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Mentors as instructional coaches for new teachers: lessons learnt from the early career framework in England

Caroline Daly (CCM, Institute of Education, University College London, London, UK)
Polly Glegg (CPA, Institute of Education, University College London, London, UK)
Beth Stiasny (CPA, Institute of Education, University College London, London, UK)
Mark Hardman (CPA, Institute of Education, University College London, London, UK)
Becky Taylor (CPA, Institute of Education, University College London, London, UK)
Claire Pillinger (CPA, Institute of Education, University College London, London, UK)
Haira Gandolfi (Faculty of Education, University of Cambridge, Cambridge, UK)

International Journal of Mentoring and Coaching in Education

ISSN: 2046-6854

Article publication date: 22 August 2023

Issue publication date: 12 October 2023

337

Abstract

Purpose

The paper provides analysis of the use of instructional coaching (IC) as a prevalent trend supporting new teachers in the English system and aims to inform ongoing policy development and implementation. The qualitative study examines mentors' conceptualisations and enactment of the role of instructional coach and the readiness of mentors to assume mentors' key stakeholder roles in the professional education of early career teachers (ECTs).

Design/methodology/approach

Semi-structured interviews with 37 mentors explored mentors' understandings and experiences of becoming instructional coaches as part of a pilot support initiative to support ECTs in England. Two rounds of interviews were conducted to generate data related to the first six months of mentoring on the programmes. Thematic analysis identified seven semantic themes which describe manifest content found within the data and identify mentors' perceptions of their role and practice as instructional coaches. Three latent themes were developed from mentors' accounts which indicate challenges in becoming an instructional coach in this context.

Findings

Concern to apply IC “correctly” according to the programme models was a strong feature amongst both novice and experienced mentors. A key finding is the lack of explicit knowledge of professional learning pedagogies amongst mentors and insecure understanding of how new teachers learn. Assuming the role of instructional coach presented both benefits of having a “model” to follow and disadvantages in fostering limited and over-prescribed concepts and practices related to the learning of new teachers.

Research limitations/implications

The study investigated mentors during the first six months of a pilot programme and the paper reports on analysis of one type of data. The research results may lack generalisability, and a longitudinal study is necessary to further explore the validity of the findings.

Practical implications

Sustained, high-quality professional learning for mentors is crucial to mentors' role as instructional coaches to enable mentors to develop deep, critical understanding of how IC might support new teachers and how to exercise professional judgement in working with “models”. Judicious use of time and resource is needed to enable mentors to fulfil the potential of national mentoring programmes.

Originality/value

The study is timely in its examination of mentors that assume the role of instructional coach as one response to national policy development that makes support for ECTs mandatory. Such strategies have wide international relevance where the retention of new teachers is a policy priority.

Keywords

Acknowledgements

The paper reports on data collected as part of an evaluation of the Early Career Teacher Support pilot (Hardman et al., 2020), funded by the Education Endowment Foundation (EEF), a charitable organisation focused on breaking links between economic disadvantage and educational achievement. The paper presents a secondary analysis of the subset of mentor interview data, collected by the author team. All authors were part of the original research team.

Citation

Daly, C., Glegg, P., Stiasny, B., Hardman, M., Taylor, B., Pillinger, C. and Gandolfi, H. (2023), "Mentors as instructional coaches for new teachers: lessons learnt from the early career framework in England", International Journal of Mentoring and Coaching in Education, Vol. 12 No. 4, pp. 350-365. https://doi.org/10.1108/IJMCE-10-2022-0090

Publisher

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Emerald Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2023, Emerald Publishing Limited

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