Michael Fullan, Peter
Michael Fullan, Peter
WHAT IS CO-TEACHING?
Co-teaching is an informal professional learning arrangement in which
teachers with different knowledge, skills and talents have agreed to
share responsibility for designing, implementing, monitoring and/or
assessing a curricular program for a class of students on a regular basis
(e.g., biweekly, monthly, or per term). Co-teaching is a relatively new
term but appears in the work of such authors as Vance Austin.
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learning by using formative assessment today to plan for
supplementing instruction tomorrow. It is a process that honours
informal knowledge that teachers gain from living and working in the
classroom and gives prominence to strategies that engage students in
learning.
Coaches are:
- Active and
empathetic WHAT IS COACHING?
listeners
- Responsive and Coaching is a relationship established between two parties to meet a
flexible learners particular learning goal. Coaching involves teachers in processes in
- Reflective and which they collaborate, refine, reflect, conduct research, expand on
well- informed ideas, build skills and knowledge, and problem solve in order to
thinkers improve student learning and achievement. Coaching needs to be non-
- Collaborative and
evaluative and build upon a foundation of mutual respect. The teacher
collegial
co-workers and the coach are partners in supporting student learning.
- Inclusive and equity-
minded educators Some goals for literacy and numeracy coaching are:
- Effective • Increase the number of conversations at the school level about
communicators literacy and numeracy teaching and learning
- Facilitators of • Activate and support teachers’ inquiry and study to improve their
professional learning – knowledge and teaching of literacy and numeracy
assessment literate and • Engage teachers in thinking more deeply about children’s literacy
knowledgeable about and numeracy learning in relation to their teaching of literacy and
current research and numeracy
resourc
es
- Relationship builders, Forms of Coaching
respectful and Although coaching can take on many forms, coaching sessions usually
cognizant of include a pre-visit conference, a classroom visit and then a post-visit
confidentiality debriefing session. The purpose of the visit is set collaboratively by the
- Site-based school coach and the inviting teacher. There are several forms of coaching:
reformers cognitive coaching, content-focused coaching and peer coaching.
Content-focused coaching terms from West and Staub are used here to
describe three phases of interaction with teacher-learners:
Pre-lesson Conference – The teacher explains the goals of the lesson
and how she/he plans to teach it. The coach becomes familiar with
the teacher’s thinking, beliefs and knowledge. The coach and the
teacher are accountable for initiating and assisting effective student
learning. They collaboratively design the lesson and develop a
shared view of understanding, strategies, concepts and skills that
students are working on. By agreeing to work together on the lesson
design, coaches and teachers are freed up to make the post-lesson
discussions all about student learning.
Lesson – The coach’s role is collaborative. Teacher and coach
negotiate how they will work together to add value to instruction
for a specific lesson. The decisions are made based on the teacher’s
needs and on what conditions need to be acted upon to make the
lesson one in which students learn. The discussions between teacher
and coach are always directed towards students’ understanding and
learning. The coach is a partner with the teacher in working towards
a shared goal of student learning, not a critic of the teacher’s
practice.
Post-lesson Conference – The teacher and the coach talk about how
the lesson plan was implemented, with success or not. They discuss
what problems arose and whether or not the students learned what
they were supposed to. This process involves looking at students’
work. The feedback gathered here often contributes to data used for
planning the next lesson.
When pairs of teachers observe each other, the one teaching is the
“coach,” and the one observing is the “coached.” Teachers who are
observing do so in order to learn from their colleagues and learn about
students’ thinking. The classroom observations are followed by brief
exchanges and reflections on the strategies gleaned and the impact of
teaching on student learning.
Showers and Joyce suggest that teachers need to engage in a new form
of collaborative work and sharing before they can reach a self-
sustaining level of expertise as a coach. Provision of a peer-coaching
coordinator is a very critical element in planning for implementation of
a peer-coaching program. Those who are developing skills as peer
coaches need to have a coach of their own who has already mastered
coaching and who can help guide their practice and refinement of the
skills. Such a coordinator needs release time to organize several aspects
of the program so that it functions efficiently and effectively. That
release time is also needed to allow the coordinator to provide the
necessary coaching that the developing peer coaches require as they
master the new skills.
Coaching takes time to get used to. It requires new skills and new
thinking about adult learning. That is why peer coaching holds so much
promise for making schools more collaborative work places and for
improving instruction. This is also why successful peer coaching
programs utilize peer program coordinators.
The inviting teacher might request that the coach model a lesson or co-
teach a lesson. Both options would be preceded by a planning session to
determine an area of focus and followed by a debriefing session that
would include analysis and interpretation.
WHAT IS MENTORING?
Support for mentoring in Ontario has been focused on new teachers but
the mentoring relationship can be adapted to involve experienced
teachers. Mentoring can be conceived as a one-to-one helping
relationship between a novice and experienced educator in which the
mentor provides guidance for everyday teaching practicalities, as well
as being a friend who gives emotional and psychological support.
Mentors are both experienced and willing to tell the stories of their
teaching and learning experiences in order to help others. Feiman-
Nemser and Parker (1992) identify three different purposes of mentors:
As local guides, mentors try to smooth the entry of beginning
teachers into teaching by explaining school policies and practices,
sharing methods and materials and solving immediate problems.
Their focus is to help novices fit into the school setting and learn to
teach with minimal disruptions.
As educational companions, mentors help novices to cope with
immediate problems and circumstances, but also prompt the novice
to work towards long-term professional goals, such as helping them
to understand student thinking and develop reasons for their
instructional decision-making and improve their instructional
practices.
As agents of change, mentors seek to dismantle the traditional
isolation among teachers by fostering norms and practices of
collaboration and shared inquiry. They build networks with novices
and their colleagues and organize opportunities for teachers to visit
each other’s classrooms to have conversations about teaching.
Effective mentors take the risk and have the wisdom to allow their
limitations and lack of knowing about teaching to show. An expert
cannot be a good mentor unless he or she can meet learners where they
are. A mentor acts as a role model and gives advice and guidance about
classroom organization and management, curriculum planning and
instruction. Often, mentees report that the mentoring support within an
in-school context is pivotal to their development as teachers.
The recent expert panel reports for literacy and numeracy have called
for instruction that directly focuses responsibility on student
achievement of expectations – all eyes and ears are on the students and
their learning. The reports also call for elimination of the separation
between theory and practice and expect that teachers analyse, study
and reflect on their classroom practice. Case studies make principles of
practice observable through narrative description. They establish a
culture of inquiry (Fullan, 2001) and allow teachers to identify practices
that are influencing improved student achievement.