The perceptions of best mentoring practices in an early literacy intervention project : a case study of nine coaches

There is significant national evidence the language development of four year-olds is a critical area for later school success (Brooks-Gunn, Fuligni, & Berlin, 2003; Cunningham, & Stanovich, 1998). This study originated as part of Literacy Intervention X (LIX), a larger national study conduct...

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Main Author: Castañeda, Magdalena
Format: Others
Published: FIU Digital Commons 2007
Subjects:
Online Access:http://digitalcommons.fiu.edu/etd/2071
http://digitalcommons.fiu.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=3325&context=etd
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spelling ndltd-fiu.edu-oai-digitalcommons.fiu.edu-etd-33252018-01-05T15:32:35Z The perceptions of best mentoring practices in an early literacy intervention project : a case study of nine coaches Castañeda, Magdalena There is significant national evidence the language development of four year-olds is a critical area for later school success (Brooks-Gunn, Fuligni, & Berlin, 2003; Cunningham, & Stanovich, 1998). This study originated as part of Literacy Intervention X (LIX), a larger national study conducted to examine the effectiveness of early literacy curricula implemented in subsidized childcare centers. The professional development of childcare center providers is key to improving the quality of subsidized care. In exploring the mentoring practices of nine LIX literacy coaches, the researcher investigated the perceptions of what best mentoring practices facilitated the implementation of literacy curricula by childcare providers. A qualitative case study was conducted using a combination of participant observer notes, document analysis, and focus group semi-structured interviews. The researcher is a participant observer, one of the nine Literacy Coaches. The best mentoring practices from the perspective of the literacy coaches are related to building relationships including trust, mutual respect, support, empathy, and encouragement with the childcare providers, the center directors, and with fellow literacy coaches. Clear, constant, and consistent communication with the childcare providers was a vital mentoring practice in building a relationship between the literacy coach and childcare provider. Another best mentoring practice in building a relationship with the childcare provider was the perceptions of the literacy coaches as co-learners in the mentoring process. The best mentoring practices highlighted in this study exemplified the kind of effective professional development that builds on the strengths of the childcare providers and does not disrupt the childcare centers or the services provided by the subsidized childcare programs that meet the needs of children and families. The experience of these nine literacy coaches, including their perceptions of effective mentoring practices, along with lesson learned about relationships, mentoring team structures, and general project design sheds light on the challenge of mentoring subsidized childcare providers in future literacy intervention projects. 2007-07-20T07:00:00Z text application/pdf http://digitalcommons.fiu.edu/etd/2071 http://digitalcommons.fiu.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=3325&context=etd FIU Electronic Theses and Dissertations FIU Digital Commons Education Educational Administration and Supervision
collection NDLTD
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Education
Educational Administration and Supervision
spellingShingle Education
Educational Administration and Supervision
Castañeda, Magdalena
The perceptions of best mentoring practices in an early literacy intervention project : a case study of nine coaches
description There is significant national evidence the language development of four year-olds is a critical area for later school success (Brooks-Gunn, Fuligni, & Berlin, 2003; Cunningham, & Stanovich, 1998). This study originated as part of Literacy Intervention X (LIX), a larger national study conducted to examine the effectiveness of early literacy curricula implemented in subsidized childcare centers. The professional development of childcare center providers is key to improving the quality of subsidized care. In exploring the mentoring practices of nine LIX literacy coaches, the researcher investigated the perceptions of what best mentoring practices facilitated the implementation of literacy curricula by childcare providers. A qualitative case study was conducted using a combination of participant observer notes, document analysis, and focus group semi-structured interviews. The researcher is a participant observer, one of the nine Literacy Coaches. The best mentoring practices from the perspective of the literacy coaches are related to building relationships including trust, mutual respect, support, empathy, and encouragement with the childcare providers, the center directors, and with fellow literacy coaches. Clear, constant, and consistent communication with the childcare providers was a vital mentoring practice in building a relationship between the literacy coach and childcare provider. Another best mentoring practice in building a relationship with the childcare provider was the perceptions of the literacy coaches as co-learners in the mentoring process. The best mentoring practices highlighted in this study exemplified the kind of effective professional development that builds on the strengths of the childcare providers and does not disrupt the childcare centers or the services provided by the subsidized childcare programs that meet the needs of children and families. The experience of these nine literacy coaches, including their perceptions of effective mentoring practices, along with lesson learned about relationships, mentoring team structures, and general project design sheds light on the challenge of mentoring subsidized childcare providers in future literacy intervention projects.
author Castañeda, Magdalena
author_facet Castañeda, Magdalena
author_sort Castañeda, Magdalena
title The perceptions of best mentoring practices in an early literacy intervention project : a case study of nine coaches
title_short The perceptions of best mentoring practices in an early literacy intervention project : a case study of nine coaches
title_full The perceptions of best mentoring practices in an early literacy intervention project : a case study of nine coaches
title_fullStr The perceptions of best mentoring practices in an early literacy intervention project : a case study of nine coaches
title_full_unstemmed The perceptions of best mentoring practices in an early literacy intervention project : a case study of nine coaches
title_sort perceptions of best mentoring practices in an early literacy intervention project : a case study of nine coaches
publisher FIU Digital Commons
publishDate 2007
url http://digitalcommons.fiu.edu/etd/2071
http://digitalcommons.fiu.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=3325&context=etd
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