Supporting Teachers During Implementation of Illustrative Mathematics: Big Ideas For Coaches and Teacher Leaders - IM CERTIFIED® BLOG (2024)

Supporting Teachers During Implementation of Illustrative Mathematics: Big Ideas For Coaches and Teacher Leaders - IM CERTIFIED® BLOG (1)

By Sonja Twedt, IM Certified® Facilitator, 6–12 Special Projects Course Assistant

Are you an instructional coach or teacher leader in a district that is adopting Illustrative Mathematics? If so, you’ve likely found yourself thinking about how to best support your teacher team during year one of their implementation work. In today’s blog, some lessons from the field will be offered around three leverage points that can be helpful in supporting teachers through their “first go” with the IM curriculum.

As teachers adopt a new curriculum there is always so much to learn and do, and we know our teachers, like all of us in education, have limited time in their day! While we would love for everyone to spend as much time in learning and reflecting as possible, we also know that for many teachers, simply staying on top of day-to-day planning is going to be a mountainous task in and of itself. This is especially true for those teachers who teach multiple subjects or preps.

As an instructional coach or teacher leader, one of the most powerful leverage points is to maintain focus on the “big picture” in year one of implementation. Know what your team wants year one of implementation to look like, sound like, and feel like…

  • Where are you all starting from?
  • Which parts of the program build on things you already know and do?
  • Which parts of the program are completely new for your team?
  • What are your important focal points for year one?
  • How will you measure success?

Keep these questions at the forefront of your mind, and at the forefront of the work you do with both individual teachers and with teacher teams. Lift small and big successes through reflection around this vision. It is through your coaching conversations, effective questioning, facilitation of PLCs, and other collaborative work that you will be able to reinforce this “big picture.”

And as you do this, lean into the IM resources! When coaching there are so many times that a quick read of a unit narrative together, a quick search for an IM blog post, or simply a reference to IM’s lesson structure helps answer questions, allay concerns, or refocus work as teachers and teams work their way through year one.

Get on the Field

It is tremendously helpful to “get on the field” with your teachers, entering the collective classroom spaces and working together. Given the different roles that instructional coaches and teacher leaders are given within a building or district, this may be more possible for some coaches/leaders than others, but in any way that you can, try to prioritize it in year one.

How can you get into the classroom? Many coaches are involved in full instructional coaching cycles that provide the opportunities to be in the classroom with teachers often and experience the program from a teaching lens.

For those whose instructional coaching or leadership roles do not require or allow for coaching rounds, there are still small ways to carve out time in classrooms. Take five minutes each day to go into different classrooms and notice and name the good things that you are seeing; from fostering student discussion, to having a strong launch, to strong selecting and sequencing of student responses for a synthesis, and everything in between, teachers and students will appreciate hearing what is going well!

If your role allows you the time, teach in the classroom with a teacher on occasion, whether that means co-teaching a whole lesson or taking five to ten minutes to facilitate one element of a lesson. As a coach or teacher leader, walking in the teachers’ shoes and positioning yourself firmly as a learner with your teachers during year one of implementation builds trust and gives you an understanding of what teachers are experiencing, which will strengthen the conversations that you will be able to have together as you support them in the curriculum.

Support Classroom Community

Finally, if there is one thing that has the most potential to make Illustrative Mathematics “work” in year one, it is the building and sustaining of the classroom community. Students need to that they are part of a collaborative whole that is developing mathematical ideas together. These experiences are the base on which the important learning experiences in IM rest.

For everyone, but particularly for educators with little experience with problem-based instruction, there needs to be space to think about the moves it takes to build and sustain this nurturing mathematical community. Support teachers around building classroom community throughout the year. While many classrooms build community and community norms at the beginning of the year, the work does not end there. Like any community, a math learning community needs continual work to remain strong. Keep teachers talking about the moves they are making in their classrooms that continue to support their math communities, and bring them together to collectively problem solve at times in the year when it feels like those communities need support. As a leverage point, when this work is a priority in year one of implementation, you will likely see the biggest return on investment in teachers feeling positive and excited about what they see happening in their classrooms. That momentum can really help keep implementation of the program moving in the right direction, and teachers feeling positive about their classroom experiences.

Next Steps

The three big ideas I’ve described are just a few of the ways in which coaches can support teachers in successful implementation. As a coach or teacher leader, how might you use these ideas in future work? Knowing your context, what are some additional ways that you are thinking about that could support your teachers implementing IM? Thinking proactively about how you will support your teachers and be responsive to the needs they have will set you up to do some powerful, collaborative work together as you move forward with IM!

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Supporting Teachers During Implementation of Illustrative Mathematics: Big Ideas For Coaches and Teacher Leaders - IM CERTIFIED® BLOG (2024)

FAQs

How do math coaches help teachers? ›

Generally coaches are seen as supporting and encouraging. They continu- ally analyze strengths and weaknesses and build on these findings to help teachers improve instruction so that students' learning improves.

How instructional coaches can use co teaching to support teachers? ›

Model Teach: A coach should model if the teacher has low belief in self and students. The coach teaches the class while the teacher observes. They observe a number of teacher moves and can see how the students react to each of them.

What are some ways a teacher can connect mathematical ideas to real-world activities? ›

We've collected some of the most interesting answers, ways teachers are connecting math to the everyday lives of their students.
  • The Real-World Math Wall.
  • A School Water Audit.
  • Acting Out Restaurant Scenarios.
  • Integrating Math Into English and History.
  • Math Recipes.
  • Grocery Store Field Trip.
Jun 13, 2018

What teacher actions will best facilitate students doing mathematics? ›

Mathematics Teaching Practices
  • Establish mathematics goals to focus learning. ...
  • Implement tasks that promote reasoning and problem solving. ...
  • Use and connect mathematical representations. ...
  • Facilitate meaningful mathematical discourse. ...
  • Pose purposeful questions. ...
  • Build procedural fluency from conceptual understanding.

What are the goals of a math coach? ›

A math coach provides ongoing support by guiding the learning every step of the way. Whether through collaborative planning, demonstration lessons, co-teaching, or informal discussions, coaches step in to discuss the math content, clarify the math standard, or suggest teaching options or next steps.

What are the qualities of a math coach? ›

An effective math coach would master many skills, but the foundation must be content expertise. Just as teachers cannot teach what they do not know, math coaches cannot coach teachers without having content knowledge expertise to identify pedagogical, instructional, and assessment needs.

How teachers and coaches can cultivate learning focused relationships? ›

To have a productive relationship, teachers and coaches need to trust one another, respect each other professionally, commit to keeping their partner- ship agreements, and clearly define the work they will do together.

How do instructional coaches build relationships with teachers? ›

Partnership: Co-creating the journey

Involving the teachers you work with in decision-making, seeking their input, and valuing their expertise during joint planning sessions taps into a teacher's agency and helps them begin to trust you: their coach. Partnerships also encourage active participation from teachers.

What do teachers need from instructional coaches? ›

Coaches collaborate with teachers to identify what students need and what strategies teachers can use to hit those goals, and then they keep adapting and refining the strategy until students meet their goals. The only true measure of effectiveness is the objective standard of significant positive change in students.

How do I communicate mathematical ideas? ›

To communicate mathematically means to: use words or mathematical symbols to explain real life • talk about how you arrived at an answer • listen to other ways of thinking and perhaps alter your own thinking • use pictures to explain understanding • write about the math you used, not just give an answer.

What are three activities that can be used to teach mathematical concepts? ›

Here are some fun classroom math activities that will have your students begging to do more.
  • Math Bingo. This math game is sure to become a fast favorite with your students. ...
  • Make a paper plate clock. ...
  • Guess the weight. ...
  • Hopscotch math. ...
  • Pizza fractions. ...
  • 'Lengthy' scavenger hunt. ...
  • Survey and graph.
Feb 26, 2018

What are the commonly used teaching strategies in learning mathematics? ›

The best strategy to use when teaching mathematics is to use a combination of well-proven strategies that have been devised over the years. These include explicit Instruction, cooperative learning, the flipped classroom, visual strategies, hands-on learning, strategic questioning, and scaffold learning.

How do you implement effective activities in math? ›

6 Simple (But Effective) Instructional Strategies for Mathematics
  1. Make conceptual understanding a priority. ...
  2. Set meaningful homework that builds on class learning. ...
  3. Use cooperative learning strategies. ...
  4. Use strategic questioning. ...
  5. Focus on real problem-solving and reasoning. ...
  6. Use mixed modes of assessment.
Nov 9, 2020

Why do teachers need methods and strategies for teaching math? ›

Teachers need to use multiple strategies to help students understand math concepts. Students who have difficulty learning in math need even more experiences to use math concepts.

How can teachers best support creative thinking in mathematics? ›

Setting up an environment in which mistakes are allowed, and making sure that your students know there is more than one solution to a problem will foster creativity. Math is as much about posing problems as problem-solving, and at that point, the creativity is in noticing there is something to investigate.

How does coaching help with teaching? ›

Effective coaching encourages teachers to engage in reflective practice, a critical aspect of professional growth. By engaging in meaningful conversations with their coaches, educators can analyze their teaching practices, evaluate the impact on student learning, and identify areas for improvement.

How do literacy coaches help teachers? ›

These professionals, often known as literacy or reading coaches, provide coaching and other professional development support that enables teachers to think reflectively about improving student learning and implementing various instructional programs and practices.

Why do teachers need instructional coaches? ›

Coaches collaborate with teachers to identify what students need and what strategies teachers can use to hit those goals, and then they keep adapting and refining the strategy until students meet their goals. The only true measure of effectiveness is the objective standard of significant positive change in students.

What is the difference between a math coach and a tutor? ›

Tutors tend to focus on building concrete skills and helping students with what they immediately need to keep up with schoolwork. Similar to a sports coach, an academic coach tends to work on more general strategies to help kids succeed. They can help kids develop a more organized approach to learning and schoolwork.

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