasks
19What support from administrators?
- Included in professional development planning at
the building level 81 - Not in evaluative role that teachers distrust
76 - Commitment that job is to help with instruction
in literacy 71 - School culture of reflective practice change
58 - Money for material purchases 55
20What support from administrators?
- Consistent follow through on professional
development meeting agendas 51 - Clear blocks for time to work with teachers in
study groups 46 - Support in work with resistive teachers 46
- Building-wide expectations that you are coaching
during certain specific times 28
21What support at the district level?
- Instruction in doing coaching of adults 77
- Professional work on vision for secondary
literacy at classroom, building, and district
level 75 - Given district materials to use 75
- Information on CBLA 73
- Differentiation 60
22What support at the district level?
- Professional development on secondary literacy
strategies 58 - Instruction in best quality professional
development 57 - Information on other mandates 56
- Participate in study group yourself 52
- Instruction in working with adults 49
23What support at the district level?
- How to meet needs of English Language Learners
43 - Specific literacy intervention programs 43
- Working with resistant colleagues 41
- How to assist teachers with classroom management
33 - Learn how to manage time and job 28
24In what areas are you well prepared?
- Secondary Literacy Strategies 41 35
- Secondary Literacy Assessment 31 33
- Change Processes 28 39
- Application of Literacy Strategies 25 40
- to content areas
- Adult Learning 25 38
- Groups Process and Conflict Resolution 22 37
- Secondary Literacy Interventions 21 36
25How do you know if you have been effective?
- Teachers seek me out
- I see teachers making changes in their teaching
- Test scores have increased
- Administrative feedback
- Students tell us they know what to do
26What evidence are you asked to keep re
effectiveness of your work?
- 20 indicated none was required though may did
some documentation on their own - Weekly calendar of coaching sessions, PD
presented, meetings attended, people contacted,
etc. - Notes from coaching sessions
- Notes, handouts, and evaluations from PD sessions
given - Monthly self-reflection given to principal
27What worries you most about your job?
- Not having enough time
- Administrative support that reinforces the
importance of using best practices and continual
reflection on teaching - Funding
28In what ways have you impacted student learning?
- Greater motivation due to differentiated
instruction - More students are reading independently
- There are more student-centered classrooms
- When students were interviewed, 100 could
identify a lesson or assignment where they used a
strategy in a content class that they had learned
in reading class
29IMPLICATIONS
- Mirrors other research findings (Roller, 2006
Smith, 2006) and the LCC Blog - Points to need for building and district level
planning and support - Supports the need for considerations under the
Models Button of the LCC website - www.literacycoachingonline.org
30http//www.literacycoachingonline.org
About Us Qualifications Briefs
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31Select ResourcesUse the boxes below to select
from our libraryShow Newest ResourcesShow All
- People
- Show All People
- Literacy Coaches/Specialists
- Teachers
- Administrators
- Students Families
- Departments of Education
- Policy Makers
- Practices
- Show All Practices
- Books
- Tools
- Federal Programs
- University Programs
- Related Knowledge Bases
- Gr. PreK-12
- Gr. PreK-5
- Gr 6 - 12
- Research
32LibraryResources
- Allen, J. (2006). Becoming a literacy leader
Supporting learning and change. Portland, ME
Stenhouse. - Literacy Specialist Endorsement
- Bean, R. (2004). The reading specialist
Leadership for the classroom, school, and
community. NY Guildford Press. - Flaherty. J. (2005). Coaching Evoking excellence
in others. Boston, MA Elsevier. - Gottesman, B. (2002). Peer Coaching For
Educators. (2nd Ed.). NY Rowman Littlefield
Education. - Sweeney, D. (2003). Learning along the way
Professional development by and for teachers.
Portland, ME Stenhouse. - Toll, C. (2007). Lenses on literacy coaching
Conceptualizations, functions, and outcomes.
Norwood, MA Christopher-Gordon Publishers, Inc.