Opinion
School & District Management Opinion

A School-Improvement Guidebook: Embrace Honest Feedback

By Emily Moyes — June 11, 2018 4 min read
With her PLC and an instructional coach, one teacher can “focus on making things better”
  • Save to favorites
  • Print

Editor’s note: In this special Commentary project, a team of educators from Byron Nelson High School in Texas—a principal, an assistant principal, two instructional coaches, and one teacher—offer their perspectives on the difficulties and benefits of implementing the continuous-improvement model. Read all of the essays in the series.

As a third-year teacher I am always on the hunt for new methods of teaching and managing my classes. I want to find high-yield strategies and practices that will help my students succeed. My coach (Diane Caldwell), my assistant principal (Maggie Norris), and, most of all, my professional-learning community have helped mold me into the teacher I am today.

The members of my PLC complement each other’s talents and deficits and have very open conversations. The PLC is a place where we all feel that we can speak honestly about our work. I can let my PLC know when an activity bombed or when I rocked it in class. I can bring ideas and modifications and get honest feedback from my peers. Maggie comes as often as she can, and our instructional coach, Diane, is always there. Through my work in this group, I have seen firsthand how an instructional coach can help teachers improve in ways that directly help their students. The practices I have learned in my work with Diane have helped my students leave my classroom with a greater understanding of what they do and do not yet know.

Diane helps us stay on track when we start on tangents and provides an outside perspective, bringing resources or practices from across the school that have been effective for other PLCs. She stirs our creativity with questions to help us recognize what it is that we want for our teaching practice or how, specifically, we need to modify tools for our needs. Members of my PLC frequently have brief meetings in the hallway, where we can exchange failures, successes, and modifications, so that by the end of the day we are already better than we were in the morning.

Another advantage instructional coaches can offer is that they work closely across the school hierarchy. Diane meets frequently with school administrators and often knows what is coming down the pike. With her input, when we are planning out-of-class interventions, we know which days are reserved for other events that may not have been announced to teachers yet.

Because I see Diane frequently, I know she sees my heart and that I care about my students. If she comes to watch me teach a lesson and I fall on my face, I know that she knows I’m not lazy, not bad at my job, not a complete failure, but that things just didn’t go the way I planned. She can tell me that a lesson went terribly without making me feel that this one class will be etched into my permanent record.

I can focus on making things better for the next class period or the next year, with a trusty guide by my side.

Since she began coaching last year, Diane has emphasized to the teachers she works with that she is not evaluating us at all and that her goal is in line with ours: to make us better educators. It took us all a while to let her see our weaknesses, but since we began collaborating with her as our coach, my PLC members have improved as teachers by leaps and bounds.

She can tell me that a lesson went terribly without making me feel that this one class will be etched into my permanent record."

Diane brings cross-content ideas to us from other PLCs around the building. Some of these ideas I hadn’t considered or possibly wouldn’t have considered, but because she has implemented these classroom practices with other PLCs within the building, it is easier to trust and believe they will have the desired effect. Several techniques from the math department have proven useful to my work, including introducing peer evaluation, using a common grading rubric, or considering other options for grading formative assessments in Advanced Placement classes.

For example, under Diane’s guidance, my PLC has begun standardizing our grading practices for common assessments. Prior to this year, we exchanged ideas to plan the tasks and formative assessments we would use throughout a unit, but spent much less time discussing how we would grade them.

This year, we realized that each of us was grading the same free-response questions a little differently; emphasizing the importance of certain phrases or vocabulary or expecting a specific written format. Diane showed us the five-point rubric used on all free-response questions in Algebra I. She helped us think through the possible expectations that we can associate with each number. With this instructional support, our PLC was able to hammer out a standardized grading rubric for a unit’s free-response question in just 15 minutes. We also saved this approach to our online calendar, so we wouldn’t have to reinvent the wheel next year.

Diane has made us aware of a better practice, guided us through how to personalize it, and then had us discuss how this changed our students’ outcomes. She knows and has impressed upon us the importance of reflecting on new practices and recording them. We can now reference these pros, cons, and modifications in the future. Diane has made us better educators, because she holds us accountable, listens to our ideas, and brings in effective practices that we have not tried before.

Working with an instructional coach has made me a better teacher. She knows my strengths, weaknesses, and goals, and is committed to helping me learn, so that I can be better tomorrow than I was today.

< Instructional Coach Perspective

A School Improvement Guidebook: Cultivate Trust

Principal Perspective >

A School Improvement Guidebook: Empower Teachers

Coverage of continuous-improvement strategies in education is supported in part by a grant from the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, at www.gatesfoundation.org. Education Week retains sole editorial control over the content of this coverage.
A version of this article appeared in the June 13, 2018 edition of Education Week as A Young Teacher Embraces Honest Feedback

Events

This content is provided by our sponsor. It is not written by and does not necessarily reflect the views of Education Week's editorial staff.
Sponsor
Artificial Intelligence Webinar
Decision Time: The Future of Teaching and Learning in the AI Era
The AI revolution is already here. Will it strengthen instruction or set it back? Join us to explore the future of teaching and learning.
Content provided by HMH
This content is provided by our sponsor. It is not written by and does not necessarily reflect the views of Education Week's editorial staff.
Sponsor
School & District Management Webinar
Stop the Drop: Turn Communication Into an Enrollment Booster
Turn everyday communication with families into powerful PR that builds trust, boosts reputation, and drives enrollment.
Content provided by TalkingPoints
This content is provided by our sponsor. It is not written by and does not necessarily reflect the views of Education Week's editorial staff.
Sponsor
Special Education Webinar
Integrating and Interpreting MTSS Data: How Districts Are Designing Systems That Identify Student Needs
Discover practical ways to organize MTSS data that enable timely, confident MTSS decisions, ensuring every student is seen and supported.
Content provided by Panorama Education

EdWeek Top School Jobs

Teacher Jobs
Search over ten thousand teaching jobs nationwide — elementary, middle, high school and more.
View Jobs
Principal Jobs
Find hundreds of jobs for principals, assistant principals, and other school leadership roles.
View Jobs
Administrator Jobs
Over a thousand district-level jobs: superintendents, directors, more.
View Jobs
Support Staff Jobs
Search thousands of jobs, from paraprofessionals to counselors and more.
View Jobs

Read Next

School & District Management Heightened Immigration Enforcement Is Weighing on Most Principals
A new survey of high school principals highlights how immigration enforcement is affecting schools.
5 min read
High school students protest during a walkout in opposition to President Donald Trump's policies Tuesday, Jan. 20, 2026, in Los Angeles. A survey published in December shows how the Trump administration’s immigration enforcement agenda is upending educators’ ability to create stable learning environments as escalated enforcement depresses attendance and hurts academic achievement.
High school students protest during a walkout in opposition to President Donald Trump's immigration policies on Jan. 20, 2026, in Los Angeles. A survey published in December shows how the Trump administration’s immigration enforcement agenda is challenging educators’ ability to create stable learning environments.
Jill Connelly/AP
School & District Management ‘Band-Aid Virtual Learning’: How Some Schools Respond When ICE Comes to Town
Experts say leaders must weigh multiple factors before offering virtual learning amid ICE fears.
MINNEAPOLIS, MN, January 22, 2026: Teacher Tracy Byrd's computer sits open for virtual learning students who are too fearful to come to school.
A computer sits open Jan. 22, 2026, in Minneapolis for students learning virtually because they are too fearful to come to school. Districts nationwide weigh emergency virtual learning as immigration enforcement fuels fear and absenteeism.
Caroline Yang for Education Week
School & District Management Opinion What a Conversation About My Marriage Taught Me About Running a School
As principals grow into the role, we must find the courage to ask hard questions about our leadership.
Ian Knox
4 min read
A figure looking in the mirror viewing their previous selves. Reflection of school career. School leaders, passage of time.
Vanessa Solis/Education Week via Canva
School & District Management How Remote Learning Has Changed the Traditional Snow Day
States and districts took very different approaches in weighing whether to move to online instruction.
4 min read
People cross a snow covered street in the aftermath of a winter storm in Philadelphia, Monday, Jan. 26, 2026.
Pedestrians cross the street in the aftermath of a winter storm in Philadelphia on Jan. 26. Online learning has allowed some school systems to move away from canceling school because of severe weather.
Matt Rourke/AP