It's no secret that education leaders need solutions to combat pressing challenges such as the teacher shortage and inequities in educational outcomes.
Research shows instructional coaching is a unique lever to strengthen teacher practice and improve student outcomes. But with so many coaching solutions on the market, where do you start?
To evaluate whether instructional coaching is the right fit to achieve your school or district goals, let's start by defining coaching.
In her book, The Art of Coaching, Elena Aguilar says that coaching is not a way to enforce a program; it is not a tool to fix people; and it is not therapy.
So, what is coaching?
At PowerMyLearning, we define instructional coaching as one-on-one professional development to help teachers strengthen their teaching practices and improve student outcomes.
Jim Knight, founder of the Instructional Coaching Group, says, “Instructional coaches partner with teachers to analyze current reality, set goals, identify and explain teaching strategies to hit the goals, and provide support until the goals are met.”
Although coaching models vary widely, effective models share key characteristics. Education policy researchers Matthew A. Kraft, David Blazar, and Dylan Hogan determined that effective instructional coaching is:
1. Increasing Teacher Retention
With a growing teacher retention crisis facing the country, improving the support teachers receive should be a priority for school and district leaders.
In 2012, TNTP released a report that highlighted eight low-cost retention strategies. The study found that teachers who received two or more of these strategies, planned to remain teaching at their schools for nearly twice as long.
PowerMyLearning’s instructional coaching integrates several of these research-backed strategies including: providing regular, positive feedback to teachers; helping teachers identify areas of development; and giving informal critical feedback about performance.
2. Growing High-Quality Instruction
In addition to helping school leaders keep teachers in the classroom, coaching is one of the most effective ways to strengthen the quality of instruction students are receiving.
Coaching is one of the rare PD models that has been shown to improve teacher practice to the degree required to impact student-achievement outcomes. A 2018 meta-analysis of 60 studies showed that instructional coaching has large positive effects on both instructional practice and student achievement.
The meta-analysis found, “The quality of teachers’ instruction improves by as much as—or more than—the difference in effectiveness between a novice and a teacher with five to 10 years of experience.” This effect was stronger than that of traditional PD and most other school-based interventions.
3. Greater Equitable Student Outcomes
Research shows that instructional coaching can support equitable learning experiences.
Instructional coaching is a powerful tool for strengthening student engagement, supporting deep learning, and creating joyful, safe, and inclusive classroom environments for all learners.
PowerMyLearning’s instructional coaches incorporate five key attributes when teaming up with educators nationwide.
Team up with PowerMyLearning to support your educators with high-quality instructional coaching that has proven impact.
PowerMyLearning partner schools across the country that received coaching support:
Learn more about our instructional coaching program.