Coaching and Teaching
Perhaps because I?ve never been a natural athlete and
never been on an athletic team, I?ve always hated the idea of coaches. I still
feel strong visceral contempt when, in a movie or play, a young athlete in
conversation with his family says something like, ?Coach says . . . .? Dropping
the definite article represents a sure sign of cultish devotion, unwarranted
Rasputinesque influence and the end of independent thinking. In my mind it?s
?the coach? or you?re an idiot. But then one of your closest friends sends you
an article from the New Yorker and you begin to reflect on the effectiveness of
the best teaching you?ve had and even such powerful attitudes can soften as a
deeper understanding of coaching takes hold.
To let myself off the hook a bit, I think I?ve always
been inclined toward learning through coaching, but simply had a deep prejudice
against the word. That, of course, also meant I maintained a powerful barrier
against learning what might lie behind mindfully reflecting on the word and
where those reflections might lead. For example, when I was invited to go to
Saudi Arabia and speak in September, I was given a choice of keynote topics ?
the Scholarship of Teaching and Learning or Peer Observation. I snapped up Peer
Observation as something I knew to be worthwhile and of direct benefit to
teaching faculty, whereas, though SoTL might foster reflection and lead to
better teaching, I?d found most of it to be as thin as French veneer without
any of its elegance. Way back in the 1970s as a TA I?d agitated to have myself
videotaped and persuaded faculty to review the tapes with me at a time when
neither was standard procedure and videotaping was a cumbersome affair. So, I
guess I?ve believed in
coaching all along. I?ve just had a chip on my shoulder about coaches.
The article my friend sent me ? ?Personal Best? by Atul
Gawande, appeared in the October 3 issue of the New Yorker in the ?Annals of
Medicine? department. Gawande is a surgeon and an associate professor of
medicine and public health at Harvard and author of the recent book The
Checklist Manifesto: How to Get Things Right. Nearing his mid-forties, Gawande
began to wonder if his skills as a surgeon were as good as they were ever going
to get. His rates of postsurgical complication had steadily declined as he?d
gained experience, but they?d hit a plateau. Then, on vacation, he happened to
spend an unexpected hour with a tennis pro whose few comments ended up
improving Gawande?s serve significantly even though he had thought his serve
was the strongest part of his game. That started Gawande on the course of
investigation and reflection that led to writing the article. He recounts how
coaching was seen as unsporting in nineteenth-century Britain (an attitude
beautifully dramatized in the film
?Chariots of Fire? about the 1924 Olympics) and how its embrace in America led
to consistent victories on athletic fields. He then inquired and discovered
that top musicians like violinist Itzhak Perlman and soprano Renee Fleming have
trusted coaches continually acting as their second, seasoned pairs of eyes and
ears helping them see and hear their performances and where their strengths and
weaknesses lie. This initially surprised Gawande. He?d assumed top musicians
operated as most doctors (and most faculty) do: once graduated they go on alone
and untutored.
Eventually, Gawande?s investigation led him to Jim Knight,
director of the Kansas Coaching Project at the University of Kansas. I?m
compressing a fine piece of writing I hope you?ll seek out and read for
yourself, but I want to expose you to some of Gawande?s most provocative
findings. Through Knight, Gawande became familiar with research on
teacher-skill development done in 80 schools in the 1980s that more than
supports the idea that coaching may be the best way to improve teaching. That
research found that workshops inspired teachers to make improvements in their
teaching only 10% of the time whereas coaching about the same skills led
teachers to adopt the changes in more than 90% of the cases. Moreover, the
coached teachers were more effective and their students did better on tests.
The open question at this point was what makes for good
coaching, since clearly all coaches aren?t effective. To explore the question
Knight agreed to let Gawande sit in on work being done with teachers in
Albermarle County, Virginia. Let me skip the ins and outs of the program there
and jump to the post-class session between coaches and the eighth-grade algebra
teacher visited, Jennie Critzer. The lesson that day had been about simplifying
radicals ? the square roots of 36 and 32 to begin with.
She?d done well. Gawande didn?t see how she could have
done better. She?d had students visualize, verbalize, and write out their
ideas. She?d shown good command of ?learning structures??lecturing,
problem-solving, cooperative learning, discussion. But the coaches said that
every teacher has something to work on. In this case they?d noticed that of the
20 students, four had seemed at sea. How might she have reached them?
Coaching about the class, however, did not begin with
that question. It began with the question: ?What worked?? Critzer, an
experienced teacher who simply wants to improve, had a good sense of what she?d
done well and anticipated the next question regarding what didn?t go well. She
had a sense of what needed attention there too ? the students who were adrift
and ?not getting it.? So the conversation immediately became one about what she
might do to reach them. Critzer quickly thought she might need to break the
concepts down more. Coaches prompted further thought about what else she might
do, which led to her thinking about how a previous class had been livelier,
more verbal. This connected with an observation the coaches had made that
boy-girl pairs had had difficulty with their math conversation working on
problems. And so the question then became how to help them become more verbal.
All of this underscores a key modality of effective
coaching ? conversation. Effective coaching depends on setting aside status and
making the matter at hand ? improved teaching ? the only concern. They speak
with credibility, as Gawande points out, but while credibility involves
?authority,? it also transcends it. We don?t always believe authorities. Belief
relies on trust and trust, of course, involves a willing vulnerability, an
exposure of self to criticism. It is an inherently intimate relationship not
everyone is willing to embrace. So, coaching, properly understood and executed,
is not the repellant surrender of identity I?d long associated with athletics,
not the shouting, cretinous commands of bullnecked former football stars. Gawande
maintains that coaching differs from teaching, but reading his exploration of
good coaching, it seems to me as though coaching is teaching at its very best.
The piece ends with Gawande making that embrace by
inviting a trusted retired surgeon, one of his former teachers, to come and
observe some of his surgeries. The experience took me back to peer observation
and what willing faculty might learn from it, and to ?Lesson Study? of the kind
Bill Cerbin describes in his recent book. Most of Gawande?s surgeries went
well; one did not. He learned a great deal, he reports, from both experiences.
One of the other presenters at the forum in Saudi Arabia
was a colleague from Scotland. That inspired me to end my keynote on Peer
Observation with a quote from Robert Burns?s ?To a Louse,? which I
vaingloriously delivered in a fine Scottish brogue: ?O would some power the
giftie give us to see ourselves as others see us.? Rhetorically, it was a flop,
but the point is a good one; we need others to help us see how we?re doing and
how we might do better. But they need to be people we fully trust, who care
about the same things we do. It turns out, that such people are all around us
if we will only reach out to them. As Steve Barkley says in one of the videos
on the Kansas Coaching Project website, ?Coaching really isn?t an activity;
it?s a culture.? Belief, trust, common interest: these are the economy.
Insights, improvement, personal fulfillment: these are the profits to be
shared.
Atul Gawande?s ?Personal Best?: http://www.newyorker.com/reporting/
2011/10/03/111003fa_fact_gawande
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