140 likes | 331 Views
Positive Gains: Instructional Coaches Coaching Interns. AACTE March 2, 2014. Instructional Coaching. https://vimeo.com/80593567. Statement of the Issue.
E N D
Positive Gains: Instructional Coaches Coaching Interns AACTE March 2, 2014
Instructional Coaching https://vimeo.com/80593567
Statement of the Issue • The purpose of this study was to provide evidence of the impact instructional coaching has on the clinical internship experience and k-12 student achievement. • Instructional coaches were added to the traditional triad model of intern, clinical teacher, and university supervisor. • The goal of the research was to examine the impact of instructional coaching on the use of effective instructional practices in the clinical internship.
Literature Review • An instructional coach is someone who models research- based practices, gives encouraging feedback, and provides specific observations to adults rather than to students (Steiner & Kowal, 2007). • Instructional coaching is recommended by NCLB for schools who do not make adequate yearly progress(AYP) for two years or more (Kowal & Steiner, 2007; Annenberg, n.d.) • Instructional coaching helps teachers reflect and apply what they have learned to their students and coworkers (Neufeld & Roper, 2003 ; Poglinco et al., 2003).
Literature Review • In order for instructional coaching to be effective and sustained long-term, data on the significance of instructional coaching needs to be collected and reviewed (Walker, 2006). • Instructional coaches need to be an expert with pedagogy, content, interpersonal skills. They also need continued training to keep them up to date in these areas (Knight, 2008; Steiner & Kowal, 2007). • When multirater feedback occurs goals can be established and used to drive instruction (Dochy, Segers & Sluijsmans, 1999; Tillema, 2009).
Instructional Coaching • The Instructional Coach adds another layer of support and guidance for interns during their internship by serving as a: • liaison between the intern/clinical teacher/school administration/University. • facilitator of academic goals and initiatives within the school system to which the intern is assigned. • guide for pre-service opportunities at the school and system level during the internship. • mentor for interns whose clinical teachers have less time to devote to mentoring.
Methodology A mixed methods study that relied on • qualitative data from exit surveys • quantitative data from Teachscape walkthrough observations • locally evaluated edTPA scores.
Relevance-Data • This study includes quantitative evidence that informs policy and practice. • Successful practices have been identified and are being used by interns as they progress through their internship. • Multiple measures indicate statistically significant gains when compared to interns that did not work with instructional coaches.
Relevance-Data Results and Findings Over a Three Year Period Quantitative Data: • Teacher candidates significantly increased their use of instructional practices and research-based instructional strategies. • Levels of student engagement were also found to increase significantly. • edTPA rubrics for Instruction and Assessment were higher for teacher candidates with an instructional coach. *See Handout of Data Results
Relevance-Data Qualitative Data: • Exit Survey - Teacher candidates ranked the ISLES modules and instructional coaching as two of the most influential initiatives contributing to their preparation for the classroom. “My instructional coach helped shape me into a better teacher through her observations, constructive criticism, recommendations, and encouragement.” “They were most helpful because they provided us with relevant information about classroom intervention strategies.”
Implication for Action-Policy • The implication of this project for colleges of education is that carefully designed clinical practice experiences involving instructional coaches can effectively prepare novice teachers. • This clinical experience reform has the potential to change the teaching effectiveness trajectory of first year teachers while ensuring more children benefit from highly qualified teachers. • Based on this research study, instructional coaching, in the clinical internship experience, is informing how well researched based practices are implemented during clinical intern’s internship experience.
How to Replicate without $9 mil • Differentiated roles with university supervisors and clinical teachers • Principal candidates coaching teacher candidates (junior level) • Increase co-teaching as this increases coaching (1:1 2:1) • Begin with one or two program areas, keep good data, and scale up as you learn from your experiences
Contact Information Kristen Cuthrell cuthrellma@ecu.edu Joy Stapleton stapletonj@ecu.edu Judy Smith smithjud@ecu.edu Vivian Covington covingtonv@ecu.edu Krys Castro Castok@pitt.k12.nc.us Angie Gaddis gaddisa@pitt.k12.nc.us Angela Greene GreeneA@pitt.k12.nc.us Gail Edmondson gailedmondson@greene.k12.nc.us