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This website contains ideas that are "in process." Simply put, what you read here may be just some random thoughts, rather than validated and final procedures. Mind you, aren't most ideas "in process?" The bulk of what you'll read here are answers to questions I am emailed or asked during presentations, or summaries of excellent ideas others share with me.

Of course, you can add to this blog by leaving your own comments, too.

You can learn more about Instructional Coaching at www.instructionalcoach
.org

or at my delicious site

You can contact me at jimknight@mac.com

Or follow me on twitter at http://twitter.com/
jimknight99

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Saturday
Jun072008

Presentation Zen

As you may know, I'm deep into books about presenting as I work on my book based on the research I did on Partnership Learning. You can actually download a Partnership Learning Fieldbook on the topic at the website. One book that I've especially found useful is Garr Reynold's Presentation Zen. Mr Reynold's main idea is that the powerpoint we use should be simpler and more beautiful, and we should use fewer words that convey core concepts. Garr also suggests we create separate documents to go with our presentations, rather than what he calls "sliduements" those simple prints of PowerPoint or Keynote that are usually handed out at workshops. If we create separate documents that have all the key information as a handout, then our audience doesn't need to worry about taking notes or reading their notes, they can foucus on the presentation that we are giving. Mr Reynolds has a sample presentation on his personal website, and his blog. I'll be posting a lot more information in the next few weeks on what I have been reading about presenting and dialogue

Tuesday
May132008

3rd Annual Coaching Conference

Third Annual Instructional Coaching Conference: Perspectives on Coaching
October 13- 15, 2007

This year’s Instructional Coaching Conference will be a three-day event celebrating Coaching: Approaches and Perspectives a new book I'm lucky enough to edit and which will be released at the conference. Coaching: Approaches and Perspectives contains chapters written by a veritable “who’s who” of leaders in the fields of coaching research and study providing their perspectives on what coaching is and what it can be. Almost all of the authors of Perspectives on Coaching plan to present at this year’s conference.

Among those scheduled to present are the following:

Cathy Toll on Literacy Coaching
Carolee Hayes on Cognitive Coaching
Joellen Killion on the roles of coaches
Lucy West , Content Coaching
Randy Sprick, Wendy Reinke, and Jim Knight, Coaching Classroom Management
Jane Kise, Differentiated Coaching
Karla Reiss, Leadership Coaching
Jim Knight, Instructional Coaching
Jake Cornett and Jim Knight, Research on Coaching

In addition to presentations by all the authors, this year’s conference will feature many of the learning experiences we have offered in the past, including Open Space Dialogues, Lightning Round (6 minute presentations by practitioners with cool new ideas), panel discussions, and other opportunities for sharing and learning.

Also, as has taken place in the past, this year’s conference will be held at Liberty Hall and the historical Eldridge Hotel in downtown Lawrence. If you are interested in staying at the Eldridge, we strongly advise that you make your reservations soon.

The fee for the conference is $450.00 per participant, and each participant will receive a copy of Perspectives on Coaching. All profit generated from the conference supports ongoing research on coaching completed through the Kansas Coaching Project at the University of Kansas Center for Research on Learning.

All in all, we are very excited about this year’s conference, and we hope to see you in October. If you have any questions regarding the conference, please feel free to contact Carol Hatton at chatton@ku.edu.

By the way, you can find video clips from last year's conference on the www.instructionalcoach.org website.

Tuesday
May132008

Cathy Toll's Literacy Workshop

Some of you may be interested in Cathy Toll's upcoming intensive workshop for Literacy Coaches. Cathy sent me the following information about her session:

I'm pleased to announce the 4th Annual Summer Intensive on Literacy Coaching, which will be held in Indianapolis in June 2008.

This year, the Summer Intensive has two parts. The Introduction to Literacy Coaching session will be from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. on Monday, June 23, through Wednesday, June 25. The session for Experienced Literacy Coaching will be from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. on Monday, June 9, through Wednesday, June 11.

All sessions will be held at the Hilton Garden Inn in the lively center of Indianapolis, just off the Circle and in the heart of shopping, dining, museums, and entertainment venues. Those who attended the Summer Intensive in Indianapolis last summer were delighted to find the many experiences that Indianapolis has to offer these days. The Hilton Garden Inn has reserved a block of rooms at a special rate for attendees.

As always, I will facilitate the sessions, and the price of attendance will include continental breakfast, lunch, and all materials. The sessions will be lively and interactive, with plenty of time to ask about your particular interests or concerns.

Please see the flyer at www.tollandassociates.com for all of the details; look for the link under "workshops." (Note: The flyer is in PDF format, so Mac users may want to download it before opening.) Please share this information with colleagues who may be interested.

I hope to see you at one of the sessions of the Summer Intensive!

Wednesday
Jan022008

Coaching Burnout

Recently I received an email asking about coaching burnout. As I almost always do when I get a tough question, I sent it to my team, and asked for their thoughts. Here is what everyone said, starting with the question I received.

Jim, I think I am reaching burnout in this job. This is year four and finally we are building based and everything should be better than before, but I think I am nearing the end of my rope. Have others reported back to you that burnout around this time is common? It looks so tempting to just go teach and do the things I know I should do and put all my training into practice as opposed to attempting to get others on board. Is year four a key year? Or is it just me being "done" with the job?

My response:

I don't know if the fourth year is the issue, but the season certainly is. Rolling into the holidays, these holidays in particular, seems to be a darker time of the year for many, coaches, teachers, students, everyone. I don't know what advice to give you that will speak to your particular situation, but I'll give it a shot, and I'll also send this to me team to see if they have any thoughts. I have three thoughts. One is to not think of you job in terms of the long-term outcome, but rather to focus on each minute of the job. If each hour is meaningful, if you focus on the moment--this conversation right now--the rest will be OK. If you look at the long-term impact, at times in can be discouraging, but if you focus on each conversation, each person, and you say, I'm going to make sure this interaction is humane. I'm going to encourage respectful interaction. I'm going to be an awesome listener right now. If you take care of the moment, there should be more reason for hope. I think it is a good idea to review the partnership principles, review the communication strategies and see how they apply in this situation.

Second, is a bit of a cliche, but I think it is also very true. Any work worth doing will have its tough moments. I have been focussed on running a lot the past year and a half, and I decided that I wanted to run a marathon. This fellow--a track coach in Portland, Oregon--gave me a great bit of advice. He said, there will be a point where you will think you're not going to be able to do it. He said, just keep running, you'll get past that moment, and you'll get the strength you need to get to the end. He was right. There was a very tough stretch, but I stuck with it and made it. I think his advice applies to anything that is worth doing. There will be points where you really doubt what you're doing, but if you stick with it, you'll pass through that time, and you'll reach your goal.

Third, I say this all the time, but I think it bears repeating: don't lose sight of the moral purpose behind what you do. There are few jobs where you have more possibility to make a profoundly important impact on society--to make a difference. What could be more important than helping teachers reach out to more students. The thing, too, is that you never know what might happen. Change always goes in unpredictable patterns? You think there's no hope and something happens, and suddenly more and more people are on board. You just cant predict the future, so (here's where my first point comes in to play) just make every day count, and it is possible that you'll have a huge impact. You just can't know what might happen.

Coach A:

I can appreciate what this coach is feeling because I've been there before. I, too, am in my fourth year as a coach. There were times when I sometimes felt this way. When there is little teacher turnover at a school, a coach might begin to feel no longer needed. Of course there is a need, but it is more hidden. The teachers in "obvious" need of help have received assistance and the more resistant teachers remain. It takes more work to get those people on board. As my school experienced a lot of turnover in my last year there, I suddenly felt rejuvenated and needed. I also had this feeling when I came to my new school this year. I think the burnout factor also comes from teachers a coach is not able to help move in a positive direction. I invested a lot of time working with one teacher at my first school on classroom management, but he never fully improved, and he eventually left. There were times when I just wanted to teach the class myself. I still feel that way sometimes.

I've learned so much as a coach, but I also really miss teaching. I would like to take everything I've learned and put it into practice in the classroom because I think it would make me an even stronger coach. I would love to teach just one class so I could try out new strategies and practices, which would refresh my teaching juices. I think this would greatly help coaches keep in touch with what teachers experience daily in the classroom. Anyone who is not doing the daily grind -- teaching, grading papers, planning lessons, etc. - loses perspective at some point. It happens to administrators and I truly believe it even happens a little to coaches. I think this coach could deal with burnout in one of several ways: by finding some teachers she/he could really make a difference with; asking for placement at a new school; or asking to teach part-time (one or two classes) in addition to coaching duties. I'm sure this person has more to give as a coach, but she/he needs to recharge her/his batteries. The important thing is to know you're making a difference, even when it doesn't feel like it.

Coach B

I don't think this is a four-year phenomenon! This type of thinking happens to me every year. In my humble opinion, coaches are consistently reflective about many different aspects of the job, so inevitably, we are most reflective about our own abilities. The biggest concerns most of us face are, "Have I lost my effectiveness? Am I still making a difference?" This is especially difficult in a building that doesn't have the top-down pressure we all need. In a school without that pressure, a coach can sometimes feels as if he/she is flailing and running from issue to issue. I know I have felt this way since my one awesome principal left. Making that kind of new positive connection has been difficult in the interim.

We are practitioners of an imperfect science, and once we add the human element, everything goes haywire!

I think this coach is experiencing what most of us feel most of the time; however, don't give up. Even when we don't think we're making a difference, we're building relationships that will only serve us in the future.

Coach C

Change is messy and it takes much more time than most people think. How are you measuring your success? How are others measuring your success? Are expectations realistic? When I start to think about the enormous amount that needs to be done in my school, it can be overwhelming. When I think of people who start and then stop, it is discouraging. When I think of how the school has changed over time because I am here, I become hopeful again. Coaching is messy and the changes are often subtle so it is hard to measure success. Only you can answer the question if it is time to leave for something else. If you continue coaching, find ways to keep yourself refreshed such as meet with other coaches regularly, talk about successes even if they are small, share materials, and talk about how not to burn out. If that isn't available locally, consider a blog. When I start to feel weary, I do more model teaching so I can connect with the students again. Often doing what you are missing is a good cure for the doldrums.

Coach D

Well, I have barely been at this job four months, and only "half-time" at that, but I do know that motivating others really takes its toll, whether those others are students, teachers or friends. Being a coach is all about giving people the tools to improve their talents and then motivating them to put new tools or methods into practice. At some point a coach (whether coaching students in a classroom, or athletes on the field of competition, or teachers in a school community, or friends who need to make a change) must stand back and let the recipient fly or fall. Coaches who take on too much of the ownership for change will definitely burn out. Theodore Roosevelt offers good advise when he said "Do what you can, with what you have, where you are." I can only be responsible for providing the water; I cannot drink it for the horse. When I try, both the horse and I will be frustrated and unfulfilled. This 4 yr veteran probably needs to make a list of all the things that would not be in place without coaching (like a scene from "It's a Wonderful Life); a hefty dose of gratitude and counting one's blessings can go a very long way to squelching burnout.

Sunday
Aug192007

Three interesting presentations

As part of my research on Partnership Learning I've been watching videos from the TED website, which I personally consider a fantastic place to get new ideas, and to simply be inspired to be more creative. In fact, at the upcoming 2nd Annual Instructional Coaching Conference we're going to do a little TED-type presenting of our own, with what I refer to as Lightning Round, 7 short presentations (8 minutes each) by experts in coaching, and then we'll be uploading those presentations, as well as other interesting videos to the Instructional Coaching Website.

While reviewing the TED videos I found three that are particularly interesting, to me at least, both for their content and for the way in which they deliver the content. First, Seth Godin's presentation on the spread of ideas (an idea I explore in my book Instructional Coaching ) shows that PowerPoint or Keynote slides can be great allies for presentations if they contain more images and fewer words. Second, Richard St. John's talk on the secrets of success shows that you can present a lot of information, quickly and effectively if you use a tight organizational structure. Finally, Peter Gabriel's talk on the witness program communicates the potential of video to promote worldwide awareness and learning.

The most important important message here, I suppose, is that if you've got something worthwhile to say, people will listen. Each of these presentations excites, inspires, and moves us to action, and that is a lot to accomplish in a brief presentation.

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