An educator I know recently asked what the role of an instructional coach should be when it comes to providing professional learning to administrators. I’ve given quite a bit of thought about this through the years. The instructional coach is in a perfect place to provide professional learning opportunities to administrators. We know what can be accomplished instructionally when technology is used well and with a purpose. However, my experience has been that as much as administrators want to see technology being used in their buildings, they are not quite sure what it should look like. I’ll never forget the Principal, who when asked if he was happy with how technology was being used in his building, responded with a “Yes, when I walk down the halls, I can see the rooms glowing (from the interactive whiteboards).” Yikes! That was a formative moment for me. I realized that although many educators get it, that is not always the case for everyone.
Now comes the question of how best to get the use of instructional technology on the radar of administrators.
Ideally, I think that all educators need to find ways to use these tools in
their everyday lives. I can almost guarantee you that if I show a new
father/mother/grandparent how to make a slideshow or movie of their
(grand)children’s pictures, blog about their hobby, create an interactive
Christmas card, customize their reading so that they receive articles and
alerts about their favorite teams or hobbies, I can get them to think about how
those same tools can be used for reading, writing, speaking, and listening
about content. Did you know that there are still, unfortunately, some districts
that do not allow school devices to be used for anything personal? Ugh.
Another approach is getting administrators to model for the
faculty. After all, unless there is a sense of urgency from administrators, we
are going to continue to see only pockets of excellence in any district.
Teachers are stressed with so many different initiatives; they are going to
pick and choose their priorities. I believe that administrators need to use
Google Docs, Padlet, Google Forms, OneNote Staff Notebooks and 1-take videos
to model effective communication,
collaboration, problem solving, self-regulation and knowledge construction
between and among faculty. Then, once the faculty has used these tools, the
faculty needs to have a facilitated conversation about how these tools can be
used in the classroom to promote critical thinking. Then, make a plan how each
subject area or grade is going to use it. The expectations needs to be
explicit. Ideally, I would sit with administrators as they design their faculty
meetings and communications, the things they do anyway, to recommend tools that
could be used most effectively. Most of the communication that happens in
faculty meetings could be done virtually. Why not do it? Then, use the time
together to have that conversation about how that tool we used for a virtual faculty
meeting could be used in the classroom.
The trick is getting in the door to make this happen. That
four-letter word is thrown at me – Virginia, if I only had the TIME.
Another piece of this is the ability of instructional coaches to
make the connections between initiatives and technology. I have heard, “Oh, we
can’t do technology this year, our focus is formative assessment or
differentiated instruction or literacy across the curriculum.” Huh? If we
continue to think of these things as silos, then the connections will never be
made. As coaches, we can work with administrators to see how the tools our
students have at their fingertips support formative assessment, differentiated
instruction, and literacy.
Having these conversations with administrators is not easy. They
have so much on their plate. The amount of time they spend on observations
overwhelms them. To make professional learning very practical, one of my
projects has been to work with administrators on taking a look at the Danielson
Framework to develop examples of effective uses of technology for each of the
components. It’s a work on progress – one this post reminds me I need to
return to.
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