Some comments so far have addressed the importance of trust
amongst colleagues in order to make this process work and getting over the
feeling of being “evaluated” just because some other adult is in your room
observing. Very legitimate and
common concerns, according to the book.
Chapter 4 addresses logistics and making the process happen, which we
have discussed some. Chapter 5
addresses deciding on a focus. A
good idea that is mentioned is to start with something with which the person
doing the inviting is pretty confident.
Also important to note is that the person will be more committed to a
goal he or she has formulated rather than one formulated by someone else. The coach should simply just ask “What
do you want to know?” or “What am I looking for?” It must be very clear for both parties to get an accurate
record that will help the inviting teacher. We are planning on meeting to discuss the logistic ideas
such as how we will pre-conference, observe and post conference and develop
some common understanding on these during in-service week. What ideas do you have already on
this? What I mean by this is what
are some good general guidelines for coaches and inviters as far as these
things are concerned? Also, what
ideas do you have or ways do you like for focusing an observation?
Tuesday, July 17, 2012
Sunday, July 8, 2012
Rationale and Questions
The rationale for peer coaching consists of seven reasons, or needs. They are:
Ø Reduce isolation among teachers
Ø Build collaborative norms to enable teachers to give and receive ideas and assistance
Ø Create a forum for addressing instructional problems
Ø Share successful practices
Ø Transfer training from the workshop to the workplace
Ø Promote the teacher as researcher
Ø Encourage reflective practice
Which of these particularly catches your attention as important? What questions do you or do you think others have about peer coaching before embracing the concept? Include possible answers or not.
Monday, July 2, 2012
Goals
Chapter
1 defines peer coaching as “a confidential process through which two or more
professional colleagues work together to reflect on current practices; expand,
refine, and build new skills; share ideas; teach one another; conduct classroom
research; or solve problems in the workplace.” Let’s go with the suggestion at the beginning of Chapter 1: In the best of all possible worlds,
what would you want peer coaching to look like, sound like and feel like at
Meridianville Middle School?
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