Have you ever had a lesson go differently than you had planned? Almost every teacher I know would answer,
“YES” to that question. Having an
occasional lesson that flops isn’t a bad thing.
It can provide opportunity for reflection, feedback, and new learning. Just ask Katie Schafer, first grade teacher
at Linn-Grove Elementary.
Katie had a successful implementation with Seesaw in the spring of
last year, so in the fall she contacted both Jessica Zimmerman (Technology
Integration Coach) and Tiffany Kinzenbaw (Instructional Coach) to implement iPads
during reading rotations. With continued coaching interactions, Jessica and
Tiffany were able to support the integration of more technology into Katie’s
everyday routines. Rather than work in
isolation, the three professionals collaborated together during their coaching
cycles, capitalizing on collective intelligence. They truly were stronger together.
Katie was eager to learn about more technology, so she attended a TQSA
class for coding and robots, taught by Jessica, which is where she learned
about Bee-Bot. She was able to explore Bee-Bot in the class and then proceeded to
further explore Bee-Bot on her own time. When
searching for curriculum connections, she realized it would be a great tool to
enhance her next writing lesson. What
she found was that Bee-Bot was a catalyst to many things:
“What started out as an
experiment in programming has resulted in a springboard/explosion for the
students’ enthusiasm and engagement during writing. Every single student in my class was engaged
in writing, revising, and sharing a sequential story that involved Bee-Bot.
Their enthusiasm for writing has amazed me and I am more than excited for my
near daily collaborating mini-sessions with my Instructional Coach about the next
steps in guiding their learning.”
Another key piece to the successful coaching conversations was the impact on teacher reflection, teacher practice, and student learning. Katie was eager to receive feedback from students, which flowed over into students accepting feedback from their peers in regards to their writing and how they could make it better.
Giving constructive and timely feedback takes time. Once teachers make small tweaks to direct instruction and daily practice the payoff can be tenfold. In this case, Katie’s increased reflection impacted the learning environment for all students in her classroom.
"The students are willing to let their classmates make mistakes
without pointing them out. I can then guide them to give and receive
appropriate and helpful feedback."
The above quote is a great connection to the work Linn-Grove has also
been doing with Growth Mindset. Getting feedback
and using it in a positive way is a healthy way for students to continue
learning even with mistakes, or bumps in the road.
Throughout
this entire process, Katie has been open to the coaching cycles while being reflective
on her own learning. “After
teaming with my Instruction Coach and Technology Integration Coach for an
extended amount of time I find myself trying to coach myself through my lesson
planning. They both have a direct but helpful way of questioning what the
purpose of each aspect of the lesson or plan is."
The bottom
line for educators here is that Coaching really can impact everything we do
with and for students. We often hold the
answers we need to be more successful in our classrooms. Coaching helped Katie be a self-directed
learner, build her efficacy, and be more mindful of what work makes the
greatest impact on students.
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