The benefits and impacts of a coaching and mentoring programme for teaching staff in secondary school

This study attempts to produce evidence to establish whether teaching staff in schools in the UK, who undertake coaching as part of their continuous professional development, will enjoy benefits and impacts upon their professional and personal lives. There is a paucity of empirical research on this...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Paul Allan
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Oxford Brookes University 2007-08-01
Series:International Journal of Evidence Based Coaching and Mentoring
Subjects:
Online Access:https://radar.brookes.ac.uk/radar/items/5f709a78-88a5-4263-b1d1-780714c0a222/1/vol05issue2-paper-01.pdf
id doaj-2ff0ccc3b86040df9d36a0058fbbc98a
record_format Article
spelling doaj-2ff0ccc3b86040df9d36a0058fbbc98a2021-04-02T20:31:24ZengOxford Brookes UniversityInternational Journal of Evidence Based Coaching and MentoringXXXX-XXXX1741-83052007-08-01521221The benefits and impacts of a coaching and mentoring programme for teaching staff in secondary schoolPaul AllanThis study attempts to produce evidence to establish whether teaching staff in schools in the UK, who undertake coaching as part of their continuous professional development, will enjoy benefits and impacts upon their professional and personal lives. There is a paucity of empirical research on this subject. Coaching in schools is at an early stage and there have been calls by professional bodies to produce evidence of its benefits and impacts. This study does this by conducting an intensive coaching programme for three teaching staff in a secondary school wishing to develop coaching: a senior and a middle manager and a junior member of staff. The study was approached as an action research project. Data were collected in a variety of ways, including formative evaluation reviews, data from reflection notes and from an extensive summative feedback evaluation questionnaire. It also included third party evidence. This has resulted in the production of evidence that appears to support some of the claims of a number of professional organisations and writers.https://radar.brookes.ac.uk/radar/items/5f709a78-88a5-4263-b1d1-780714c0a222/1/vol05issue2-paper-01.pdfCoachingteacherscontinuous professional developmentevidence of benefitsimpacts
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Paul Allan
spellingShingle Paul Allan
The benefits and impacts of a coaching and mentoring programme for teaching staff in secondary school
International Journal of Evidence Based Coaching and Mentoring
Coaching
teachers
continuous professional development
evidence of benefits
impacts
author_facet Paul Allan
author_sort Paul Allan
title The benefits and impacts of a coaching and mentoring programme for teaching staff in secondary school
title_short The benefits and impacts of a coaching and mentoring programme for teaching staff in secondary school
title_full The benefits and impacts of a coaching and mentoring programme for teaching staff in secondary school
title_fullStr The benefits and impacts of a coaching and mentoring programme for teaching staff in secondary school
title_full_unstemmed The benefits and impacts of a coaching and mentoring programme for teaching staff in secondary school
title_sort benefits and impacts of a coaching and mentoring programme for teaching staff in secondary school
publisher Oxford Brookes University
series International Journal of Evidence Based Coaching and Mentoring
issn XXXX-XXXX
1741-8305
publishDate 2007-08-01
description This study attempts to produce evidence to establish whether teaching staff in schools in the UK, who undertake coaching as part of their continuous professional development, will enjoy benefits and impacts upon their professional and personal lives. There is a paucity of empirical research on this subject. Coaching in schools is at an early stage and there have been calls by professional bodies to produce evidence of its benefits and impacts. This study does this by conducting an intensive coaching programme for three teaching staff in a secondary school wishing to develop coaching: a senior and a middle manager and a junior member of staff. The study was approached as an action research project. Data were collected in a variety of ways, including formative evaluation reviews, data from reflection notes and from an extensive summative feedback evaluation questionnaire. It also included third party evidence. This has resulted in the production of evidence that appears to support some of the claims of a number of professional organisations and writers.
topic Coaching
teachers
continuous professional development
evidence of benefits
impacts
url https://radar.brookes.ac.uk/radar/items/5f709a78-88a5-4263-b1d1-780714c0a222/1/vol05issue2-paper-01.pdf
work_keys_str_mv AT paulallan thebenefitsandimpactsofacoachingandmentoringprogrammeforteachingstaffinsecondaryschool
AT paulallan benefitsandimpactsofacoachingandmentoringprogrammeforteachingstaffinsecondaryschool
_version_ 1721546981194596352