Coaching | Torsh Tue, 25 Mar 2025 15:52:51 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.7.2 Enhancing Teacher Recruitment and Development at KIPP DC with TORSH Talent https://www.torsh.co/success-stories/kipp-dc-streamlines-teacher-recruitment-development/ https://www.torsh.co/success-stories/kipp-dc-streamlines-teacher-recruitment-development/#respond Thu, 07 Nov 2024 17:54:12 +0000 https://www.torsh.co/?p=6633 How KIPP DC Streamlines Recruitment and Cultivates Teacher Excellence with TORSH Talent KIPP DC Public Schools, the second-largest preK–12 district…

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How KIPP DC Streamlines Recruitment and Cultivates Teacher Excellence with TORSH Talent

KIPP DC Public Schools, the second-largest preK–12 district in Washington, DC, is dedicated to providing students with access to high-quality, culturally affirming education. Central to this mission is their commitment to hiring exceptional talent—whether or not they are certified teachers—and helping them grow into top educators. Read on to see how KIPP DC used TORSH Talent to help streamline teacher recruitment and development.

KIPP DC Logo

KIPP DC streamlines teacher recruitment and professional development with TORSH Talent

Transforming Teacher Recruitment with TORSH Talent

After the COVID-19 pandemic, KIPP DC aimed to transition back to in-person interviews. However, scheduling in-person demo lessons for time-strapped principals and district leaders posed a challenge. Rather than requiring candidates to present their demo lessons multiple times, the hiring team sought out technology to streamline the evaluation process.

Shanelle Trenard, Associate Director of Instructional Hiring at KIPP DC, initially considered having candidates film lessons on their phones and upload them to Google Drive. However, concerns about data security prompted the team to explore a more secure solution. That’s when they turned to TORSH Talent, an innovative coaching and professional learning platform.

Secure and Convenient Demo Lesson Review with TORSH Talent

One of TORSH Talent’s standout features is its secure video upload functionality, enabling seamless collaboration across the district.

Coaching observation on the TORSH Talent Platform to streamline teacher recruitment and development

TORSH Talent’s flexible platform allows for various modes of teacher development

  • Reimagined Demo Lessons: Candidates present their demo lessons in person on a KIPP DC campus, and the hiring team records and uploads the lessons to TORSH Talent. School leaders across the district can log in at their convenience to review and assess multiple candidates.
  • Data-Driven Hiring Decisions: KIPP DC’s hiring team plans to implement competency-based rubrics and data-driven assessments in TORSH Talent, ensuring a thorough and consistent evaluation process.

“This year we focused more on quality over quantity, and TORSH Talent has definitely helped us do that.”

— Shanelle Trenard, Associate Director of Instructional Hiring, KIPP DC

Nurturing Exceptional Teachers through the Capital Teaching Residency

As one of Washington, DC’s highest-performing school districts, KIPP DC prioritizes teacher quality. When hiring, the focus is less on prior teaching experience and more on whether candidates are mission-aligned and committed to continuous growth.

For individuals without teaching credentials—such as recent graduates or career changers—KIPP DC offers a pathway to state licensure through the Capital Teaching Residency. This program welcomes candidates from all backgrounds and provides intensive, hands-on training, including mentorship and coaching.

TORSH Talent: Supporting Teacher Development in the Residency Program

KIPP DC leverages TORSH Talent to deliver personalized, job-embedded coaching to Capital Teaching Residents. The platform supports both synchronous and asynchronous learning, ensuring residents receive ongoing, tailored feedback to help them grow as educators.

  • Pathway to Licensure: As an accredited Educator Preparation Program (EPP), residents engage in meaningful coursework that aligns with the daily work of high-performing teachers. Torsh seamlessly integrates with our learning management system, enabling resident faculty to grade teaching videos and provide actionable feedback on residents’ practice.
  • Feedback for Growth: Residents utilize the goals feature to set performance objectives aligned with the built-in rubrics. With support from the residency team, Capital Teaching Residents work towards mastery with clear action steps and models provided in the exemplar showcase.

With over 100 Capital Teaching Residents becoming KIPP DC Teachers of the Year, and 70% of alumni remaining in teaching or leadership roles after four years, the program is a proven success.

A virtual coaching session focused on teacher recruitment and development between two individuals

Professional development and teacher coaching can take place in virtual or hybrid settings with TORTH Talent

 


TORSH Talent: Empowering KIPP DC’s Mission for Educational Equity

Thanks to TORSH Talent, KIPP DC has not only streamlined its recruitment process but has also fostered a culture of continuous improvement and educational excellence. By investing in both quality hiring and ongoing professional development, KIPP DC continues its mission to ensure every student has access to top-tier educators dedicated to transforming lives through education.

To find out more about how you can use TORSH Talent to streamline your teacher development, book a demo today

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Implementing Developmentally Appropriate Practices ∣ DAP Best Practices in Early Childhood Education https://www.torsh.co/article/dap-best-practices/ https://www.torsh.co/article/dap-best-practices/#respond Tue, 15 Oct 2024 18:41:10 +0000 https://www.torsh.co/?p=6571 5 Key Ways Technology & Quality Professional Development Boost Developmentally Appropriate Practices In Early Education   If you step into…

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5 Key Ways Technology & Quality Professional Development Boost Developmentally Appropriate Practices In Early Education

Child playing with a toy while an adult supports

 

If you step into any early learning space, you will witness educators engage with their little learners individually and uniquely. One teacher may show a toddler how to carefully pick up and stack blocks to help them build fine motor skills. Another might clap with a preschool-aged student as they practice sounding out a word on a whiteboard. At their core, these examples are developmentally appropriate practices (DAP), where teachers are adapting their instructional practices to match each child’s developmental level. 

To the untrained eye, this concept in action may seem intuitive and straightforward. While DAP is widely understood as a highly effective practice for supporting healthy development during a child’s early years, these teaching methods do not mature on their own. Quality professional development (PD) drives quality classroom practice, with DAP as well as other evidence-based models for student learning. 

Let’s explore why DAP and practice-based coaching work well together, and how modern technology can enhance both to support children’s optimal development.

Why Developmentally Appropriate Practices (DAP) Matter in Early Education

Adapted from the original definition created by the National Association for the Education of Young Children (NAEYC), The University of Maine defines DAP as follows:

 “[Developmentally appropriate practices are] an approach to education that guides early childhood professionals in everyday practice. It comes from more than 75 years of research on child development and early learning…and gives early childhood professionals information from which to make decisions.”

~The University of Maine Center for Community Inclusion and Disability Studies

Three areas  in particular help educators determine the appropriateness of an everyday practice or interaction with a young child:

  • Age appropriateness, or practices that support a child of a particular age and stage of growth;
  • Individual appropriateness, or approaches that nurture a specific child’s development; and
  • Cultural and social appropriateness, or practices that align with and respect each child and family’s identity as well as their community.

PennState Extension summarizes the intent of using DAP across these areas as meeting individual children where they are developmentally. In other words: “Teachers… get to know [children] well—and [enable] them to reach [individual] goals that are both challenging and achievable.”

These learning practices apply to all areas of early childhood development, including literacy, math, social-emotional, and cognitive growth.

Clearly, the right materials, learning space, observation cycles, and resources that reinforce staff knowledge support instructional practices tailored to a child’s developmental stage.

 

Challenges with Implementing Developmentally Appropriate Practices

As straightforward as developmentally appropriate best practices sound, this approach to teaching is not necessarily intuitive. Common challenges that programs face with implementing DAP include:

  • A mismatch between an individual teacher’s personal beliefs about DAP and their self-reported or actual practices (Şahin-Sak, Tantekin-Erden & Pollard-Durodola, 2016)
  • Partial or inconsistent use of DAP within a classroom
  • Lack of ongoing support for educators with applying appropriate instructional practices in education settings

Every early childhood program and educator benefits from intentional practice, refinement, and ongoing continuous improvement around DAP in order to drive effective growth for young children. This is where quality professional development, paired with the right technology, comes into play.

 

High-Quality PD Yields High-Quality Practices

Many in the early childhood field already recognize that adult learning is an ongoing process; not a one-and-done effort. To improve teaching practices and drive positive outcomes for young children and their families, an early childhood educator needs continuous support to build individual skills and weave them into instructional practices. 

Quality PD is essential for early childhood education professionals to purposefully implement DAP. 

Research indicates certain professional learning models are particularly impactful with changes to teaching practices. One study found that targeted training provided via classes to early childhood teachers helped decrease teachers’ contrasting beliefs and practices that go against the principles of DAP, removing a key barrier to their adoption (Heisner & Lederberg, 2011).

Other effective professional development strategies include:

  • Online courses designed for independent learning around particular topics
  • Staff learning communities organized for peer collaboration in a supportive environment
  • Practice-based coaching (PBC) tailored to individual practitioner needs

Coaching is most impactful in driving tangible shifts to teacher practices, whether it serves to help educators meet Head Start performance standards, embrace DAP best practices, or achieve other program priorities.

 

The power of coaching to improve DAP best practices

Strong relationships between coaches and mentees has proven effective in shifting developmentally appropriate instructional practices across a wide range of learning areas. Programs focused on social-emotional development via the Pyramid Model benefit just as much from practice-based coaching (PBC) as those concentrating on literacy development in the classroom.  

Part of the power behind PBC is helping staff recognize what specific DAP best practices look like in action and adapting them into their approaches. A high-quality coaching program allows teachers to self-reflect and receive targeted feedback from their coach, while also celebrating progress.

A few ways that an early childhood educator may set goals for coaching around DAP include:

  • Refining their strategies for building relationships with families and learning about their cultural, linguistic, and personal backgrounds (key to “getting to know” each child)
  • Shifting how they adapt the same teaching strategy for early numeracy skills (like recognizing and naming numbers) to children at different cognitive development stages
  • Learning how to effectively and correctly use early childhood assessments to determine where a child is in their development

Child copying teacher's movements

5 Ways Technology Supports Developmentally Appropriate Practices

No matter what learning goals a program sets with DAP, technology is quickly becoming a crucial part of effective practitioner growth. In particular, online learning platforms (OLPs) form the backbone for many successful adult learning models, including PBC.

The right technology can connect educators, streamline data collection, and drive improvements in developmentally appropriate practices in early childhood organizations.

Let’s explore five ways that technology cultivates a culture of continuous improvement and growth when it comes to DAP, as well as what features administrators should look for when choosing an OLP.

 

1. Creates visibility into teachers’ practices

OLPs must allow coaches and other professional learning practitioners to see teaching practices in action—without solely depending on live, in-person observations. While valuable, such observations are time- and resource-intensive, especially for early learning programs serving multiple sites or large regions.

This is where video technology can help reduce costs to programs and boost visibility into classroom practices. 

OLPs that have native video capabilities create flexible opportunities for:

  • Teachers to record their practices for self-reflection or goal-setting
  • Coaches to witness teachers’ instructional strategies anytime, anywhere—and provide specific feedback to teachers via time-stamped comments 
  • Teachers and coaches to connect virtually for individual sessions, from any location at a time that works around their daily responsibilities
  • Program leaders to curate videos demonstrating high-quality DAP in action for other educators to explore

TORSH Talent stands out with respect to these capabilities. Its mobile app allows teachers to record practices, even without internet access, and later upload videos when connectivity is restored. The platform provides programs with a digital library to gather exemplary videos and additional resources for collective learning purposes. Lastly, administrators, teachers, and coaches can fine-tune user permissions, ensuring that only those team members authorized to see a video can access it in the solution.

 

2. Centralizes program resources and guidelines for DAP

In addition to visibility into practice, an OLP must allow programs and practitioners to develop a repository of materials that guide any professional learning approach used to improve DAP. 

TORSH Talent’s Resource Library can include those videos of exemplary practices as mentioned above, but it can also house:

  • Standardized rubrics and frameworks to guide coaches with engaging mentees consistently in embracing DAP best practices
  • Goal-setting templates to establish each teacher’s coaching goals in connection to program priorities around DAP
  • Policies and requirements for educators related to utilizing DAP, participating in professional development efforts, and more

Learn more about this and other critical features available within our all-in-one professional learning platform, designed to support the unique needs of early learning programs.

 

3. Monitors key data to measure PD impact and DAP fidelity

Continuous data insights, reflection, and improvement are necessary for the ongoing cycle of DAP best practices.

At the individual level, the right OLP supports teachers and coaches by capturing metrics that pertain to their unique goals around DAP best practices. Data insights may include coaching session frequency, total coaching time, self-reported progress on goals, and more.

Moving up a level, OLPs can also help coaches explore patterns about their engagement across mentees, perhaps even surfacing areas of growth for a coach themselves in how they engage with teachers and drive their successes with DAP. 

At the highest level, program administrators need an OLP that synthesizes all these data and more—even from sources outside of the platform itself—to analyze the overall impact of professional learning efforts on critical priorities related to DAP. 

TORSH Talent supports all three layers of data analysis and collection. With configurable data collection forms, customizable insight reports, and multiple forms of data integration with other education platforms, staff at every level of an early learning program have the insights they need all in one central location.

 

4. Develops individual learning paths for independent growth

Even in an organization that emphasizes a practice-based coaching model, educators benefit from independent resources and learning opportunities. OLPs that not only support coach-mentee relationships but also facilitate self-learning offer a winning combination to early childhood education programs.

In addition to TORSH Talent’s virtual coaching features, your program can utilize customizable Learning Paths to cultivate professional growth. Learning Paths offer self-paced modules and courses that target specific training areas based on program data, coaching observations, and individual educator needs including:

  • Targeted professional development to focus on specific areas for growth or skills, helping teachers continuously improve their practice.
  • Courses structured to meet specific certification or recertification needs, making it especially useful for early-career educators.
  • Flexible, asynchronous learning opportunities for educators to upskill on their own time, which is critical for those balancing heavy workloads.

The best part? The Learning Paths modules can point directly to those exemplary resources curated in the Resource Library, making it easy for educators to access a wide variety of learning tools at the click of a button.

 

5. Cultivates collaborative learning in hybrid or virtual environments

Last but not least, the right OLP creates space for easy collaboration. These features are especially handy for programs that utilize a peer-to-peer mentorship model or otherwise wish to facilitate collective learning among their staff. 

For instance, professional learning communities (PLCs) empower teachers to share reflections, ask for colleagues’ input, or keep up to date with the latest insights related to DAP best practices in the classroom. When exploring technologies to support a PLC, program administrators should look for OLPs that flexibly adapt to a virtual, hybrid, and in-person version of this collaboration model.

TORSH Talent’s Communities feature allows PLC members to connect asynchronously and access the curated Resource Library as part of their PLC engagement.. Educators aren’t limited by the bounds of their physical program sites, either. TORSH often sees its early learning partners use Communities to facilitate multi-site PLCs on key topics like DAP. 

 

Drive High-Quality, High-Impact DAP Best Practices With TORSH

Ready to up-level your early childhood educators’ developmentally appropriate instructional strategies? TORSH Talent is the ideal platform for your professional development needs. From designing targeted Learning Paths to facilitating high-quality virtual, hybrid, and in-person coaching, early childhood education programs benefit from the easy-to-use and secure tools built into TORSH Talent, including:

  • Video-based observation
  • Targeted, specific feedback to teachers on their interactions with children and families
  • Synchronous and asynchronous collaboration with coaches and among peers
  • On-demand training for professional learning and certification
  • Individualized coaching tools for goal setting and tracking
  • Insights to guide professional learning and training

Discover how TORSH Talent can support your practitioners to take DAP to the next level, ensuring they meet every child and family where they are to help them thrive.

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TORSH Partners With Early Learning Coalition of Northwest Florida to Streamline Coaching & Enhance Early Education https://www.torsh.co/press-releases/torsh-and-elcnwf-streamline-coaching-enhance-early-ed/ https://www.torsh.co/press-releases/torsh-and-elcnwf-streamline-coaching-enhance-early-ed/#respond Mon, 05 Aug 2024 21:37:17 +0000 https://www.torsh.co/?p=6483 TORSH Talent operationalizes early learning coaching processes, empowering educators to improve practice and drive positive outcomes for children and families.…

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TORSH Talent operationalizes early learning coaching processes, empowering educators to improve practice and drive positive outcomes for children and families.

NEW ORLEANS, LOUISIANA, UNITED STATES, August 5, 2024 — TORSH, Inc., a leading educational technology provider, is thrilled to announce a new collaboration with the Early Learning Center of Northwest Florida (ELCNWF). Through this partnership, ELCNWF will streamline their coaching processes in child care centers, focusing the mentor-mentee relationship on effective classroom strategies, access to resources, and quick and effective information sharing. By investing in improving this process, the coalition moves closer to achieving its vision to ensure all children receive world-class early education preparing them for kindergarten.  

ELCNWF selected TORSH Talent, an innovative professional development and coaching platform for early learning professionals, in order to improve the efficiency and impact of their early learning educator coaching process. 

TORSH Talent has initiatives specifically targeting early learning through their technology solutions, aiming to improve educational outcomes for young children and can be particularly beneficial for early learning environments in several ways:

  1. Observation and Feedback: Early childhood educators can record their interactions with children and receive feedback from ELCNWF mentors and coaches. This helps in refining teaching strategies to better support the developmental needs of young children.
  2. Professional Development: The platform provides access to professional development resources tailored for early childhood educators. This includes training modules, best practices, and instructional strategies that are essential for fostering a high-quality early learning environment.
  3. Collaboration: TORSH Talent facilitates collaboration among early learning educators. Teachers can share videos and resources with their peers, participate in discussions, and learn from each other’s experiences.
  4. Documentation and Assessment: The platform allows early learning educators to document and assess children’s progress over time. This can be particularly useful for early childhood education where continuous observation and assessment are crucial for understanding and supporting each child’s development.
  5. Parental Involvement: Torsh’s solutions can also enhance parental involvement by sharing selected classroom videos and progress reports with parents, helping them stay informed about their child’s learning journey.

“The ELCNWF offers coaching to early learning educators which is a key element of high-quality professional development,” said Suzan Gage, Executive Director of ELCNWF. “By streamlining our internal processes, our coaches are able to shift their collective focus to in-class instruction, which helps to positively impact child outcomes.”  

Courtney Williams, Founder & CEO of TORSH, expressed, “Our team is honored to serve such an important mission in partnership with the Early Learning Coalition of Northwest Florida. Modern technology and data analysis offers so much potential to improve children’s lives, by improving the quality and impact of the educators who serve them.”

By using TORSH’s technology, early learning centers and educators can create a more effective and collaborative environment, ultimately improving the quality of early childhood education.

About TORSH, Inc.
TORSH, a New Orleans-based education technology company, is dedicated to improving childhood outcomes by increasing educator instructional effectiveness. TORSH Talent, an online coaching and professional learning platform, enables organizations to support educator growth through the entire development cycle of observation, assessment, goal setting, feedback, and coaching. Learn more by visiting torsh.co.

About the Early Learning Coalition of Northwest Florida
The Early Learning Coalition of Northwest Florida are the behind-the-scenes team ensuring young children in Northwest Florida have access to affordable, high-quality early learning experiences. We envision a Northwest Florida where all children receive world-class early education and care, thereby being fully prepared to learn upon entering kindergarten. We offer a variety of programs and supports, including Voluntary PreKindergarten (VPK), Mental Health Services, Child Development Screenings, and more. Learn more by visiting elcnwf.org.

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4 Keys to Using Job-Embedded Professional Development to Develop a Highly Qualified Early Education Workforce https://www.torsh.co/article/job-embedded-professional-development/ https://www.torsh.co/article/job-embedded-professional-development/#respond Fri, 21 Jun 2024 14:55:21 +0000 https://www.torsh.co/?p=6450 From declines in enrollment to program closures in the wake of evaporating pandemic funds to difficulties sustaining existing preschool programs…

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From declines in enrollment to program closures in the wake of evaporating pandemic funds to difficulties sustaining existing preschool programs — these are challenging times for early education. Of particular concern is a dearth of highly qualified early childhood educators, which can be felt in nearly every state.

Dr. Meg Franko, Director of Early Childhood Initiatives, Butler Institute for Families, University of Denver, explains during a recent interview, “[Early caregivers and early educators] are the folks who take care of our youngest citizens and who are their earliest teachers, people who help them get ready for the rest of their lives. At the same time, [programs are] in a position where we’re really struggling to get people to enter and stay in the field.”

Research continues to reinforce the incredible impact of early learning programs on student outcomes, from improving school readiness to predicting success after high school graduation. Even K12 administrators recognize that investing in early education is well worth it to cultivate successful student learning. 

To tackle these staffing issues, many programs are finding creative ways to attract and retain high-quality educators in their classrooms. Some partner with high school Career and Technical Education programs to create hands-on opportunities to engage future teachers, while others collaborate with community colleges and workforce development organizations to build the pipeline of qualified candidates.

These strategies prove effective in drawing nascent educators into the field — but what about those already working with children and their families? Recruitment alone does not guarantee ongoing quality and support for early educators as they advance in their careers. 

This is where job-embedded professional development for teachers comes in. 

 

Table of Contents

 

 

What Is Job-Embedded Professional Development, Exactly?

 

Despite its growing popularity among early educators, job-embedded training is more than a buzzword. Let’s examine job-embedded professional learning more closely and see how it compares with other approaches to educator development.

Job-embedded learning typically refers to “learning that is grounded in day-to-day practice and is designed to enhance professional practice with the intent of improving children’s learning and development” (Croft et al., 2010). It often relies on teams of education providers collaborating through a variety of methods to identify and solve issues of practice in an ongoing manner. Programs that embrace cycles of continuous learning and improvement lean on this type of professional learning to support their staff.

One example of a job-embedded learning strategy is practice-based coaching, defined by the ECLKC as “a strategy that uses a cyclical process. . . that supports teachers’ use of effective teaching practices that lead to positive outcomes for children.” This model focuses on collaborative, targeted relationships between coaches and teaching staff that center mentorship on specific goals related to practice. 

In contrast, other “traditional” forms of adult learning are often provided as external training (workshops or “PD Days”). But these approaches are far less effective in nurturing shifts in teaching practices than job-embedded professional development for teachers. In their 2020 report, Debra Pacchiano, Ph.D., Rebecca Klein, M.S., and Marsha Shigeyo Hawley, M.Ed. highlight that traditional PD is limited as it:

  • Lacks support to assist teachers with applying training information to practice
  • Involves minimal to no time for teacher reflection and examining real, relevant problems of practice
  • Offers few opportunities for teams to collaborate and learn from each other to support quality teaching practices

According to research examined by the Society for Research in Child Development, job-embedded supports like practice-based coaching have a greater impact and result in more benefits for teachers: “Coaching that supports domain-specific curricula is more successful in improving preschool children’s learning than coaching on general best practices for preschool teaching.”

 

Modernizing Professional Development in Early Education

 

The stakes are high for early education providers seeking to uplevel their approaches to teacher professional development. Quality instructional practices can be the difference between a child entering kindergarten, ready to learn in a classroom setting and a student who struggles with learning on day one. 

The consequences of school readiness (or lack of it) cannot be underestimated. In many cases, factors beyond educators’ direct control affect children’s kindergarten preparedness. For instance, socioeconomic gaps and racial inequities affecting families can result in some students entering the classroom already far behind their peers (NCES). More challenging still, gaps in academic performance as early as kindergarten persist even into the upper elementary grade levels (Princiotta & Germino Hausken, 2006).

These data underscore the importance of turning to empirically proven methods of improving teaching practice as the lever educators can maneuver to improve student outcomes. As such, job-embedded learning is all the more crucial for programs to invest time and effort into. 

However, not all job-embedded professional learning is equally impactful. Pacchiano, Klein, and Hawley explain that four key characteristics make these PD strategies most effective in the modern era:

  • 1:1 coaching support: As explored earlier, one-off training is insufficient for adult learners to retain new knowledge, let alone apply it in new ways to their teaching. Individualized support like practice-based coaching for early childhood teachers is more effective in shifting practices for the benefit of young students. 
  • Upskilling and self-learning: Early educators are busy! When programs offer opportunities for independent professional growth, they allow teachers to bolster their skills and even complete requirements for specific certifications on their own schedules around their many obligations. In particular, online courses work well to lead educators down tailored learning paths based on their learning opportunities or needs.
  • Peer-to-peer collaboration: Collaboration can include formal mentorship relationships between colleagues as well as less formal gatherings like lunch-and-learns or professional learning communities (PLCs). Fostering a spirit of collaboration among teachers can boost morale, create space for staff to seek and receive support when needed, and nurture a culture of continuous improvement as a team.
  • Data assessment and analysis: Metrics are essential to measure the effectiveness of all three characteristics above. The right data help educators and program administrators alike identify patterns of success and new ways to drive improvements to teaching practices that meet students’ needs.

With these characteristics of successful professional learning in mind, how can early learning organizations efficiently launch or uplevel a job-embedded upskilling program?

 

Four Strategies to Uplevel Job-Embedded Professional Development for Teachers

 

1. Invest In The Right Online Learning Platform For Your PD Needs

 

The first step to expanding and supporting job-embedded professional learning opportunities is identifying the best technology for your programs. The right online learning platform can make all the difference in either helping or hindering your team’s ability to engage in coaching efficiently, provide peer feedback and support, and measure the impact of coaching activities on program goals.

Solutions like the innovative TORSH Talent online learning platform provide all the tools needed to catalyze your job-embedded professional development program — all within your organization’s available resources. 

Let’s take coaching, for example. Teachers leverage TORSH Talent’s video recording features to capture classroom practices live, which they can review ahead of coaching sessions to self-reflect or identify opportunities for growth. In parallel, coaches can also review these recordings, leaving time-stamped feedback for their mentees with specific input related to their coaching goals. When a teacher and their coach next meet, whether it’s in-person or online, these prep steps set them up for a more targeted, productive session. 

These are just a few of the many resources available to early childhood teachers and coaches using TORSH Talent. Ready to learn more? Request a demo to discover how our platform can nurture your coaching practices and teachers’ professional growth as a continuous process. 

Looking for more tips as you search for the right online learning platform to meet your PD needs? Read our recent article for seven key questions every administrator should ask. 

 

2. Create Multiple Methods for Self-Paced Development

 

Another critical component of effective job-embedded training is self-learning. Asynchronous opportunities for upskilling give early educators autonomy and practical ways to continue building their teaching effectiveness on their own schedule. Many programs will use solutions like TORSH Talent’s Learning Paths to develop right-sized online modules and courses for:

  • Targeted training on specific topics, identified based on program data or opportunities for educator growth sourced from coaching observations
  • Certification requirements, either for new or ongoing education (especially helpful for teachers early in their career)
  • Other self-paced learning opportunities based on educators’ interests or personal learning goals

The best part about online learning pathways is their flexibility to meet individual educator’s unique needs. For example, TORSH Talent allows administrators to curate which modules educators must complete in order to layer on learning with great intentionality and precision. And with such busy schedules, early childhood teachers appreciate the ability to complete requirements like certifications when and where it’s convenient for them.

When early childhood providers take time to develop self-learning opportunities for their staff, they create conditions for practitioners to improve teaching effectiveness. Further, they encourage a mindset of curiosity among educators, which can greatly encourage them to stay in the field and continue helping young learners grow and thrive.

 

3. Leverage Hybrid & Virtual Collaboration for Scalability

 

Like many early education program leaders, you may be exploring hybrid and virtual professional learning methods such as online coaching to stretch limited program dollars and staff resources to the maximum. But there are so many ways technology can support collaboration beyond coaching! 

Consider building peer-to-peer collaboration opportunities in a digital space for early childhood staff. As highlighted earlier, PLCs are a great way to foster peer collaboration. Many programs leverage PLCs that focus on particular challenges with teaching practices within their classrooms. This setup encourages teachers to take ownership of isolating, testing, and measuring changes to program instructional approaches to improve student outcomes. 

TORSH Talent’s Communities feature is the perfect place to launch a virtual PLC or complement an in-person one with online collaboration. This informal tool allows your staff to pose and answer questions among their peers. A comprehensive directory also allows you or PLC leaders to manage membership in specific Sharing Circles around particular topics or challenges.

Learn more about this and other collaboration features available for early childhood educators in TORSH Talent.

 

4. Gather The Right Data To Guide Continuous Improvement

 

Even with the best coaching and collaboration practices in place, job-embedded professional learning is nothing without data. After all, the ultimate goal of improving teachers’ effectiveness is to improve students’ learning and growth — which requires measuring the impact of your PD strategies.

Whether you manage a Head Start program working to meet performance standards or a preschool experimenting with a new curriculum, data are essential. Consider how you might synthesize outputs from early childhood assessments, coaching feedback, and more to paint a picture of your program’s effectiveness. What learning outcomes are educators successfully driving in young learners? Where might teachers benefit from additional training or support? 

Additionally, these learning outcomes will inevitably change as a program matures and shifts — and that means building an ongoing process for reviewing and analyzing data becomes critical.

TORSH Talent offers clear reporting and metrics that you can tailor to meet your specific program needs or measure particular goals. Additionally, the platform integrates seamlessly with many LTI-compliant platforms such as Canvas, Blackboard, and Sakai, allowing you to examine multiple data across existing tools to make informed decisions about professional learning and practices. These capabilities underpin a successful cycle of improvement where teachers grow and students thrive.

 

Expand Your Job-Embedded Professional Learning Strategies with TORSH

 

TORSH brings a wealth of expertise and experience in effective coaching and job-embedded professional learning for early childhood educators. The innovative TORSH Talent online learning platform is the ideal solution to support and enhance job-embedded professional learning practices within your early education program, with easy-to-use and secure tools to:

  • Complete video-based observations
  • Provide targeted, specific feedback to early learning educators on their interactions with children and families
  • Nurture synchronous and asynchronous collaboration
  • Individualize educator coaching and learning
  • Give insights to guide professional learning and training

Uplevel your early childhood educator professional development needs with TORSH Talent. Request a demo today!

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The Early Learning Coalition of Pasco & Hernando Counties Selects TORSH to Enhance Early Childhood Coaching Initiatives https://www.torsh.co/press-releases/the-early-learning-coalition-of-pasco-hernando-counties-selects-torsh-to-enhance-early-childhood-coaching-initiatives/ https://www.torsh.co/press-releases/the-early-learning-coalition-of-pasco-hernando-counties-selects-torsh-to-enhance-early-childhood-coaching-initiatives/#respond Thu, 13 Jun 2024 20:36:03 +0000 https://www.torsh.co/?p=6435 TORSH Talent will streamline ELCPH coaching processes, advance teaching practices, and improve early childhood outcomes for thousands of children and…

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TORSH Talent will streamline ELCPH coaching processes, advance teaching practices, and improve early childhood outcomes for thousands of children and families.

NEW ORLEANS, LOUISIANA, UNITED STATES, June 13, 2024 — TORSH, Inc., a leading educational technology provider, is thrilled to announce its new strategic partnership with the Early Learning Coalition of Pasco and Hernando Counties, Inc. (ELCPH) to enhance the organization’s coaching initiatives. Through this collaboration, ELCPH will streamline coaching and professional development for the region’s early learning professionals, driving high-quality education to enable young children and their families to thrive.

ELCPH selected TORSH Talent, an innovative online learning platform, to standardize their coaching processes and deepen the impact of coaching activities on teacher effectiveness. The platform offers an extensive suite of professional learning tools for individual coaching, mentoring, observation, feedback, and collaborative learning. Features such as the exemplar library, video recording functionality, rubrics, and more will empower ELC coaches to seamlessly share exemplary resources with educators, continuously monitor teachers’ progress toward their professional learning goals, and streamline coaching processes using standardized CLASS rubrics.

“Early education programs benefit from a streamlined process that generates clear data on coaching effectiveness for continuous improvement,” said Courtney Williams, Founder & CEO of TORSH. “TORSH Talent will aid ELCPH in achieving this synchronicity for their staff.”

Over time, early learning teachers supported by ELCPH will use TORSH Talent to submit videos of teaching practices for coaches to review, who will then share time-stamped, evidence-based feedback on opportunities for improvement. ELCPH also plans to leverage the platform to facilitate direct communication with early learning site directors and providers, providing them with additional, valuable resources to support their staff and improve teaching effectiveness.

“Using TORSH Talent will improve the quality and impact of both in-person and hybrid coaching,” shared Steve Knobl, Ph.D., Executive Director of ELCPH. “It’s all about supporting teachers not only with targeted feedback but also with following through on clear and actionable next steps from their coaching conversations to advance instructional practices.”

Together with TORSH, ELCPH looks forward to deepening the benefits of their coaching for educators, standardizing coaching processes, and ultimately driving positive outcomes for the thousands of young children and families they serve.

About TORSH, Inc.
TORSH, a New Orleans-based education technology company, is dedicated to improving childhood outcomes by increasing educator instructional effectiveness. TORSH Talent, an online coaching and professional learning platform, enables organizations to support educator growth through the entire development cycle of observation, assessment, goal setting, feedback, and coaching. Learn more by visiting torsh.co.

About the Early Learning Coalition of Pasco and Hernando Counties
The Early Learning Coalition of Pasco and Hernando Counties, Inc. is a 501c3 organization and one of 30 Early Learning Coalitions in Florida. Florida’s Voluntary Prekindergarten (VPK) program is for all children who are four years old on or before September 1. School Readiness provides subsidized childcare for low-to-moderate-income working families. The nonprofit serves over 10,000 children between infancy and twelve years old, working with over 300 childcare providers in both counties. Learn more by visiting elcph.org.

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TORSH Inc. Partners with Launch Network to Connect Educators to Coaches and Resources for Improved Learning and Wellbeing https://www.torsh.co/press-releases/torsh-inc-partners-with-launch-network/ https://www.torsh.co/press-releases/torsh-inc-partners-with-launch-network/#respond Tue, 04 Jun 2024 17:24:16 +0000 https://www.torsh.co/?p=6411 NEW ORLEANS, LOUISIANA, UNITED STATES, June 4, 2024 —TORSH, Inc., a leading educational technology provider, is honored to announce its…

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NEW ORLEANS, LOUISIANA, UNITED STATES, June 4, 2024 —TORSH, Inc., a leading educational technology provider, is honored to announce its strategic partnership with the Launch Network. Through this partnership, the Launch Network will improve learning outcomes across the Rocky Mountain region by increasing unity, wellbeing, and academic success for students, families, and educators.

The Launch Network offers educators crucial resources to aid them in better serving their students and partnering with their families. Among these resources are coaches who serve kids, families, and teachers across multiple school sites and districts in Colorado. To facilitate greater collaboration and quality coaching among these sites, the Launch Network selected the innovative TORSH Talent platform, a secure web-based solution with a mobile application.

Justin Darnell, Co-Founder and Chief Navigator of the Launch Network, shared, “It’s time for better, and we are excited to partner with TORSH in creating a social network for kids, families, and teachers where they can share practice, learn together, and co-create better outcomes for everyone.”

TORSH Talent is well-positioned to support the Launch Network in nurturing personal and professional development by opening doors across learning environments. With the Communities feature, teachers and families can connect to share insights about their approaches and swap resources that further student growth. Time-stamped video feedback, a comprehensive resource library, and the ability to build Learning Paths tailored to each person’s needs for professional learning also set up Launch coaches for successful, individualized mentorship with each student, family, and teacher they serve.

“TORSH is beyond excited to collaborate with the Launch Network as their team innovates on ways to up-level collaboration and drive positive learning outcomes for all students, families, and educators through high-impact coaching,” said Courtney Williams, Founder and CEO of TORSH.

The Launch Network will roll out TORSH Talent across all currently supported locations and extend the social network service to as many K-12 classrooms as possible in the Rocky Mountain region. Through in-person and virtual coaching, as well as centralized teacher collaboration, Launch looks forward to promoting every child’s success and every family’s opportunity to thrive. Learn more by visiting launchnetwork.org.

About TORSH, Inc.
TORSH, a New Orleans-based education technology company, is dedicated to improving childhood outcomes by increasing educator instructional effectiveness. TORSH Talent, an online coaching and professional learning platform, enables organizations to support educator growth through the entire development cycle of observation, assessment, goal setting, feedback, and coaching. Learn more by visiting torsh.co.

About Launch Network
At Launch Network, we believe learning is beautiful. We believe every kid, every parent, every teacher, and every community member has unlimited capacity to launch their potential and realize transformational learning, together. That’s why Launch provides its partner educators with coaches for both teaching staff and families to guide greater collaboration and co-creation, leading to greater student and educator success, wellbeing, and unity. Learn more by visiting launchnetwork.org.

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How to Support Literacy Development in the Classroom: Coaching & PD as the Foundation for Strong Instructional Practices https://www.torsh.co/article/how-to-support-literacy-developement-in-the-classroom/ https://www.torsh.co/article/how-to-support-literacy-developement-in-the-classroom/#respond Tue, 21 May 2024 19:27:47 +0000 https://www.torsh.co/?p=6397 Meet George. George is an adult man who lives in Florida, speaks perfect English, and holds a high school diploma.…

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Meet George. George is an adult man who lives in Florida, speaks perfect English, and holds a high school diploma. And yet, George cannot read.

Seema Tejura, Founder and Managing Director of The Literacy Architects, first met George in 2003 while volunteering at an adult literacy center. After a quick diagnostic assessment, Tejura verified that he struggled to read most of the three-letter words presented to him. Right away, she set to work using explicit, systematic, multisensory phonics teaching strategies to develop his foundational literacy skills. 

One day during a tutoring session, George was progressing well with accurately decoding a list of new words. Suddenly, he stopped mid-word, looked directly at Tejura, and asked, “Why didn’t I learn any of this in school?”

George’s story reflects the experiences of the 93 million adults in the U.S. who struggle with reading. It’s these stories that underscore the importance of evidence-based literacy instruction in early childhood classrooms. That way, people like George become lifelong readers well before graduating from high school. 

Tejura and her colleague Caitlin Deckard, a Science of Reading Specialist with The Literacy Architects, recently joined TORSH to discuss the implications of the science of reading for early literacy support and how early learning programs can embrace these findings. This article offers a glimpse into the power of professional learning, a foundational pillar to strong instructional practices that cultivate literacy skills in our youngest learners.

Watch the full webinar recording here, or learn more about TORSH’s partnership with The Literacy Architects here

 

Table of Contents

 

 

Why Evidence-Based Literacy Development Matters — Now More Than Ever

 

Oral language skills evolved in humans nearly 100,000 years ago, but reading and writing skills developed far more recently. This means that our brains have had time to localize oral language to use only one part of the brain, while literacy requires no less than four parts to do successfully. 

The result? Reading is not a natural process like spoken language development. While students may naturally learn how to speak through repeated exposure and immersion, they need much more explicit, systematic instruction to learn how to read their favorite books. 

 

[Image: The Reading Brain from The Literacy Architects]

supporting literacy development

 

Additionally, reading requires more cognitive load (or effort and energy by the brain) to understand written texts. Tejura stressed that this matters for high-quality instruction with young learners: “Instruction should help students spend less cognitive energy on [basic skills like] decoding and word recognition in written texts to learn and comprehend those texts.”

 

Understanding the Science of Reading

 

A body of empirical research commonly known as the science of reading highlights the critical building blocks for learning how to read and shifting this cognitive load. Though these findings are not new, they have recently been expanded and are improving educators’ knowledge of which evidence-based teaching strategies cultivate strong reading skills.

In short, the science of reading stipulates that students must develop the following foundational literacy skills, in explicitly and systematically structured ways: 

  • Phonemic awareness
  • Phonics knowledge, decoding, and encoding
  • Vocabulary development
  • Fluency
  • Comprehension

As educators re-examine how to support literacy development in the classroom, they are increasingly recognizing the value of evidence-based reading strategies for young learners — strategies demonstrated through research to improve literacy in students. Research findings from the science of reading underpin the most effective instructional approaches. 

Learn more about the science of reading with The Reading League’s comprehensive overview. 

 

What the Science of Reading Tells Us About Early Literacy Support

 

This research is incredibly important for early learning programs to understand and embrace within early childhood classrooms.

Remember those five skills emerging from the science of reading (phonemic awareness, phonics knowledge, etc)? There’s a particular order in which students best learn them; each skill builds upon one another to unlock stronger reading abilities and higher reading levels. This order should inform literacy strategies to support instruction.

Young students must first develop their phonological awareness (recognizing sounds in spoken language) — specifically their phonemic awareness (manipulating the individual sounds in words). In turn, these skills are required for kids to become adept at alphabet awareness (recognizing written letters) and sound-spelling correspondence (understanding which letter(s) and letter combinations represent each sound).

Here’s an example of one instructional practice that brings this order of operations to life. Recent empirical literature suggests that linking phoneme awareness to letter-sound knowledge strengthens a student’s use of phoneme awareness, improving their reading and spelling performance (Brady 2020). Literacy support strategies that reflect this evidence may look this:

  • First, students practice isolating phonemes (like /s/) as they read and spell them.
  • Next, they blend phonemes (such as /s/ /a/ /t/) to form a word and read it (‘sat’).
  • Last, they practice segmenting phonemes in words (such as segmenting ‘ship’ into /sh/ /i/ /p/) and spell words with segmented phonemes (s-h-i-p).

“The classroom implications of this [research] are significant,” Deckard underscored. “If teachers stack phonemic awareness and letter-knowledge instruction, they can maximize instructional time while making stronger connections for their students.”

But Tejura explained too that, despite the importance of adopting such practices for early literacy support, actually changing instructional approaches isn’t easy: “To improve school readiness, early education programs need to focus on early phonemic awareness with kids, yet many instructors across the U.S. may be struggling to make this seemingly simple shift in practice.”

What can administrators and program directors do to support staff to shift classroom practice and ensure all students experience positive literacy skills development in preparation for kindergarten?

 

Professional Learning & Impactful Instruction Go Hand-In-Hand

 

Any change in a classroom or across a program requires time and consistent support. Some research estimates that it may take up to four years for educators to successfully shift instructional practices to embrace evidence-based programs and strategies (Fixsen et al, 2009). 

With such a long runway for meaningful change, early education programs can’t make just one or two quick swaps in literacy curricula and instruction. Change for a positive impact on literacy requires time and effort, both granularly and systematically.

This means going beyond one-and-done training on early literacy instructional methods and instead embracing a model of ongoing support, thoughtful professional development, coaching, and feedback. These components are must-have ingredients to alchemize reading instruction to support literacy development. 

Research shows that both students and teachers benefit from deliberate practices in sharing feedback and ongoing support. But it’s coaching that generates the greatest effects when assessed against other strategies for instructional improvement, including pre-service training and merit-based pay incentives (Fryer, 2017).  

With two-thirds of teacher preparation programs failing to adequately address phonemic awareness instruction — a critical piece of the literacy puzzle — the urgency could not be greater (NCTQ, 2023). Early childhood education programs must invest in professional learning and coaching to help teachers implement evidence-based practices in literacy.

 

3 Coaching & PD Strategies To Shift Literacy Instruction for the Better

 

From our expertise in professional learning for early childhood educators, here are three strategies that early childhood programs can adopt right now to support a stronger, impactful approach to early literacy.

 

Create a Safe Space For Educators From the Start

 

Change management is a natural part of any shift to programming or practice. For many educators, adapting evidence-based literacy practices may easily qualify as second-order change, which involves not only shifting instruction in classrooms but also adjusting educators’ mindsets. 

Naturally, the scale of such change can feel daunting and may conjure many different emotions and reactions. At the same time, second-order changes are also necessary for educational reforms to be achieved and sustained.

A safe, supportive environment is essential to help educators navigate second-order change. When teachers and administrators feel safe to share their concerns, ask for support, and experiment with new and unfamiliar approaches, the entire program can better move forward. 

Here are a few tips to help you cultivate a safe and supportive space for your team as you prepare professional learning to drive major changes in literacy instruction:

  • Start small. A huge list of new changes can quickly overwhelm even veteran staff members. Try focusing on one piece of the literacy puzzle at a time. For example, first spend time exploring how a child’s brain processes written texts and learns how to read. This gives you space to address teachers’ questions about the topic and gives teachers time to get comfortable with a new biological model for literacy development. 
  • Focus on actionable steps as much as theory. As you design each professional learning opportunity, ask yourself: what small, tangible, and practical steps can teachers take TODAY to shift practice? Again, keep these steps focused — it greatly supports educators to make incremental shifts to teaching practices without trying to tackle everything all at once. 
  • If exploring specific curricula or programs rooted in evidence-based literacy practices, assemble a diverse group of stakeholders for your selection committee. This means including the voices of teachers, administrators, and support staff in the review, discussion, and selection processes.

 

Prioritize Collaboration Among Teachers

 

Nothing builds positive camaraderie like collaboration. In adult learning, collaboration is often more effective than pure information sharing or solo practice. 

As a bonus, collaboration creates a spirit of shared learning and responsibility around major changes to literacy instruction. This experience can deepen staff’s buy-in for the changes themselves — IF collaboration is thoughtfully cultivated. 

Take a look at these suggestions to create collaboration opportunities centered on evidence-based literacy instruction:

  • Create professional learning communities (PLCs) dedicated to teachers’ collective growth in reading instruction. PLCs are excellent spaces for staff to share their insights, ask for support or guidance when navigating challenges, and surface resources that may help colleagues with their practice improvement. PLCs can be conducted virtually or in hybrid settings to connect early childhood educators across multiple program sites. Many early learning programs use TORSH Talent’s Communities feature to build PLCs for asynchronous collaboration.
  • If you seek support to facilitate targeted collaboration for early literacy instruction, explore the Literacy Masterminds program. This partnership between TORSH and The Literacy Architects offers a unique job-embedded professional learning approach for early learning professionals. 

 

Establish Ongoing, Varied Adult Learning Opportunities

 

Just as young students learn best through different methods, so too do adult learners. Offering a wide variety of ongoing learning opportunities is a powerful way to support your instructors in reshaping their mindsets and expanding their skill sets around literacy practices. 

Explore these tips for designing a comprehensive professional learning system that supports multiple learning styles and approaches among teaching staff:

  • Offer coaching through virtual, hybrid, and/or in-person methods to maximize coaching time with teachers. TORSH Talent contains all the tools you’ll need to modernize job-embedded coaching. From easy-to-use video recording tools to capture teaching practices in action and provide targeted feedback to digital portfolios to support coaches with managing mentees’ goals and resources, TORSH Talent catalyzes and centralizes professional learning for early childhood educators and programs.
  • Prioritize bite-sized learning sessions over marathons of training. For many learners, it’s easier to digest smaller chunks of new information repeatedly over time. TORSH Talent can support your program here with the innovative Learning Paths feature. Learning Paths allows administrators to craft customized journeys for their staff to layer information and skills practice through connected online courses linked to additional resources curated in your Exemplar Library

 

Lay the Foundation for Excellent Literacy Instruction with TORSH

 

Curious to learn more about the science of reading and how professional learning improves literacy instruction? Watch the webinar with TORSH and The Literacy Architects to dive deeper into the research and its implications. 

Ready to coach your educators through transformational change in early literacy support? Learn more about the Literacy Masterminds program or connect directly with one of our experts.

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[On-Demand Webinar] An Inside Look: How Georgia Created an Efficient and Effective Statewide Coaching and PD Program for Early Childhood Educators https://www.torsh.co/webinars/od-how-georgia-created-efficient-and-effective-statewide-coaching-pd-program/ https://www.torsh.co/webinars/od-how-georgia-created-efficient-and-effective-statewide-coaching-pd-program/#respond Mon, 20 May 2024 11:12:51 +0000 https://www.torsh.co/?p=6372 Professional learning and coaching are linked to positive child learning outcomes and increased educator engagement and satisfaction. However, professional learning…

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Professional learning and coaching are linked to positive child learning outcomes and increased educator engagement and satisfaction. However, professional learning and coaching that are individualized to meet the needs of all early childhood educators across an entire state is no small undertaking. 

Watch this on-demand webinar to hear from Dr. Christi Moore, Director of Professional Learning at the Georgia Department of Early Care and Learning (DECAL), how DECAL has built, expanded, and sustained professional learning programming across the state using the online learning platform (OLP) TORSH Talent.

During the 45-minute webinar you’ll learn tips for how to:

  • Utilize synchronous and asynchronous coaching to provide educators with targeted feedback on practice and make learning digestible for busy schedules
  • Use standardized rubrics and frameworks so 1:1 coaching is aligned to evidence-based practices and providers stay on track with portfolio completion
  • Create the space for self-reflection so that both educators and coaches can easily revisit and build upon their learnings
  • Leverage data, insights, and reporting in all facets of your professional strategy to support informed decision-making 

Take advantage of this opportunity to see how one enterprise-level program provided more coaching to educators with greater efficiency and, as a result, cultivated high-quality educators who improve developmental outcomes for the families and children they serve.

Fill out the form to watch the on-demand webinar.

Webinar Presenters:

Dr. Christi Moore 
Director of Professional Learning at the Georgia Department of Early Care and Learning (DECAL)

Christi Moore is the Director of Professional Learning at the Georgia Department of Early Care and Learning (DECAL). She guides the work of the Professional Learning Unit, which oversees DECAL’s early learning workforce development and professional learning initiatives. In 2011, Christi earned her Ph.D. in Early Childhood Education from Georgia State University. She has a variety of experiences in education, including service as a classroom teacher in Georgia’s Pre-K and in K-5 classrooms, as well as working as a guidance counselor in a middle school setting. She has also worked in teacher education, serving as a language and literacy instructor in a university teacher preparation program and as a facilitator and trainer for a non-profit professional development center. Before joining DECAL, Christi led the development of an award-winning online learning platform for teachers of children ages birth through third grade.

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5 Questions to Ask When Choosing an Online Learning Platform for Early Childhood Professional Development https://www.torsh.co/article/choosing-an-online-learning-platform/ https://www.torsh.co/article/choosing-an-online-learning-platform/#respond Thu, 11 Apr 2024 14:18:51 +0000 https://www.torsh.co/?p=6355 Tech platforms saturate education. There is no shortage of solutions, apps, online courses, or software available to early learning programs.…

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Tech platforms saturate education. There is no shortage of solutions, apps, online courses, or software available to early learning programs. They help streamline everything from family enrollment to educator certifications to basic business management processes.

In the world of educator development, an online learning platform (OLP) is quickly becoming a central asset for driving sustainable professional learning in early childhood education programs. 

In a best-case scenario, an OLP enables educational institutions to provide more coaching and training to teachers with greater efficiency, cultivating high-quality educators who improve developmental outcomes for the families and children they serve. The right OLP is the difference between modern, high-efficacy professional development opportunities with satisfied users — and one that wallows in outdated processes and frustrates users. 

Despite the increasingly important role they play in early childhood education, it can feel overwhelming to find the right OLP from the wide range of interactive learning platforms available. Each program is unique, and an online education platform must be able to support an organization’s specific professional development needs.

But the search for your ideal platform doesn’t have to be complicated!

From our team to yours, we will share five key questions that every early childhood program director should ask when assessing OLPs against their goals for professional development (PD): 

  1. Does it provide opportunities for educators to apply and grow their skills?
  2. Does it promote regular reflection on current teaching practices?
  3. Does it cultivate ongoing support and coaching for educators to refine practice?
  4. Does it enable differentiation in independent educator learning activities?
  5. Does it facilitate anytime, anywhere collaboration among early childhood educators?

Let’s dive in!

 

Table of Contents

 

 

5 Considerations for Online Learning Platforms in Early Educator PD

 

#1: Does It Provide Opportunities for Educators to Apply and Grow Their Skills?

 

This may seem obvious — but for an online educational platform to be effective in supporting professional growth, it needs to support educators to, well, grow! 

These days, many early education settings use practice-based coaching to support teachers in building a wide variety of skills. This methodology is effective because it encourages educators to be active participants and drivers of their own learning and career paths. An OLP is where modern technology meets coaching practices. 

Consider these factors when examining an OLP for its ability to cultivate professional development opportunities for teachers to apply their skills directly to student learning:

  • Observations beyond in-person
  • Time-stamped feedback

Customizable access to resources

 

Request Demo

 

Observations Beyond In-Person

 

Coaching practices are evolving beyond the days when in-person observation was the only option. To be sure, classroom visits still play a role in improving teacher practice — but these sessions are difficult to do frequently and at scale across an organization. OLPs help early childhood programs increase the dosage of coaching provided to educators through video-based observation tools. 

Look for platforms like TORSH Talent that make it seamless for teachers to record high-quality videos of themselves utilizing specific skills, and easy to share those videos directly with their coaches for reflection.

 Be sure to consider how an online education platform supports staff who teach in or may travel to remote locations without consistent access to the internet, too! TORSH Talent’s mobile app does not require connectivity to record and store videos, which automatically upload to the platform as soon as a teacher’s connection to a network is restored. 

 

Time-Stamped Feedback

 

Online learning programs and platforms should also build on these video-based coaching tools by enabling two-way communication and feedback within its digital environment. But few platforms allow the level of precision with feedback granted by an in-person activity or observation — where coaches can, in near real-time, make a note of a positive student-teacher interaction or flag soft skills that may need refinement to manage student behaviors.

TORSH Talent is the exception among interactive learning platforms: coaches can leave time-stamped feedback on their mentee’s classroom video recordings. This specificity is important; it ensures a coach can provide highly targeted support without physically being in the classroom. By pinpointing bright spots and opportunities for growth between coaching sessions, coaches can tee up more effective conversations with teachers when they next gather. 

 

Customizable Access to Resources

 

A foundational feature of many OLPs is the resource library, where programs can curate specific documentation, templates, lesson plans, exemplary practices, and more in one central location for all staff to access with ease. Most solutions will also enable administrators to create libraries of courses on a variety of topics for teachers to complete on their own time. 

TORSH Talent takes the self-guided approach to professional development opportunities to the next level. Teachers who receive the PD or coaching each have different learning styles, needs, and experience levels. Learning Paths in TORSH Talent allow PD to be fully differentiated to reach audiences with vast styles and experiences. The observation, self-assessment, data forms, goals, and video tools provide a unique set of learning modalities to reach the preferences, needs, and experience levels of organizations.

The key here is customization. Administrators can craft single courses and other interactive online learning opportunities from that very same resource library, and then string them together into curated, in-depth learning journeys. The possibilities for content creators are limitless, from offering teachers hands-on learning exercises for specific instructional practices to individual courses on broader topics.

TORSH sees education institutions use Learning Paths to create a specific range of courses on a variety of topics, sometimes granting staff access to courses without individualization. They also develop targeted online courses intended to support focused learning in one area, then enroll those teachers with that area of need to complete these in-depth learning paths. Many TORSH partners also leverage this functionality to build certification courses that allow staff to fulfill important requirements around their busy teaching schedules. 

The beauty of TORSH Talent’s customization — from micro-learning doses to full-blown online learning programs — is that early childhood teams can create their own unique library of courses that meets their needs.

 

#2: Does It Promote Regular Reflection on Current Teaching Practices?

 

Another crucial consideration is teachers’ self-reflection. Remember, coaching best practices emphasize a teacher’s active engagement and ownership of their career path and learning. Strong self-reflection practices are essential muscles to build here — after all, adults are always learning and growing, too!

Coaches serve as facilitators of these reflective strategies to improve a teacher’s ability to notice their own behaviors, thought patterns, and approaches to instruction. OLPs should also support these practices by creating space for self-reflection that both teachers and coaches can easily revisit. 

Here again, TORSH Talent’s video tooling is an excellent resource to cultivate these soft skills for teachers by allowing them to record and watch themselves teaching in action. Many educators on the platform find it useful to reflect on their practices with high-quality videos just before a live coaching session. That way, they are prepared with specific bright spots to celebrate and opportunities for growth on which to seek additional support.

Educators can also collaborate with their coach to set and track progress toward achieving their goals, turning their self-reflections as well as coaches’ input on these video recordings into tangible action steps.

 

#3: Does it Cultivate Ongoing Support and Coaching for Educators to Refine Practice?

 

With this inquiry, ongoing is the word of note. Educator professional development isn’t limited to discrete windows of time as they once were. Now, early learning programs can lean on modern technology to ensure that services are available year-round and even on demand. 

This matters especially in the world of early childhood education, where teaching tools such as early childhood assessments depend on effective PD, coaching, and training to correctly and equitably implement. TORSH Talent is an ideal platform for scaling up access to professional learning, coaching, and technical services in early childhood education programs

Perhaps just as important as the groundwork of ongoing support is the higher-level visibility that administrators and program leaders need around these activities. When planning how to allocate funding, staffing, coaches, and other resources, early learning directors must be able to see the impact of these strategies.

TORSH Talent creates this insight for top-level program staff through robust reporting on active users, popular courses, coaching activities, and more on the platform. The solution also integrates with many LTI-compliant platforms, allowing directors and other administrators to triangulate patterns across multiple data sources and make more informed decisions. 

 

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#4: Does It Enable Differentiation in Independent Educator Learning Activities?

 

Just as every young child has their own journey of growth, so too does each educator who supports them. And yet individualized professional learning requires a lot of effort, time, and staff — which may not be feasible for an early childhood program. An OLP is an excellent resource to help a program balance staff’s unique growth opportunities for support with their available resources to meet that wide variety of learning needs.

Remember the Learning Paths module in TORSH Talent? We’ve already explored the customization options that this function offers for right-sizing individual courses and focused learning opportunities for educators. Now picture how a range of courses can be strung together into in-depth learning paths for staff to follow — at their own pace. Now scale these customized, high-quality courses across an entire program! 

TORSH Talent designed its Learning Paths module to be easy for everyone involved, no matter the size or nature of a program. From accessible authoring tools for admins to simple enrollment for staff, this functionality helps programs create that balance between efficiency and individual growth. With its friendly learning interface, the platform ensures teachers and administrators are all satisfied users!

When a program cultivates differentiated learning opportunities within an OLP, it must also identify key factors universal to all opportunities to evaluate their impact. This is why TORSH Talent again is the ideal platform, as it includes detailed reporting on learners’ progress toward lesson goals through competency-based assessments, aligned resources, discussion groups, and learning completion rates. 

 

#5: Does It Facilitate Anytime, Anywhere Collaboration Among Early Childhood Educators?

 

Collaborative efforts to drive continuous improvement can make a huge difference in early education settings. Common models like professional learning communities (PLCs) bring educators together to share insights from their practices, reflect as a team on their efforts to support student learning and iterate on programming to incrementally create more positive outcomes. 

An OLP can become a valuable hub for learning within PLCs. In TORSH Talent, for instance, educators from the same program (or better still, from across multiple programs using the platform) can form groups in the Communities feature. Some teams may create groups based on teaching experience, pairing newer staff with veterans for guidance. Others may form PLCs around particular priorities within an organization, while others further focus instead on a range of topics tied to professional growth goals and current industry practices in those areas. 

And of course, coaches and educators benefit from having access to asynchronous tools and customizable workflows within the platform to connect between their individual video or in-person sessions together. TORSH Talent is also an excellent resource for peer-to-peer coaching opportunities

 

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Why the Right Online Learning Platform Matters For Early Education PD

 

Early childhood educators benefit from guidance to refine their knowledge, soft skills, instructional practices, etc. And every program leader knows that offering a wide range of PD opportunities, from certification courses to video-based coaching, is the key to unlocking every teacher’s potential.

Effective PD is inextricably linked to positive child learning outcomes, including improved school readiness, increased educator engagement and satisfaction, and improvements in meeting specific program requirements such as Head Start performance standards. These trends all impact the learning experience for students and their families. 

It comes as no surprise that modern technology can either help or hinder professional learning strategies in early education institutions. The most important benefit that OLPs offer is efficiency. Self-paced online courses, resource libraries with high-quality videos and documentation, community features, and more enable lean program teams to more effectively support more educators on a wide range of topics with fewer resources consumed. 

This matters! The goal of any professional learning strategy is to support a high-quality early childhood workforce that improves developmental outcomes for children, and OLPs create a hub of learning that drives the PD behind these gains.

In addition, the best interactive learning platforms also provide:

  • Key data, insights, and reporting into all facets of a professional strategy to support informed decisions
  • Mechanisms to reinforce consistency with coaching or instructional practices
  • Centralized resources such as digital coaching rubrics, documentation of core protocols, exemplary lesson plans or videos of classroom activities, etc.
  • Features to streamline and expand coaching services using either virtual, hybrid, or in-person models, such as video-recording options, goal-setting and tracking tools, etc.

 

Streamline Early Childhood Professional Development & Certification With TORSH

 

From building a comprehensive training resource library to driving high-impact virtual coaching, TORSH Talent is the ideal platform for your professional development needs. Early childhood education programs can take full advantage of the easy-to-use and secure tools built into TORSH Talent, including tools for:

  • Video-based observation
  • Providing targeted, specific feedback to teachers on their interactions with children and families
  • Synchronous and asynchronous collaboration with coaches and among peers
  • On-demand training for professional learning and certification
  • Individualized coaching tools for goal setting and tracking
  • Insights to guide professional learning and training

Take a look at how your early education program can leverage TORSH Talent to nurture high-quality early childhood learning and ensure every family you serve can thrive.

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Online vs In-Person Early Education Coaching Models: Results From Child360’s Two-Year Study https://www.torsh.co/article/online-vs-in-person-early-education-coaching-models-results-from-child360s-two-year-study/ https://www.torsh.co/article/online-vs-in-person-early-education-coaching-models-results-from-child360s-two-year-study/#respond Mon, 12 Feb 2024 16:15:13 +0000 https://www.torsh.co/?p=2248 Is online coaching for early education professionals really as effective as in-person coaching and observation? The answer is a resounding…

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Is online coaching for early education professionals really as effective as in-person coaching and observation? The answer is a resounding “yes,” according to the results from a two-year study conducted by Child360, a Los Angeles-based non-profit whose focus was on early learning opportunities vital to succeed in school and life.

Child360 first conducted a feasibility study in 2016‐17 and the outcome suggested that online coaching had the potential to be highly effective. As a result of that first study, Child360 initiated a more robust two-year, full-scale study of online coaching with a larger sample of teachers and coaches. “We decided to continue using TORSH [Talent which was a part of the original feasibility study] in this study because of anecdotal evidence that it allowed teachers and coaches to build trusting relationships through virtual face‐to‐face interactions, to set quality improvement goals, and to track progress toward goals.”

Over the 24 month period, six coaches worked with 215 teachers from 121 child care provider locations to provide resources, offer advice, and collaborate with them to create goals for their early learning programs. In Child360’s traditional coaching model, coaches typically conduct in‐person visits, in which they work one‐on‐one with teachers and administrators to help them improve their early learning programs through a cycle of appreciative inquiry, process consultation, feedback, reflection, and goal setting. The organization sought to determine if the adoption of an online coaching platform could positively impact reach, coaching dosage, and affordability while maintaining the level of quality achieved with their in-person model. 

Participants of the study were involved in all methods of coaching which included in-person, online and a hybrid of in-person and online. Online or hybrid participants engaged through the use of videos, allowing coaches to remotely observe teachers and their classrooms. They also added the use of video conferencing or online chats to conduct conversations in real‐time with teachers to provide feedback. All online activity was captured and tracked within the TORSH Talent platform. 

While most participants were new to the online coaching platform and had a bit of a learning curve when it came to incorporating video into their routines, as the study progressed, both coaches’ and teachers’ increasing familiarity and comfort with technology resulted in a positive overall experience. 

Child360’s 35-page report provides the raw data used to calculate time and cost savings, feedback from coaches and teachers, as well as the protocol documents used by participants. The organization also answers questions related to the impact of adopting an online coaching platform in relation to these key areas:

  • Expanding Access to Coaching Supports
    • Online coaching offers the considerable advantage of allowing teachers and coaches to collaborate regardless of the physical distance between them. Unfettered by the constraints of having to meet in person, Child360 coaches could potentially serve a much wider pool of providers. 
  • Building Better Relationships Between Teachers and Coaches
    • All teachers reported having positive relationships with their coaches. Through the expanded use of communications platforms  – text, phone, and email – Child360 helped some participants reduce initial worries about transitioning to an online coaching program. Teachers reported that their coaches were encouraging, supportive, and flexible.
  • Providing More Affordable Coaching Supports
    • This study prove that online coaching was more affordable for providers than face‐to‐face coaching, resulting in a 22% reduction in total cost compared to traditional coaching.
  • Increasing Coaching Dosage for Child360’s Providers
    • Partially due to a reduction in drive time of 68% for online coaches versus in-person, coaches reported that online coaching enabled them to accomplish more in a shorter period of time.

Early Education Specialist-Angela Daliet

Angela Daliet manages Business Development specializing in Early Education at Torsh. After earning her B.S. from the University of New Orleans, Angela successfully worked as an investment advisor and financial planning firm coach for several years. Upon learning her children’s public school had no immediate plans to reopen post-Katrina, she established the non-profit Save Our Schools NOLA to help leverage students, parents, teachers, and residents as informed, effective advocates for equitable access to local, high-quality schools and programs.

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