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Knight, Jim – Learning Professional, 2019
Engagement is an essential part of a meaningful life, no less so for students than for adults. Students who are in healthy relationships are engaged by their friends and family. Students who are productive learners engage in learning activities. Most important, students who stay in school do so because they are engaged. Coaches should play a role…
Descriptors: Coaching (Performance), Learner Engagement, Teacher Improvement, Student Behavior
Knight, Jim – Educational Leadership, 2018
When opportunities to learn present themselves, often teachers will turn away from them. Knight calls this the Zero-Learning Zone, a rut that educators can get in and miss out on professional growth. He offers warning signs for when you're in the Zero-Learning Zone and tips on how to avoid it to go on to lead a fulfilling, knowledge-filled life.
Descriptors: Faculty Development, Teacher Improvement, Educational Opportunities, Educational Methods
Knight, Jim; Elford, Marti; Hock, Michael; Dunekack, Devona; Bradley, Barbara; Deshler, Donald D.; Knight, David – Journal of Staff Development, 2015
In this article the authors describe a three-step instructional coaching cycle that can helps coaches become more effective. The article provides the steps and related components to: (1) Identify; (2) Learn; and (3) Improve. While the instructional coaching cycle is only one effective coaching program, coaches also need professional learning that…
Descriptors: Coaching (Performance), Teacher Improvement, Teacher Competencies, Teaching Skills
Knight, Jim – School Administrator, 2006
The number of school districts using instructional coaches is growing at a staggering rate. Coaching is becoming popular, in part, because many educational leaders recognize the old form of professional development, built around traditional in-service sessions for teachers, simply does not affect student achievement. By offering support, feedback,…
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Faculty Development, School Districts, Tutors
Knight, Jim – Principal Leadership, 2005
The pressure to improve the quality of instruction in schools may be higher today than at any other time in the history of U.S. education. To respond to this urgent demand, schools across the nation are hiring instructional coaches (ICs), even though there is little published research that shows what works and what does not work when it comes to…
Descriptors: Teaching Methods, Principals, Academic Achievement, Teacher Improvement
Knight, Jim – Journal of Staff Development, 2004
Teachers don't resist change, the author suggests, they resist programs that call for change without support. This Topeka, Kan., program added full-time instructional coaches to middle schools and found that teachers, with the coaches' support and time, adopted new practices that affected student learning.
Descriptors: Middle Schools, Tutors, Teacher Improvement, Instructional Leadership
Knight, Jim – 2000
This study examined the attitudes of middle and high school teachers and administrators about one unsuccessful professional development session. Participant interviews asked: What is a typical day like for you, from when you get up until when you retire? What are your memories of the presentation? Where do you think the hostility at the session…
Descriptors: Collegiality, Educational Environment, Faculty Development, High Schools