Dr. Boogren was a 2007 finalist for Colorado Teacher of the Year and received the Douglas County School District Outstanding Teacher Award eight years in a row, from 2002 to 2009. In addition to writing articles for the National Writing Project’s The Voice and The Quarterly, she is the author of In the First Few Years: Reflections of a Beginning Teacher. She is a contributing author to Richard Kellough’s Middle School Teaching: A Guide to Methods and Resources and Robert J. Marzano’s Becoming a Reflective Teacher.
Dr. Boogren holds a bachelor’s degree from the University of Iowa, a master’s degree with an administrative endorsement from the University of Colorado Denver, and a doctorate from the University of Denver in educational administration and policy studies.
FOREWORD
By Robert J. Marzano
Over the course of my career, I’ve learned that accomplishing challenging tasks usually involves failure. People rarely come up with the right strategy for achieving a goal on the first try. Even so, failure is what helps them accomplish goals: when you fail, you can correct your mistakes and improve.
I believe that becoming an effective teacher is one of the most challenging and complex endeavors an individual can undertake. Every year, a group of new teachers sets out to accomplish this difficult task. Inevitably, these teachers are bound to fail in both small and large ways. The truly courageous action that new teachers take is deciding to try again after each failure.
As new teachers embark on their first years in the classroom, they need support. This can be as simple as showing them around the school or as involved as helping them respond to challenging behaviors from students. Whatever level of support is required, mentors can be invaluable resources for new teachers as they engage in the daily cycle of trying new strategies, failing, tweaking their approach, and trying again.
In the latest book in The Classroom Strategies Series, Tina H. Boogren has outlined a vision of mentorship that encompasses four essential types of new-teacher support: (1) physical, (2) emotional, (3) instructional, and (4) institutional. Boogren provides clear, specific resources and processes that mentors can use to facilitate new teachers’ growth, development, and reflection on their initial experiences as members of the teaching profession. She also outlines guidelines and criteria that school leaders can use to select mentors and match them effectively with new teachers.
Perhaps most important of all, Boogren maintains a focus on instruction. Mentors must provide a wide array of support to new teachers, but their main goal should be to help mentees develop expertise. This expertise, in turn, can help students achieve particular outcomes and results. Because educators who focus on instruction can never go wrong, I highly recommend Supporting Beginning Teachers to any mentor, coach, or school leader working with new teachers.
INTRODUCTION
Supporting Beginning Teachers is part of a series of books collectively referred to as The Classroom Strategies Series. This series aims to provide teachers, as well as building and district administrators, with an in-depth treatment of research-based instructional strategies that can be used in the classroom to enhance student achievement. Many of the strategies addressed in this series have been covered in other works, such as Classroom Instruction That Works (Marzano, Pickering, & Pollock, 2001), Classroom Management That Works (Marzano, 2003a), The Art and Science of Teaching (Marzano, 2007), and Effective Supervision (Marzano, Frontier, & Livingston, 2011). Although those works devoted a chapter or part of a chapter to particular strategies, The Classroom Strategies Series devotes an entire book to an instructional strategy or set of related strategies.
Undoubtedly, a teacher’s first year in the classroom is one of the most important. All at once and in real time, the new teacher must implement strategies learned in teacher preparation programs and during student-teaching experiences. Furthermore, it is during this transition from student teacher to independent teacher that one truly begins to realize the nuances and complexities of the profession. As the New Teacher Project (2013) stated, “Teachers who make a strong start are much more likely to become and remain strong educators over time” (p. 1). Given this insight, the question becomes, How can we support our new teachers in becoming and remaining strong educators for years to come? The answer lies in a purposeful and comprehensive mentoring program.
We begin with a brief but inclusive chapter that reviews the research and theory on retaining and supporting new teachers. Although you might want to skip this chapter and move right into those that provide recommendations for practice in schools, we strongly encourage you to examine the research and theory, as they are the foundation for the entire book. Indeed, a basic purpose of Supporting Beginning Teachers and other books in The Classroom Strategies Series is to present the most useful strategies based on the strongest research and theory available.
Because research and theory can provide only a general direction for classroom practice, Supporting Beginning Teachers goes one step further and translates that research into applications for those who support new educators. Chapter 2 outlines a general philosophy and set of principles that administrators can use when creating and overseeing a mentoring program and that mentor teachers can apply to their work with beginning teachers. Chapters 3, 4, 5, and 6 provide specific strategies designed to support the needs of new teachers, presented in four general categories: physical (chapter 3), emotional (chapter 4), instructional (chapter 5), and institutional (chapter 6).
How to Use This Book
Mentors and coaches can use Supporting Beginning Teachers as a self-study text that provides an in-depth understanding of different ways to support educators during their initial years in the profession. Additionally, school leaders might use it to enhance building-level support systems for new teachers. As you progress through the chapters, you will encounter comprehension questions. It is important to complete these questions and compare your answers with those in appendix A (page 71). Such interaction provides a review of the content and allows a thorough examination of your understanding. Groups or teams of teachers and school leaders who wish to examine the topic of supporting beginning teachers in depth may also use this book. When this is the case, teams should answer the questions independently and then compare their answers in small- or large-group settings. Appendix B (page 79) includes a number of personal essays that I wrote during my first years of teaching, each of which explores a different theme related to teaching. Mentors can read and discuss these essays with mentees, as well as use them to reflect on their own experiences during their first years of teaching.
Chapter 1
RESEARCH AND THEORY
Retaining effective teachers poses a unique problem for the education community. In 2007, the U.S. teacher turnover rate was 16.8 percent and in certain urban schools