Open Your Door

This week, I was talking with a group of teachers about the constraining practices they are being asked to use – scripted, whole-class phonics instruction that doesn’t account for the individual differences of their first graders – some of whom read abundantly and others who cannot yet name all of the letters. I heard myself whispering the words, “Close your door and teach.” While this seemed, in some ways, to be an appropriate response to the situation, I realized at once how hypocritical I was being. Isn’t coaching, after all, about opening our doors? There is so much value in going public with our practice. When we open our doors, we see teaching as a professional interaction, not a solitary exercise. Sharing our practice can have an immediate, productive impact on pedagogy. As we open our doors and teach, and then reflect with others, we learn through the complexity and messiness of our real context. As we talk with another, we think about w...