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Coaching Conversations. Thoughts on implementing the listening techniques. What techniques have you tried? How did they work? What is the hardest part for you?. Powerful Speaking. Julian Treasure Five Ways to listen better. Creating an Intention. 1. Choosing Words
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Thoughts on implementing the listening techniques • What techniques have you tried? • How did they work? • What is the hardest part for you?
Powerful Speaking • Julian Treasure • Five Ways to listen better
Creating an Intention • 1. Choosing Words • Promise - plan - passion – preference- possibility - obligation • Did _______? Or Have you ______?
Do you have lesson plans for today’s lesson? or What are you considering for the lesson plan? Did you think about how to differentiate the lesson? How were you thinking about differentiating the learning?
What do you think of these questions? • Why didn’t you include the practices in this lesson? • Are you prepared for the benchmark? • Do you know what you are doing in class tomorrow? • Are you teaching anything important in class today?
Carrying someone’s monkey… What message are we sending to others about their own strength and capabilities? Think of yesterday alone – How many monkeys did you take on? What were they?
Coaching Conversations encourage others to be reflective and exercise responsibility. We want to convey the message that “I trust you. I support you. It is ok to take risks.” When might this have happened to you?
In reading this chapter, I couldn’t help see the connection to asking good questions in a mathematics classroom. • Assume positive intent and focus on positive connections • Are open-ended • Invite multiple answers , not one correct answer • Act as thought starters to energize the mind and consider new perspectives • Focus on solutions, not problems • Empower to help us to go to a deeper level an uncover patterns of thinking
Questions… • What strategies are you considering? • What will your criteria include when you implement a plan? • What barriers do you anticipate? • What resources will help you? • What additional information will help you make a decision?
Think about a problem you are facing… • What are some questions you can ask about that?
Negative Feedback Negative Feedback Lay it on the line – critical Is worsened when it focuses on the person’s core identity rather than a product or idea The information can be alienating and over time can provoke defensiveness and negative attitudes
Conciliatory Feedback • Positive and Vague – Avoids criticizing in order to be supportive and avoid conflict; comes from the belief that negative feedback will be rejected and relationship harmed • Often called “social stroking” • Usually read as pleasant, encouraging, and nonthreatening. Not feedback at all; it’s encouragement and conflict avoidance in the guise of feedback • Chooses relationships over information • Receiver learns over multiple occasions that the feedback is empty and can be read as evasive or pandering
Communicative Feedback • Clarifies an idea or behavior under consideration • Communicates positive features toward preserving and building upon them • Communicates concerns and suggestions toward improvement • Consumes more time, requires thought and effort • Read as careful, respectful, and honest
Clarifying questions and statements • Ask for more information • Rooted in concepts or ideas about which the speaker is curious
Valuing statements • Useful for naming or labeling the topic under consideration • Value Statements – affirm strengths, identify positive
Reflective questions or possibilities • Take the spotlight off the speaker • Push the thinking of the other person • Ask for creative or out=of-the-box thinking.
Think about an issue or problem… • Brainstorm some current issues in your schools.
Now, think about the questions or prompts you might use for each component. • Clarifying • Valuing • Reflecting