Preface
Introduction: Why Develop a Mentor-Coaching System?
Selecting a Model for Early Literacy Mentor-Coaching
Finding Financial Resources for Early Literacy Mentor-Coaching
Selecting and Matching Mentor-Coaches
Orienting and Training Mentor-Coaches
Linking Early Literacy Mentor-Coaching To Your Program's Management Systems
Developing Your Mentor-Coaching System – A Planning Tool
References
Preface
The Steps to Success Decision Makers Guide has been written for you—Head Start leaders, managers, and Policy Councils. You strive to build systems that provide staff with the resources and support they need to succeed in their work. You seek effective ways to develop the skills and knowledge of new and experienced staff. Most of all, you look for strategies that reflect the Head Start Child Outcomes Framework and can help staff provide rich early learning experiences for children. Building a mentor-coaching system can help you achieve all of these goals, and more.
The Head Start Bureau envisions a model of staff support that includes both mentoring and coaching strategies. In this model, Mentor-Coaches guide protégés to reflect on and analyze their work with children and families. They also help protégés to connect new research and current theory to their practice. With protégés, Mentor-Coaches actively explore new approaches for supporting children's growth in key early learning domains. They coach protégés as they try new or complex strategies. Above all, Mentor-Coaches help protégés stay focused on how their practice impacts child outcomes.
Warm, highly-skilled Mentor-Coaches play a huge role in an effective system. As is true with all learning, strong relationships make mentoring possible. Staff form close bonds with experts or skilled peers who guide them in finding new ways to support children's learning. But, Mentor-Coaches do not bear the sole responsibility. As decision makers, you can "make or break" effective mentoring with the systems that you create.
There is no "one-size-fits-all" approach to mentor-coaching. There are, however, some important steps you can take to assure that your program provides effective mentor-coaching. In this guide, you will find a wealth of hands-on tips and tools that will help you build strong systems to support your Mentor-Coaches and help this powerful strategy work for you.

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About Steps to Success
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This Decision Maker Guide
is part of Steps to Success: An
Instructional Design for Early Literacy Mentor-Coaches in Head
Start and Early Head Start. Steps
to Success is designed to support the ongoing
mentor-coaching initiative in programs. Steps to Success includes the
development of training materials and other resources that
draw upon current research and effective practices related to
staff development and early literacy. The project is supported
through STEP-Net (http://www.step-net.org), the
communication network available to the Mentor-Coach community.
Steps to Success includes a multi-unit
training package for Mentor-Coaches; this Decision Maker
Guide; the STEP-Line (1-877-COACH 04, or 1-877-262-2404) a
support telephone line for mentor-coaching; and a newsletter,
STEP-Notes , which features information about effective
approaches to mentor-coaching and experiences from the field.
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Introduction
Why
Develop A Mentor-Coaching System?
Across the country, Head Start
programs are using mentor-coaching to support staff. The Bureau is
invested in this strategy as a way to improve child outcomes.
Research supports this belief. Studies show that mentoring builds on
protégés' actual practice and provides richer learning than one-time
workshops. It can also complement staff member's higher education
studies.
Research also pinpoints
content-focused coaching as an effective way to foster staff's
growth. With Mentor-Coaches' support, staff apply knowledge as they
acquire it. They identify goals to enrich children's learning. They
explore new content, reflect, and problem-solve. They have chances
to learn, grow, and share what they know in a supportive
environment. All of these are essential parts of effective lifelong
learning.
Mentor-coaching has great
potential to strengthen Head Start. Staff become involved in their
own growth. They also become change agents. With their mentors, they
partner in improving child outcomes. Together, they assess and
enhance children's learning. Steps to
Success mentor-coaching focuses on early language and literacy.
But, your program can use the strategy to build staff capacity in
any early learning domain.
A
Guide to the Guide
In the pages that follow, we
provide you with information to guide you in creating strong,
effective early literacy mentor-coaching systems. Even if you
already have a system in place, we hope that the information in the
following five sections will help you continue to strengthen your
system.
- Selecting a Model
for Early Literacy Mentor-Coaching. Here you will find a
detailed description of the different approaches to
mentor-coaching. This information will help you design and/or
modify your model and its oversight systems.
- Finding Financial
Resources for Early Literacy Mentor-Coaching. In this
section, you will learn about different sources of support for
your system. You will gain a good overview of sources, as well as
tips on how to access them.
- Selecting and
Matching Mentor-Coaches. This section will engage you in
thinking about the criteria you currently use or will develop to
select Mentor-Coaches. You will learn more about the
characteristics of effective Mentor-Coaches and selection
processes. You will also explore considerations for matching
Mentor-Coaches with protégés.
- Orienting and
Training Mentor-Coaches. In this section, you will gain
insight into the types of support and resources that help
Mentor-Coaches succeed in their work with staff. You can use this
section to re-examine your current or proposed Mentor-Coach
orientation and training practices.
- Linking Early Literacy Mentor-Coaching to Your
Program's Management Systems. Here you will find
effective strategies to connect your mentor-coaching effort with
existing management systems. You will also find resources to
support planning, evaluation, and resource allocation.

1. Selecting a
Model for Early Literacy Mentor-Coaching
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"Choosing a
mentor-coaching model for our program was quite a process. We
learned that there is definitely not a "one- size-fits-all"
approach." Head Start
Director |
One of the first steps in
designing a Mentor-Coach system is to select a model that is a good
fit for your program. You can begin this selection process by
considering these questions:
- Will our model include an additional cadre of
staff that function purely as Mentor-Coaches?
- Will we combine the
Mentor-Coach function with other job responsibilities?
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Assembling a planning
team for this work is a good strategy. This leadership team
may include:
- Program managers
- Policy group
representatives
- Key staff members
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The answers to these questions
are influenced by the needs, resources, and characteristics of your
program. When you meet with the leadership team to explore your
options, discuss these factors that can impact your choice of a
model:
- Program philosophy – Your
program may have a philosophy of supervision that encompasses
mentor-coaching. This is especially true if your program uses
reflective supervision where current supervisors are already
providing mentor-coaching support to staff. Or, your program may
strongly believe that supervision and mentoring are separate and
distinct functions that cannot be combined. (See page 24 of the
Head Start publication, Putting the PRO
in Protégé for more information on supervisors and mentors.)
- Organizational capacity –
Your program may already have a multi-layer structure for staff
support (education managers, coordinators, and site supervisors).
Given that structure, you may decide that shifting or re-defining
roles of existing staff to focus on mentor-coaching may be the
best option.
- Financial resources –
Keeping the mentor-coaching and supervision functions separate
usually means adding a new group of staff. Even if your program
considers this the best approach, the budget may not support
additional hiring.
Your Head Start colleagues
across the country are typically using one of three mentor-coaching
models. Depending on your current realities, one of these models may
be a good choice for your program.
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Three commonly-used
models for mentor-coaching in Head Start:
- Supervisors as
Mentor-Coaches
- Mentor-Coaches as
mentors only
- Peer teachers as
Mentor-Coaches
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Supervisors as
Mentor-Coaches. Existing supervisors incorporate
mentoring and coaching strategies into their work. They use
strength-based approaches and reflective practices.
This model allows for
building in-depth relationships between the Mentor-Coach and the
protégé. The supervisor as Mentor-Coach can provide a comprehensive
level of support to protégés. They focus on all areas of the
individual's professional development. Thus, they are able to get
the full picture of protégés' strengths and areas for improvement.
Combining the role of the supervisor and Mentor-Coach also helps to
keep lines of communication and accountability clear.
You may encounter resistance
from supervisors who feel that mentor-coaching is an add-on to their
long list of responsibilities. Helping Mentor-Coaches and protégés
understand and accept new roles and responsibilities is key to the
success of this model. You must allot sufficient time for
supervisors who are Mentor-Coaches to meet frequently with staff.
Depending on your current structure, this may mean adding hours to
the supervisor positions or even adding more supervisors to your
staff. Carefully consider a ratio of Mentor-Coaches to protégés that
will allow for this expanded role.
Mentor-Coaches as
Mentors Only. Programs hire additional staff or
consultants as Mentor-Coaches. The role of the Mentor-Coach in this
model is to help protégés build their language and literacy
practices. Supervisors continue to fulfill the evaluative role.
The addition of these
Mentor-Coaches defines mentor-coaching in a clear-cut way. This
model usually increases the frequency and intensity of support to
protégés. The absence of evaluation may help to lessen the anxiety
of protégés. It may also take less time to develop the critical
trusting relationship between Mentor-Coaches and protégés.
When adding this extra layer
of staff support, you must carefully define the overlapping roles
and responsibilities of Mentor-Coaches and supervisors. You must
also establish clear lines of communication and accountability among
Mentor-Coaches, supervisors, and protégés. Section 5 provides you
with some guidelines for effective communication.
You may be challenged to find
the financial resources to fund this model. To add this new group of
staff, you must either secure supplemental funding or adjust your
current budget. See Section 2 for further information about funding.
Peer Teachers as
Mentor-Coaches. Programs use experienced and
knowledgeable teachers as Mentor-Coaches. These teachers have
teaching responsibilities for their own classrooms in addition to
their Mentor-Coach work.
This model can help to build
a sense of teamwork among teachers. Teachers as Mentor-Coaches are
often seen as credible in the eyes of their peers. The Mentor-Coach
and protégé relationship is built on the mutual understanding and
respect that results from doing the same job. There is a sense of
"being in this together."
You can guard against the
resentment that staff members sometimes feel when a peer is given
special recognition or a promotion by involving all teachers in
nominating candidates for peer mentors and by carefully making
Mentor-Coach and protégé assignments. The Matching Mentor-Coaches and Protégés
chart in Section 3 outlines factors to consider when making
Mentor-Coach-protégé matches.
You have an opportunity to
create or expand your program's career ladder with this model. You
can offer another avenue for the professional growth of experienced
teachers. This may be very appealing to teachers who are not ready
to take on a supervisory or management role yet are seeking a new
challenge.
You need to consider the
budget implications of this model. Teachers who are also
Mentor-Coaches will need to have sufficient release time from their
own classrooms to fulfill this role. You may need to add additional
substitute coverage. Also, you may want to explore funding for pay
increases or stipends for the Mentor-Coaches.
As you can see, choosing a
model for mentor-coaching is somewhat complex. Involving your
program's leadership team in this decision-making process will help
you to arrive at the best conclusion.

2. Finding
Financial Resources for Early Literacy Mentor-Coaching
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"Our mentor-coaching system is an
investment in our staff. Our teachers now see themselves as
real professionals. They are proud of their work and as a
result, our retention rates have improved
significantly." Mentor-Coach |
Your program's Head Start
teachers, supervisors, managers, leaders, and parents have all
agreed that launching a mentor-coaching system will help bolster
your program's language and literacy goals. No matter which of the
three mentor-coaching models you have selected, you quickly come to
the realization that you will need to gather additional resources to
build an effective system. As you prepare to seek new funding
sources, pursuit and persistence will be key factors in your
success.
Pursuit.
Begin by learning as much as possible about possible
funders and their initiatives—we give you some "leads" later in this
section. Subscribe to and watch for funding announcements. Regularly
search key websites for information and funding announcements. One
place to start is the National Child Care Information Center
website: http://www.nccic.org/poptopics/funding-opportunities.html.
Set your sights on a particular funder or funding initiative and
pursue it. If possible, maintain contact with the funder, building a
relationship with them. Talk with them about your ideas and the
importance of a Mentor-Coach system for improving quality and child
outcomes. Keep detailed files of information about your efforts:
dates when you've had conversations with particular funders,
funders' interests and questions, and follow-up information and
contacts you need. Pursuit usually pays off and helps to spur the
support your mentor-coaching funding initiative needs.
Persistence .
As you work to secure additional funding, you may find that
your initial efforts to acquire new resources fall short. It is
critical to stay engaged even when a potential funder or
collaborator says, "Sorry, we can't..." In seeking any new
resources, your determination is often a measure of the effort's
success. If you do not succeed at first, don't give up—try again!
Look for ways to strengthen your efforts to secure funding. Consider
securing the support of an influential colleague or community member
to help promote the importance of a mentor-coaching system with
particular funders. Or, you may need to refine or even rewrite an
unsuccessful funding request sent to a new funder and resubmit it a
second or even third time.
Below, you will find some
possible funding strategies that you might want to pursue (and
persist in pursuing) to get your program's Mentor-Coach system well
established.
Partnerships. As you consider ways to
financially support your program's mentor-coaching goals, be sure to
examine how you might partner with child care, pre-kindergarten, or
nearby Head Start programs to advance a mentor-coaching effort.
Think big. While partnering initiatives take careful planning and
significant time to be successful, their payoff is great. For
example, partnerships can launch community-wide mentoring efforts
that help to advance and align staff member's teaching practices
across all early education programs. As you begin to organize a
community effort with other programs to seek needed funding, you
might discuss with your partners ways to blend existing resources to
secure a mentor who can work across your programs. Often by blending
limited resources, partnering programs can hire a full-time,
highly-qualified mentor.
Municipal funding. Many cities and towns
have a process for community programs to submit funding requests to
the municipalities' decision makers. Talk or write to your
community's leaders—the mayor, town council chairperson, school
board official, to learn more about any available funding
opportunities. Municipal decision makers will be more receptive to
your request if you can establish a partnership with other public
schools or early childhood education programs in your area and
demonstrate how the mentoring initiative can benefit several of the
early childhood programs in your community.
Local and/or state foundations. Early
childhood education and services to improve educational
opportunities for disadvantaged populations remain a priority for
many foundations. Learn about foundations that target your state—
find links to many regional associations of grantmakers at
http://fdncenter.org/funders/grantmaker/gws_comm/comm.html
Your local library will also
likely have a foundation directory. Visit the foundations' websites
to check out their priorities, funding cycles, the amount of the
average funding awards, and submission specifications. You may also
want to find out about other projects the foundation has funded.
Consider contacting the recipients of those grants to learn more
about their approach to soliciting foundation support and the
particular foundation that supports their effort.
Other local sources. You may also want to
check with your local Chamber of Commerce; service clubs such as
Rotary or Kiwanis clubs; and corporate community (giving) programs
associated with local banks, insurance companies, and large
corporations.
Head
Start funding opportunities. Watch for Requests for Proposals
(RFPs) from the Head Start Bureau or your region's Administration
for Children and Families (ACF) Head Start Office under which your
ideas for a mentor-coaching system might fit. Head Start directors
should talk with their ACF program specialists about financial needs
related to mentor-coaching. Specialists may have ideas to share and
alert directors to upcoming ACF funding opportunities.
State funding opportunities. Many states
maintain e-mail lists that alert interested stakeholders to funding
opportunities. Be sure that you are included on state e-mail lists
or that you regularly search state websites for funding
announcements. You might also want to maintain contact with groups
in your state that stay abreast of such opportunities. When funding
announcements are released, read them to determine their viability
for funding your Mentor-Coach initiative. Many initiatives are
established to improve learning outcomes for children, so be sure to
link your initiative to improved child outcomes and establish
systems for monitoring results of these searches.
U.S.
Department of Education language and literacy initiatives. Many
funding opportunities currently available through the U.S.
Department of Education could easily incorporate mentor-coaching.
Department of Education-funded programs such as Early Reading First,
and the Early Childhood Educator Professional Development programs
all focus on enhanced early language and literacy efforts in which
mentor-coaching strategies can help support the particular
initiative's goals. Your community may already have funding for one
or more of these initiatives. Find out how you may become part of
the effort and explore ways that a Mentor-Coach initiative could be
woven into the next request for funding. If there is no funding in
your community, read the U.S. Department of Education's funding
announcements to determine if a Mentor-Coach initiative might be
included in the request. Establish or join a community effort to be
part of a funding request.

3. Selecting
and Matching Mentor-Coaches
"Not everyone is capable of mentoring,
even if they have a lot of knowledge. They need to be open
regarding where the protégé is in her career." Teacher |
Your careful selection of
Mentor-Coaches—whether from your own program, from among local
consultants, or from a local college or university—is critical to
establishing an effective program. The work of content-focused
Mentor-Coaches is complex. As they plan and implement their
interactions with protégés, Mentor-Coaches must draw on knowledge of
child and adult development, practical expertise in language and
literacy teaching, and skills in working with adult learners. In
addition, the personal characteristics that contribute to building
trusting relationships are key to the success of Mentor-Coaches.
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Characteristics:
- Professional Knowledge and Skill
- Functional Skills
- Personal
Dispositions
|
Characteristics of
Successful Mentor-Coaches As you develop your program,
consider the following characteristics of successful Mentor-Coaches.
Professional
knowledge and skill. Deep knowledge of language and literacy
teaching and learning is essential if your Mentor-Coaches are to be
respected and effective. They must be familiar with the most current
research and understand how that research can be translated into
classroom instruction. A thorough understanding of topics such as
promoting children's oral language, encouraging early writing,
teaching concepts of print, and building phonological awareness are
all important as is the capacity to assess children's development
and measure child outcomes in all of these areas.
Functional skills. As experienced
teachers, Mentor-Coaches will model best practice for their
protégés. Mentor-Coaches must have skills however, that stretch
beyond being good teachers. They must be able to apply their
professional knowledge to work with adult learners. The capacity to
observe classroom practice and analyze those observations is central
to the success of their work and to their ability to help the
protégé in setting goals. In addition, they must use their
understanding of adult development as they translate their
observations into thought-provoking questions and design other
interventions that will support individual protégé's growth. They
must be able to raise difficult issues with the protégé in a
productive manner.
Personal dispositions. The personal skills
of your Mentor-Coaches are also crucial to their success. They will
need to communicate self-confidence and at the same time be open to
other perspectives and to continued learning about the complexities
of teaching young children. Friendliness, empathy, and respect for
their protégés must be balanced with an ability to maintain focus
and productivity in their interactions and to individualize
according to the learning styles and background of each protégé.
While recognizing individual styles, Mentor-Coaches must also help
protégés to focus on child outcomes.
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In selecting a candidate, you should
consider two issues only: Capability—what the candidate can
do—and personality—what the candidate is like. Of these two,
personality is by far the most important. Over 87 percent of
all people fail not because of capability but because of
personality. (Staley et al.
1986). |
The Selection
Process. Putting the PRO in
Protégé outlines a four step selection process for mentoring
programs. They recommend: a formal application, recommendations by
previous colleagues and supervisors, a formal observation in each
candidate's classroom (assuming they are currently teaching), and a
selection committee that reviews applications, interviews, and
selects the mentors. While these are all important components of a
selection process, you should start by thinking about the
characteristics that you are looking for and believe are essential
to your program. With these characteristics in mind you can develop
a job description and tailor a selection process that is focused on
finding the candidates that are best qualified for the job as you
have defined it. (See page 14 for a sample job description.) As you
develop your selection process, consider incorporating some of the
following ideas: 1
Examining professional skills. Reviewing
candidates' resumes will give you important information about their
academic background and current training in language and literacy.
In order to capture a picture of their ability to translate theory
into practice, do an observation in their classroom using a tool
that is focused on literacy teaching. Use an interview to ask
questions about their understanding of language and literacy
teaching and learning. Think about the aspects of literacy
development that are particularly important to you and ask questions
about those. For example you might ask, "What are the most important
ways that you build children's vocabulary and why are these
effective strategies?" Or, "What should young children be learning
about writing? What are some of the ways you help them learn this?"
Examining functional skills. If your
candidates have worked in some capacity with adults, recommendations
from colleagues can provide important information about the skills
they bring. Explain the skills you are looking for and ask for
written recommendations to address them. In addition, engage
candidates in an interview in which you pose hypothetical situations
with protégés and ask how they would respond. “What if your protégé
responds defensively when you suggest new book reading strategies?”
Or, “What would you do if your protégé cancels two meetings in a
row?” Ask the Mentor-Coach candidates to engage in a role play of a
meeting with a protégé.
Personal dispositions. Colleague
recommendations can also address dispositions, especially if you are
clear about what you are looking for. Responses to situational
questions will give you some of this information, also. When you ask
applicants to explain why they would use particular approaches,
their responses will reveal the underlying attitudes and beliefs
that influence their work with adults. Further questioning can add
more information. Try questions like: "Describe the best
mentor/supervisor you have ever had." "Describe your style of
working with other adults." "What qualities do you have that will
contribute to successful mentoring?" "What do you hope to learn from
this experience?"
Matching
Mentor-Coaches and Protégés. The compatibility between
a protégés and Mentor-Coaches is a key factor in their ability to
form and sustain a trusting personal relationship. In ideal
circumstances, decision makers have a number of highly qualified
Mentor-Coaches to choose from when considering a
Mentor-Coach-protégé match. In most Head Start programs, however,
the pool of potential Mentor-Coaches may be limited. If you are
responsible for linking Mentor-Coaches to protégés, there are steps
that you can take to promote a positive Mentor-Coach and protégé
match. In the chart that follows, we have identified a number of
typical protégé characteristics that can influence relationships
with Mentor-Coaches. You may want to refer to this chart as you
consider your Mentor-Coach and protégé matches.
1Interview
approaches are adapted from Chalufour, I. (1993) Effective Hiring Practices: A Look at
Personality, Attitudes, and Skills. Newton, MA: Education
Development Center, Inc. (Go back)
MATCHING
MENTOR-COACHES AND PROTÉGÉS
|
If the protégé
is: |
If possible,
choose a Mentor-Coach who: |
In all cases,
the Mentor-Coach should : |
|
A new teacher or home
visitor |
Can direct teachers toward appropriate
policies and procedures. |
Become proficient about the policies and
procedures in order to direct the teacher, particularly around
language and literacy goals. |
|
An experienced teacher
or home visitor |
Has had extensive experience in
classrooms and understands classroom challenges. |
Allow plenty of time for teachers to
share their experiences and then build on them to address
current language and literacy goals. |
|
A second language
learner |
Speaks the second language. |
Understand second language development.
Take it slow and allow plenty of time for the protégé to
respond to new information if there is a language barrier.
|
|
Quiet/shy |
Has a supportive, non-threatening
demeanor |
Assess own general demeanor, discuss with
colleague adjustments that might help. Videotape self to
ensure proper demeanor. When conferencing, allow time to warm
up before starting. |
|
Young/Mature |
Is
a similar age or older than the protégé. |
Recognize age differences and that there
is much to learn from each other. |
|
Open to new learning
|
Has the ability to challenge the protégé
appropriately. |
Ask many questions to learn where the
protégé's interests and strengths are. What has the protégé
been successful learning in the past? |
|
Challenged by change
|
Understands the change process. |
Help the protégé become more comfortable
with change. Ask the protégé to imagine and describe what she
will be doing in 5 years, or other alternative methods to get
the protégé to think “outside of the box” about different
practices. |
|
Not from the program's
dominant culture |
Belongs to the protégé's culture. |
Learn about the culture by talking with
the protégé and others, and through self study.
|
Sample Job Description
Title: Early Literacy Mentor Coach
(Mentor-Coach)
Hours: 40 hours per week, X weeks per
year
Report to: Education Manager
Responsibilities
General:
Each Mentor-Coach will be
responsible for supporting and engaging program staff, in individual
and small group formats, building their capacity to promote the
early language and literacy development of children in their
classrooms or homes, including within the context of the Head Start
Child Outcomes Framework. Mentor-Coaches will be an integral part of
this program's literacy initiative, coordinating work with the other
aspects of this initiative including: the in-service training
program, the library and technology development project, the family
literacy program, and program monitoring and evaluation.
Specific
activities:
- Recognize existing strengths of protégés
and build positive, reflective mentor-coaching relationships.
- Plan and conduct individual reflective
conferences with each protégé twice a month. Activities must focus
on the protégé's goals and should include: observation and
conferencing, modeling and co-teaching, guided live or videotaped
observation of other classrooms, sharing resources, and
journaling.
- Bring protégés together for in-person or
on-line guided discussion once each month. Use readings, video
tapes, or curriculum planning tasks to focus discussion in which
protégés share their experiences and thinking with each other.
- Participate in monthly Mentor-Coach
meetings and trainings. Come to meetings prepared to share
promising practices and current challenges.
- Provide monthly documentation of work
with protégés and submit to Education Manager one week prior to
each Mentor-Coach meeting.
- Contribute to efforts or other aspects of
literacy initiative as requested. This will include helping to
plan an in-service training program as it relates to early
literacy, suggesting resources for the library and technology
development project, and supporting protégés' work with families
around literacy. Conduct formal evaluations of classroom practice
as a part of the program's annual self-assessment.
Background and Qualifications:
Minimum of BA degree in Early
Childhood or related field with documented recent training in early
literacy.
Knowledge of and experience
in:
- Head Start Program Performance Standards
and Child Outcomes Framework
- Working with adult learners
- Early literacy development, child
assessment, and teaching
- Working with diverse learners.

4. Orienting
and Training Mentor-Coaches
A carefully planned ongoing
process of orienting, training, and supporting your mentors will be
essential to the success of your program. Putting the PRO in Protégé devotes a whole
chapter to this subject. Use this valuable resource as you think
through the content of your training and the ways you will provide
ongoing support to your mentors.
Steps to Success: An Instructional Design for
Early Literacy Mentor-Coaches in Head Start and Early Head
Start is another valuable resource for you to use. This
four-unit program includes training in skills essential to
Mentor-Coaches as well as reviews of key concepts in early literacy
teaching and learning. Both Putting the PRO
in Protégé and Steps to
Success include references to other resources that you
will find helpful.
Whatever resources you are
using, you will need to adapt them to the specific needs and unique
characteristics of your program. As you develop your Mentor-Coach
training program, be sure to take the following steps:
Make the Goals and
Expectations of Your Mentoring Program Explicit. An
important aspect of your Mentor-Coach orientation will be creating a
common vision of what you want to accomplish and each person's
responsibilities in relation to achieving these goals. Many programs
use signed agreements between Mentor-Coaches and their protégés to
ensure that responsibilities are understood. See a sample agreement
on page
18.
Emphasize the Content
Focus of this Work. An understanding of the teaching
practices that effectively promote children's literacy development
is essential to the success of your program. Be sure that your
training provides a vision of the early literacy teaching that
reflects your program's goals.
Provide Time To Build
Functional Skills. While your mentors may have
experience supervising, teaching, or mentoring adults, they may
never have had training in the skills required to do this
effectively. Practices that encourage teacher reflection are not
easy to adopt without some training and practice. Be sure to include
role plays, analysis of video conferences, and reflection on their
own work as they begin to mentor. These practical and analytical
experiences will help your mentors develop these skills.
Address the Needs of
the Mentors You Have Hired. It is unlikely that you
will be able to find mentors with all of the knowledge and skills
you are seeking. Steps to Success has
self-assessments in each of the four units that address the literacy
content of that unit and are keyed to suggested resources. Each unit
also guides Mentor-Coaches through a reflection of their
mentor-coaching skills. Mentor-Coaches complete the process by
completing or revising their own Professional Development Plan.
Mentor your
Mentors. Getting your program off to a good start is
going to be key to your success. Put procedures in place that will
ensure close communication with and monitoring of mentors' work.
Work with them to develop goals for their growth based on their
Professional Development Plan. Provide resources and ongoing support
in the same way that you are expecting them to work with their
protégés. Look for clues that they are having problems. Are their
protégés cooperating with them? Are they using a variety of
approaches to support the protégé's growth? Are their reports on
time and providing you a picture of content-rich work with their
protégés? Address issues before they become habits.
Establish a Mentor
Library. There are many print, video, and electronic
resources that Mentor-Coaches can use for ongoing support. Work with
your Mentor-Coaches to gather resources that they can use to support
their own development and that of their protégés. Look for lists of
relevant mentoring and literacy resources at the end of this
document and each Steps to Success
unit. Each issue of STEP-Notes, the
Steps to Success electronic newsletter
posted on Head Start's STEP-Net (www.step-net.org ), also contains a list of
relevant resources.
Sample: Mentor Coach and Protégé Agreement
This agreement describes:
- The relationship of the Mentor-Coach and
the protégé.
- The responsibilities that each share in
this partnership.
The Mentor-Coach agrees to:
- Develop an individualized mentoring plan with
the protégé that includes early literacy-related goals related to
improved child outcomes, steps for achieving goals, and the
Mentor-Coach's and protégé's responsibilities related to each
step.
- Engage protégé in ongoing evaluation of
progress toward goals.
- Schedule, plan, and facilitate two onsite
visits with protégé (three-hour minimum) per month. Incorporate
observation and conferencing into visits regularly. Model early
literacy teaching practices and co-teach with protégé according to
the mentoring plan.
- Provide other forms of support in relation to
protégé goals (e.g., sharing resources, collaborative planning,
and journaling).
- Recognize the value of the protégé's time by
keeping appointments and honoring start and ending times for
meetings.
- Keep work with the
individual protégé confidential, sharing only the general
information required in a reporting system. Obtain protégé's
explicit permission to share information with others.
The Protégé agrees to:
- Actively engage in goal setting and planning
with the Mentor-Coach.
- Arrange availability for two monthly onsite
visits with the Mentor-Coach.
- Fulfill responsibilities agreed to in the
planning process in a timely way.
- Contribute to ongoing assessment of progress
toward goals.
I have read the Mentor-Coach
and Protégé Agreement.
I have had an opportunity to
ask questions about the responsibilities that are described in the
agreement.
I understand my
responsibilities as a Mentor-Coach or protégé.
|
|
| Signature—Mentor-Coach |
Date |
|
|
| Signature—Protégé |
Date |

5. Linking
Early Literacy Mentor-Coaching To Your Program's Management
Systems
|
"When we integrated mentoring into our
program, it had a ripple effect that impacted everything we
do. The result was not just improvement in classroom
practice--our communication with parents is better, our
recordkeeping is more mindful and systematic, and our staff
now see that research has real relevance to their practice and
consequently to child outcomes." Head Start
Director |
Many programs try out
mentoring through a small pilot project. They hire or promote one or
two mentors to work with new teachers or a pilot center. They then
collect data to see how well mentoring supports the program's
teachers and services to children. Some programs even conduct a
formal evaluation. They usually do not, however, change their
written policies, plans, and procedures right away.
If your program expands your
pilot mentoring project or launches a new permanent, program-wide
mentoring effort, however, you and other decision makers will need
to build the project into your management system and written plans.
We have already explored mentor-coaching's place within some aspects
of the Human Resources and Fiscal Management systems. In the
sections that follow, we look at ways that you can connect your
mentoring efforts to several of your other systems.
| Mentor-coaching's new
relationships may challenge your program's existing ideas
about communication and confidentiality. |
Communication. Mentor-coaching
introduces new kinds of relationships to your Head Start program.
These relationships may challenge your program's existing ideas
about communication and confidentiality. This is especially true
when the Mentor-Coach is not the protégé's supervisor.
Consider the following
examples:
- A peer mentor observes her protégé in an
action that goes against program policies. She wants to share her
observation with the supervisor, but worries about losing the
protégé's trust.
- A non-supervising Mentor-Coach has not been
able to help the protégé to change an inappropriate or harmful
behavior. She would like to ask for the supervisor's help, but
worries about breaking confidentiality.
- The supervisor asks the Mentor-Coach to
evaluate and report on the protégé's skills. The Mentor-Coach
feels uncomfortable with the request, but worries about losing her
position if she doesn't cooperate.
- The protégé feels that the
Mentor-Coach is not providing adequate support, but doesn't know
who to share her concerns with.
You can help staff to
navigate through these difficult situations in a number of ways.
First, ensure that Mentor-Coaches, protégés, and program managers
share a common vision of the Mentor-Coach's role. Encourage the
Mentor-Coach and the supervisor to view themselves as two halves of
the protégé's support team and help them guard against falling into
the "good cop, bad cop" model of supervising and mentoring. Clearly
define chains of communication and confidentiality within the
Mentor-Coach and protégé relationship and formalize these
definitions within your communication plan, and Mentor-Coach and
protégé agreements. Finally, provide training to Mentor-Coaches,
protégés, and managers to ensure that they understand the
definitions and protocols.
Record-Keeping and
Reporting. Mentor-Coaches, like all other staff in
your program, need to account for their work. By creating
easy-to-use Mentor-Coach record-keeping and reporting systems, you
can:
- Help Mentor-Coaches plan for and track how
they accomplish the duties described in the job description.
- Provide supervisors with information about
the Mentor-Coaches' performance.
- Generate data that you and
other decision makers can use for planning.
Programs use a variety of
ways to help Mentor-Coaches track their work. Some Mentor-Coaches
use a running narrative to record their ongoing interactions with
their protégés. Others use a standardized reporting form. (See a
sample recording form at the end of this section.) In some programs,
Mentor-Coaches make a copy of the forms—one for their own file and
the second for the protégé's personal records. The important thing
is that all Mentor-Coaches within the program use the same system.
You may wish to engage the
Mentor-Coaches in deciding the approach that works best for your
program. This involvement often creates buy-in and builds
Mentor-Coaches' understanding of the your expectations.
In many programs,
Mentor-Coaches submit a regular, often monthly, report to the
mentor-coaching manager. These reports usually contain data about
the number and types of meetings that the Mentor-Coach has had with
all protégés, as well as the focus of the support provided. (See the
sample monthly reporting form provided. You may wish to design your
reporting system in an Excel or other database format for easy
tabulation.)
While the process will vary
from organization to organization, the final step in the
record-keeping and reporting system is to provide a report to the
program director, governing body and Policy Council.
Ongoing
Monitoring. Collecting data and checking on its
accuracy through regular spot-checks are important first steps in
monitoring a mentor-coaching program. By regularly reviewing and
analyzing these data, you and other managers can make sure that the
effort is progressing as planned. You can also discover mentoring
and other program issues that you can address and correct
immediately.
Consider the following
examples:
- When she reviewed February's monthly
Mentor-Coach reports, the mentor-coaching manager notes that only
one of seven Mentor-Coaches completed observation and reflection
conferences with all of their protégés. She recalls that the
figures were similar in January. She wonders if the
Mentor-Coaches' workloads are too heavy or if the Mentor-Coaches
are simply struggling with conferencing because it is a new skill
for them. She decides to discuss conferencing with each
Mentor-Coach during their regular supervision meetings. She will
help each Mentor-Coach develop a plan to meet the program's
conferencing expectations.
- The XYZ Head Start
education manager regularly reviews reports from his program's two
Mentor-Coaches. From the reports, he learns that over half of the
protégés are working on goals related to phonological awareness.
Although the program has offered training on this topic in the
past, he wonders whether it might be time to provide additional
training on the topic. He plans to raise the issue at his next
Mentor-Coach staff meeting.
In each of these situations,
the monthly report provides important, yet incomplete information
about the mentor-coaching project. If the managers did not probe for
additional information, they would miss information that could
inform program decisions. Effective managers continue to ask
questions, review data from other sources (e.g., child outcomes
data), and assess classroom environments until they are confident
about the progress of the program. If analysis of data reveals
issues or problems, they collect data to identify the source(s) of
the issue and develop a plan for addressing them.
"The reflective practice that is at the
core of our mentor-coaching is also central to our
self-assessment. We reflect on our work with children, with
families—what is working, what else can we try, what should we
do differently to make our program and practice the best it
can be?" Mentor-Coach |
Self-Assessment. Programs that
conduct pilot mentor-coaching projects will often conduct a formal
evaluation to look at the results of the effort. Putting the PRO in Protégé provides
information on conducting both process and outcome evaluations.
If your mentor-coaching
effort is a permanent part of your program, you will need to review
it during your annual self-assessment of your human resources
systems. As part of the assessment, your teams will need to collect
both process and outcome information. Although the program has been
regularly collecting and reviewing information through its
record-keeping and ongoing monitoring systems, the annual
self-assessment can help program staff, parents, and community
members look at the impact of the effort over time.
As your team collects process
information, they will want to find out if the project is operating
as planned. They may ask questions such as: Were the Mentor-Coaches
hired? What type of training did they receive? Did the
Mentor-Coaches complete their assigned meetings? What barriers, if
any, prevented the Mentor-Coaches from completing their assignments?
How did the protégés feel about the support they received?
The teams will need to
understand the original goal or goals of the project before they can
gather outcome information. For example, if the goal was to improve
teacher skills, the assessment team will want to review ongoing
monitoring data, ask questions, and review results of formal
assessment instruments to find out about teacher growth. If the
overall goal was to improve child outcomes, the team might want to
review results of child assessments. They may also choose to
interview staff and parents. If the project has multiple goals, the
assessment team will need to craft a combination of data collection
strategies to find out if the effort has been successful.
Assessment teams may want to:
- Review monthly reports from Mentor-Coaches
and the mentor-coaching manager.
- Interview protégés individually or in groups
to find out what they think about the system and how it could be
improved.
- Interview Mentor-Coaches individually or in
groups.
- Review results of protégé or classroom
observation instruments conducted both before and after the
mentoring effort to look for changes in teacher practice.
- Review child assessment
data to look for changes that could be linked to the
Mentor-Coaches' work.
When reviewing the
self-assessment data, look for trends or patterns that emerge (e.g.,
protégés who received regular observation and conferencing support
were more likely to find mentoring useful). Also, look for results
that stand out from others (e.g., a center that has done
particularly well or has unique issues). Both types of results are
important for ongoing planning.
Planning.
Ongoing monitoring and self-assessment can provide you with
large amounts of data. We have already discussed how you can make
mid-course corrections in your mentoring and other program efforts
by regularly looking at information as it is collected. You and
other decision makers can also make good longer-term decisions by
reviewing the data during your annual goal setting process.
At that time, assess the
mentoring effort itself. You can begin the planning process by
posing questions such as: Is the program effective? If not, can it
be improved? Is it worth the investment? How much time and money
will it cost to continue as is? How much time and money will it cost
to improve the program? If the data tell you that you should
continue the effort, you and other program decision makers can then
set new goals, objectives, and action steps that may include changes
or adjustments in staffing, funding, or activities of the
Mentor-Coaches.
Also, think about what the
mentor-coaching data tell you about other parts of your program. For
example, information from Mentor-Coach reports may point to training
needs of teaching staff. Focus group discussions with
mentor-coaching staff may provide information about needs of
families (e.g., family literacy services) that family services or
parent involvement staff can address.
Putting it All
Together. Because of its comprehensive nature,
mentor-coaching is a staff development approach that intersects many
systems and services within a Head Start program. Program leaders
who manage successful mentor-coaching initiatives carefully follow
many of the steps for decision makers outlined in this guide. We
have included the guide on the following page as a planning
resource.

Developing Your Mentor-Coaching System – A
Planning Tool
The checklist below
summarizes important benchmarks in planning and implementing your
mentor-coaching system. The items are organized into the five
sections of the Decision Maker Guide.
You can use this tool to keep you on track and document your
progress.
1) SELECTING A
MODEL FOR EARLY LITERACY MENTOR-COACHING
Assembled a decision-making team
Examined program philosophy regarding
mentoring and supervision
Examined policy regarding role of
Mentor-Coach on internal program career development system
Considered financial resources and
organizational capacity
Selected a model:
- Strengths of the model
- Potential challenges
2) FINDING FINANCIAL RESOURCES
Explored reallocation of funds in current
Head Start budget
- Proposed a budget and services revision to
the ACF Regional Office Specialist
- Received ACF approval
Identified need to secure additional funding
- Developed a plan for identifying and
contacting potential funding sources.
3) SELECTING AND MATCHING
MENTOR-COACHES
Developed a job description
Selected a Mentor-Coach
application process
Designed interview
strategies
Developed and adopted
criteria for Mentor-Coach and protégé matching.
4) ORIENTING AND TRAINING MENTOR-COACHES
Developed an orientation
plan specifically for Mentor-Coaches
Individualized the plan for
each Mentor-Coach to meet their particular needs
Established system of
supervision and ongoing support for Mentor-Coaches
Designed and adopted a
Mentor-Coach and protégé agreement.
5) LINKING MENTOR-COACHING TO PROGRAM
MANAGEMENT SYSTEMS
Communication
Established protocols for
communication between Mentor-Coaches and supervisors and between
Mentor-Coaches and other program staff
Defined confidentiality
within the Mentor-Coach and protégé relationship
Provided training to staff
on the communication protocols
Incorporated the protocols
into the written program plans.
Record-Keeping and Reporting
Designed forms to document
the ongoing interactions between Mentor-Coaches and protégés
Designed a form for tracking
the work of the Mentor-Coaches
Defined the role of the
Mentor-Coach and other staff members in the record-keeping
process
Developed protocols and
timelines for completion and submission of written documents.
Ongoing
Monitoring
Incorporated the review and
analysis of information about the Mentor-Coach program into the
system for ongoing monitoring.
Self-Assessment
Determined the type of
information about the mentor-coaching program to be collected in
the annual self-assessment
Developed procedures and
responsibilities for collecting these data.
Planning
Incorporated the review and
analysis of information about the Mentor-Coach program into the
program planning system
Developed a process for
using the data to inform continuous quality improvement.
SAMPLE Mentor-Coach and Protégé Interaction
Record
MENTOR-COACH_______________________________________________
PROTÉGÉ_____________________________________________________
DATE________________________________________________________
TYPE OF INTERACTION:
- Initial Meeting
- Resource
Sharing/Discussion
- Mentor-Coach
Modeling/co-teaching
- Pre-Observation Conference
- Observation
- Post-Observation
Conference
- Small Group Meeting
- Other
PRIMARY EARLY LANGUAGE AND
LITERACY FOCUS OF INTERACTION:
- Listening And
Understanding
- Speaking and
Communicating
- Phonological
Awareness
- Book Knowledge and
Appreciation
- Print Awareness and
Concepts
- Early Writing
- Alphabet Knowledge
- Social-Emotional
Development
- Individualizing for
Children with Disabilities
- Using Assessment
Data to Support Children's Growth
- Specific Child
- Other____________________________
- Other____________________________
- Other____________________________
|
Visit Summary:
| Goals
Developed |
Next
Steps/Strategies |
Resources
Needed |
Child
Outcomes Addressed |
Timelines |
Person(s)
Responsible |
| |
|
|
|
|
|
SAMPLE: Mentor-Coach Monthly Reporting Form
DATE________________ MENTOR-COACH
NAME_______________________________
| NUMBER OF
PROTÉGÉ INTERACTIONS COMPLETED THIS MONTH |
Protégé
1 |
Protégé 2
|
Protégé 3
|
Protégé 4
|
Protégé 5
|
Protégé 6
|
Protégé 7
|
Protégé 8
|
| Initial Meetings |
|
|
|
|
|
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