00:00:00
well Susan thank you so much for having
00:00:02
me I'm Elena Aguilar I am a coach an
00:00:07
author a teacher a podcaster a mother
00:00:10
and I'm really excited to be here for
00:00:13
this conversation today absolutely so
00:00:16
we're just gonna dive straight into it
00:00:19
because I want to hear all about your
00:00:21
process for writing and what your focus
00:00:23
is has what your focus has been and
00:00:25
where you're shifting to which I think
00:00:27
is really interesting so
00:00:29
um in the past you've written a lot
00:00:31
about coaching can you talk to me a
00:00:33
little bit about your philosophy around
00:00:35
coaching and how it impacts the
00:00:38
instructional process
00:00:39
yes
00:00:41
so
00:00:44
I'll first just share a little anecdote
00:00:46
which is that when I became a teacher
00:00:49
one of the things I noticed really
00:00:52
quickly was the incredibly High turnover
00:00:55
rate of teachers I first taught in
00:00:58
Oakland California in the public schools
00:01:01
and my students were the ones who
00:01:03
actually said to me are you going to be
00:01:06
here next year are you going to stay
00:01:07
through the end of the year and I said
00:01:09
yes of course and they said well so many
00:01:12
of our teachers don't and I came to see
00:01:14
that really quickly the incredibly High
00:01:16
turnover rates of teachers and the
00:01:19
overwhelm and stress and burnout I
00:01:22
received some coaching in my first
00:01:24
couple of years as a teacher it was very
00:01:27
technical very focused on instructional
00:01:29
strategies and what I really needed
00:01:33
support on was the how do you manage all
00:01:37
of this the emotions the just the
00:01:41
everything
00:01:42
so fast forward about about 15 years or
00:01:46
so I became a coach first at the school
00:01:49
that I had helped to found and one of
00:01:51
the things that we were really concerned
00:01:52
with was the high turnover rate of
00:01:54
teachers and
00:01:56
so the coaching methods that I developed
00:01:59
were in some ways built upon the
00:02:03
strategies that I'd experienced as a
00:02:05
coachee so there was instructional
00:02:07
coaching and focusing on students and
00:02:09
engagement all that and I also sort of
00:02:12
intuitively just began coaching people
00:02:15
around what I now call their beliefs and
00:02:19
ways of being because that was where we
00:02:22
could get into in part the conversation
00:02:25
around burnout and stress and overwhelm
00:02:28
and just the emotions of it many of
00:02:30
which are beautiful and positive and
00:02:32
encouraging but
00:02:34
um the transformational coaching model
00:02:36
that I've developed Is Anchored in a
00:02:40
sort of three domains which are
00:02:44
we coach around people's behaviors
00:02:47
beliefs and ways of being I call that
00:02:49
the three b's behaviors beliefs and ways
00:02:51
of being so behaviors are the more
00:02:54
familiar instructional coaching
00:02:56
strategies that folks are probably uh
00:02:58
have experienced or are trying beliefs
00:03:01
is around beliefs around who you are who
00:03:04
your students are that's where we get
00:03:05
into conversations around equity and
00:03:08
more and then ways of being is where we
00:03:10
explore emotions and identity and who we
00:03:14
are who we want to be and so it's really
00:03:17
a holistic model that is
00:03:20
um that was created from my own
00:03:22
experiences as well as from what I
00:03:26
observed that teachers and really I
00:03:28
would say human beings need which is to
00:03:30
be seen in our full Humanity with the
00:03:32
emotions with all the conflict and the
00:03:34
questions and also a model that does
00:03:37
include let's talk about data let's talk
00:03:39
about student
00:03:41
um engagement and parent involvement and
00:03:44
so on and so on so that's the model that
00:03:47
I have created called together that I
00:03:50
write about that I still practice as a
00:03:52
coach and that I have seen tremendous
00:03:54
impact from
00:03:55
yeah and what I love about your model
00:03:58
Elena is that you do acknowledge the
00:04:01
teachers are human and that we're not
00:04:03
like the superhero that can't show
00:04:06
emotions and so I so appreciate that
00:04:09
you're willing to dive into that and
00:04:12
allow us to actually have those emotions
00:04:14
I think I remember back to my student
00:04:16
teaching when I mean I had professors
00:04:19
tell me straight out there there is no
00:04:22
room for emotion in the classroom
00:04:23
there's no room for crying there is no
00:04:25
room for
00:04:27
um having emotions around the students
00:04:29
or even around your colleagues so that
00:04:31
you can even even if you had a horrible
00:04:33
day and you needed to break down just
00:04:35
for a minute you couldn't even do that
00:04:37
because it was seen as unprofessional
00:04:39
and so your model is so refreshing and I
00:04:43
think is so meaningful for all of us
00:04:45
because you do acknowledge that key
00:04:48
component of emotion and how it does
00:04:50
impact the other two areas our belief
00:04:53
systems and our ways of being because
00:04:55
the that's who we are right
00:04:58
and we all know that as human beings and
00:05:00
as teachers we know that however we are
00:05:03
feeling will have an impact in the
00:05:04
classroom it will have an impact on
00:05:06
students and the other thing I think
00:05:08
that I I want to shift the Paradigm on
00:05:11
or help people remember is that emotions
00:05:14
aren't good or bad they're just
00:05:16
information and some of that information
00:05:18
is incredibly energizing and galvanizing
00:05:22
can keep us teaching so the things that
00:05:24
we think about as the positive emotions
00:05:26
which again they're not really positive
00:05:28
they are just what they are but that the
00:05:31
emotions such as love and commitment and
00:05:34
passion and all of that is what can keep
00:05:38
so many of us in the classroom and in
00:05:40
the work year after year and so you know
00:05:43
as can a sadness and anger and fear in
00:05:46
all of those when we explore them and we
00:05:48
understand the messages those emotions
00:05:50
are trying to share with us they're
00:05:52
giving us information and yes I got the
00:05:54
same messages when I started teaching I
00:05:56
was told by my first principal people
00:05:58
leave your emotions at the door do not
00:06:01
bring them into the school building in
00:06:03
the school building you have to be this
00:06:05
that you know don't smile until after
00:06:06
Thanksgiving and all that kind of thing
00:06:08
like that was what that is asking us to
00:06:11
do as human beings is disconnect from
00:06:13
our Humanity we're not effective when we
00:06:17
are shutting down parts of who we are we
00:06:20
just aren't and every action we take
00:06:23
emerges from a belief and every belief
00:06:25
is connected to a way of being through
00:06:29
our full humanity and so as a
00:06:31
transformational coach we look for those
00:06:34
threads those through lines between
00:06:36
behaviors beliefs and ways of being so
00:06:39
that we can actually create
00:06:40
transformational change and not just
00:06:43
compliance based change or you know I
00:06:46
used to coach a lot of teachers before I
00:06:48
started using really a truly holistic
00:06:50
model I would coach them around
00:06:52
behaviors and then think okay they did
00:06:55
that they made that change three months
00:06:57
later they were back doing the thing
00:06:59
that I was like wait I thought we worked
00:07:00
on this why are the kids in rows again
00:07:03
why is the classroom silent I thought
00:07:04
we'd worked on that
00:07:06
um and that was before I started really
00:07:09
digging into beliefs and in that case uh
00:07:12
just specifically like what are the
00:07:14
beliefs around silence in the classroom
00:07:16
and students talking what are the
00:07:18
teachers beliefs and how does that
00:07:20
affect the choices that they make and
00:07:22
there and then the effect on students um
00:07:26
um yeah it's incredible how everything
00:07:30
does relate to one another I'm curious
00:07:33
because you've been at this for a really
00:07:35
long time
00:07:36
um in terms of of looking at teacher
00:07:39
burnout and why we have this this
00:07:42
teacher retention issue and I think it
00:07:46
Rose to the surface a lot during the
00:07:48
pandemic because I think that's an
00:07:50
extreme right
00:07:52
um but this has been around since before
00:07:54
the pandemic so do you see a change or a
00:07:57
shift in what has been the cause of
00:08:01
teacher retention issues versus what
00:08:03
they are now
00:08:06
yeah I appreciate that question and the
00:08:08
acknowledgment that
00:08:10
we had an incredible problem with
00:08:14
burnout before the pandemic because I
00:08:17
feel like there's been such an emphasis
00:08:18
on like well this is the hardest year
00:08:20
ever this is it I think the situation
00:08:23
has been exasperated and the pressure
00:08:26
for teachers has always been tremendous
00:08:29
and has just grown so it's it's really
00:08:32
just been an issue of
00:08:36
um you know of a sort of an exponential
00:08:39
impact on teachers and it's and I think
00:08:43
the underlying causes are still the same
00:08:45
and that's why in responding to the
00:08:49
burnout the retention really burnout is
00:08:52
depression I think it's important for us
00:08:54
to acknowledge that often uh and to name
00:08:57
that burnout is really sort of emotional
00:09:00
overwhelm which I would say which often
00:09:02
shows up as depression which often could
00:09:05
be really classified as depression
00:09:07
um burnout kind of obscures the more
00:09:10
serious
00:09:11
um
00:09:12
you know underlying issues but I think
00:09:14
that the the really deep underlying
00:09:17
issues uh have to do with a whole lot of
00:09:21
system issues with the way that
00:09:25
um teachers are
00:09:27
are treated or thought about are the
00:09:31
amount of responsibility and so I think
00:09:33
there's both what's needed is both an
00:09:36
individual
00:09:39
um response in terms of really an
00:09:42
individual teacher's response as well as
00:09:43
a systemic response and so when I talk
00:09:45
about an individual's response
00:09:48
um that's really what I write about in
00:09:50
my book onward which is about
00:09:51
cultivating emotional resilience there
00:09:53
are things that we can do there are
00:09:56
things that are within our sphere of
00:09:58
influence or even our sphere of control
00:09:59
that we can do to build our resilience
00:10:02
to feel better to
00:10:06
um to to navigate the burnout the
00:10:09
depression the overwhelm the
00:10:11
responsibility and to be able to make
00:10:12
some clear decisions there are things we
00:10:14
can do and there are teachers I know who
00:10:17
have thrived in
00:10:19
in the pandemic and that's been um
00:10:22
incredible to see and it they're
00:10:24
definitely outliers and that is not to
00:10:28
overshadow the difficulty and the stress
00:10:31
that so many teachers have faced and
00:10:34
that's why again I say there's two
00:10:35
things that need to happen one is a
00:10:38
total system overhaul of the really the
00:10:42
education experience the teaching
00:10:44
profession and there are things that
00:10:46
individually we need to do and that
00:10:48
includes setting boundaries and saying
00:10:51
and knowing when to walk away and
00:10:53
knowing what
00:10:55
um having a real Clarity on our sphere
00:10:57
of influence and our sphere of control
00:10:58
and being able to say like yes this I
00:11:00
have to let go of but this I could do
00:11:03
something about if I learn the skills to
00:11:06
advocate for myself or my students or to
00:11:09
speak up or to engage in the kind of
00:11:11
healthy conflict that we need to be
00:11:14
seeing in our school so there's a
00:11:15
tremendous amount that Educators can do
00:11:18
to in improve their experience and to
00:11:21
navigate the challenges and I always and
00:11:25
is one of my favorite words and the
00:11:28
system needs to change yeah but we can't
00:11:30
we can't affect the change of the system
00:11:32
if we're completely exhausted and burnt
00:11:34
down just sort of scrambling to stay
00:11:36
alive so we need to shore up our own
00:11:38
resilience so that we can have the
00:11:39
energy to change the system yeah so when
00:11:42
you talk about
00:11:44
um that we have are empowered with
00:11:46
things that we can do in order to to
00:11:49
change and shift that conversation what
00:11:51
are some examples that you've seen
00:11:55
so let's start with what is closest to
00:11:59
our sphere of control it is either
00:12:01
within our sphere of control or it is
00:12:03
closest and that is the thoughts that we
00:12:06
have the thoughts that we have
00:12:09
create the emotions that we have
00:12:12
so
00:12:14
let's say a student
00:12:20
let's say you give your students a
00:12:22
direction you ask them to do something
00:12:24
and you see a student sitting in the
00:12:27
front she rolls her eye she puts her
00:12:29
head down on the desk she might even
00:12:31
Mumble something about you and you might
00:12:34
think what did she just say about me
00:12:35
what happens next is where you can have
00:12:41
a tremendous impact on your emotions and
00:12:43
your resilience the meaning that you
00:12:46
make of that student's behaviors things
00:12:49
will happen they will always happen
00:12:51
people will do things students will roll
00:12:52
their eyes what we tell ourselves what
00:12:55
the meaning that we make
00:12:57
can lead us in all kinds of different
00:12:59
directions so if we say to ourselves
00:13:03
she doesn't respect me
00:13:05
teachers are the most disrespected
00:13:08
people in
00:13:10
our professional sphere
00:13:12
I don't know how I can keep doing this
00:13:13
how can I do this when I'm treated like
00:13:15
this by students by parents by admin by
00:13:18
everybody
00:13:19
now that set of thoughts
00:13:23
is going to
00:13:26
is going to lead to physiological
00:13:31
changes in your body right it's going to
00:13:33
lead to your stress hormones
00:13:37
um flowing increasing moving through
00:13:40
your body that contributes to the
00:13:42
emotion so it's helpful to understand
00:13:44
what emotions are they are in part a
00:13:47
result of sort of our biochemical shifts
00:13:49
in our body and those are affected by
00:13:51
our thoughts and so that can generate
00:13:53
the anger the grief the frustration we
00:13:58
could have other thoughts in that moment
00:14:00
we could think
00:14:03
I wonder what's going on with her or
00:14:05
she's tired or clearly she's frustrated
00:14:08
and maybe she's frustrated with what's
00:14:10
going on in the classroom maybe there's
00:14:11
other things I wonder if there's
00:14:13
anything I can do I wonder if I could
00:14:16
connect with her I wonder you know
00:14:18
what's going on with her but so I'm
00:14:20
saying there's a there's a like don't
00:14:22
take it personally message here
00:14:24
um when we take it personally that
00:14:26
generally can undermine our resilience
00:14:28
so there's a whole lot more to say about
00:14:30
the thoughts we have the impact they
00:14:32
have in our resilience but that is a
00:14:34
place for us to really dig into
00:14:36
understanding we create to a great
00:14:40
extent we create our own reality and
00:14:41
that's really hard to accept that took
00:14:43
me a long time to accept like my
00:14:45
thoughts create my reality no I want to
00:14:46
blame everybody else I want to say it's
00:14:49
admin it's the system
00:14:51
and again it's uh it's not black and
00:14:53
white and the system does affect our
00:14:56
well-being and health but there are
00:14:57
things that we can influence and control
00:15:00
in terms of our day-to-day experience
00:15:02
our emotions our thoughts so
00:15:05
um that's onward my book is organized
00:15:07
around 12 habits that Educators can take
00:15:10
to cultivate their own resilience and
00:15:13
that includes understanding emotions and
00:15:16
understanding how to work with emotions
00:15:18
includes understanding ourselves
00:15:19
building Community taking care of
00:15:22
ourselves it includes the habit of play
00:15:26
and create and appreciate and celebrate
00:15:28
and so it's not everything in this is
00:15:31
not a Panacea but there is a lot we can
00:15:35
do yeah and I'm smiling because
00:15:38
um my own coach has actually walked me
00:15:40
through a framework we call ctfar which
00:15:43
is circumstances you're going to have
00:15:44
circumstances thrown at you but then the
00:15:46
things that you control are your
00:15:47
thoughts and so you identify what
00:15:50
thoughts you're having and What feelings
00:15:52
then result from those thoughts and then
00:15:54
what actions result from your feelings
00:15:56
and then what the results are from your
00:15:58
actions and that you can if you can get
00:16:00
to a point where you're aware enough
00:16:03
to pause yourself in the middle of the
00:16:06
cycle that is where the power lies and I
00:16:09
I hear that from you from this framework
00:16:11
that you've been working on with
00:16:12
teachers and I think that's the key
00:16:14
right if we can stop ourselves in the
00:16:16
moment and identify and acknowledge that
00:16:19
it's in our heads what are the thoughts
00:16:21
that we're having what are the stories
00:16:22
that we're telling ourselves that brene
00:16:24
Brown says often
00:16:26
um I think that's a super powerful
00:16:29
um and it does it empowers teachers to
00:16:31
be able to have control of their own
00:16:34
destiny which oftentimes we feel so out
00:16:36
of control that that's helpful I just
00:16:38
want to acknowledge that it's super hard
00:16:40
it's super hard to do that right and
00:16:42
sometimes you can catch yourself in the
00:16:43
moment and sometimes it's later when
00:16:45
you're debriefing with somebody but it
00:16:47
is really hard and it does take practice
00:16:50
and cultivating that habit and that's
00:16:51
what one of the chapters in onward is
00:16:53
called be here now and it's the one in
00:16:55
which I plug meditation as a strategy
00:16:57
meditation is really just the daily
00:16:59
practice of what's going on in my mind
00:17:01
and how can I cultivate awareness of
00:17:04
that
00:17:05
um but I do I just I want to just say
00:17:07
like yeah it is really hard it's hard
00:17:11
um our the potential for our impacts on
00:17:13
children when we learn how to meet
00:17:16
students needs when we learn how to do
00:17:19
that better we'll see the results that
00:17:21
we all came into this profession to see
00:17:24
we'll see the student achievement the
00:17:26
student experience that we all long to
00:17:29
see I know that's why Educators got into
00:17:31
this and um and we can do that through
00:17:35
the learning we can do that we need to
00:17:38
do that we can do about our own in our
00:17:40
own skill set it is possible it's the
00:17:44
passion that you have for this is
00:17:46
incredible to watch so thank you so much
00:17:48
for joining us today
00:17:50
um if people want to stay in touch how
00:17:52
do they get into your sphere how can
00:17:54
they stay in touch with you
00:17:57
so I do have a podcast that's the Bright
00:18:00
Morning podcast that might be a place
00:18:02
folks want to start that's where I offer
00:18:06
a lot of tips and tools and demonstrate
00:18:08
coaching conversations my website is
00:18:12
brightmorningteam.com I'm on the socials
00:18:15
uh that you can find the links on our
00:18:19
website
00:18:21
um so those would be some good spots to
00:18:23
start with that's fantastic well thank
00:18:25
you so much for joining me today I
00:18:26
really appreciate it and I can't wait to
00:18:29
dive into my next PD session I'm excited
00:18:31
hey thank you Susan this was a great
00:18:33
conversation