“Can We Do It Together?”: The Coaching Move That Turns Talk into Real Practice
Summary for Educators
Based on the article by Jo Lein
Source: (Coaching Question of the Week, Apr. 27)
The Big Idea
One of the most powerful—and deceptively simple—questions in instructional coaching is: “Can we do it together?”
Jo Lein’s article highlights a common challenge in schools: educators often agree with new strategies in theory but hesitate to try them in practice. The barrier is not resistance to the idea—it is the vulnerability required to attempt something new in real time. Trying exposes uncertainty, invites mistakes, and can feel like a threat to professional identity.
This single coaching question lowers that barrier. Instead of placing pressure on the teacher to perform independently, it offers partnership and shared risk. The shift is subtle but significant: from evaluation to collaboration, from advice to action.
By inviting co-practice, leaders and coaches transform learning into a supported experience. The result is not just understanding—but skill development through real-time application.
Key Takeaways for Educators
Practice—not discussion—drives improvement.
Many coaching conversations stall because they remain theoretical. Real growth happens when educators move from talking about strategies to actually practicing them.
Lower the emotional risk.
Trying something new can feel intimidating. Practicing together reduces fear and builds confidence.
Partnership accelerates learning.
When a coach models, supports, and participates, the teacher is more likely to engage fully and refine the skill.
Repetition builds competence.
One attempt is rarely enough. Multiple “reps” with feedback help educators internalize new practices.
Modeling matters.
Seeing a strategy in action—followed by guided practice—strengthens understanding far more than verbal explanation alone.
Why It Matters
In schools, professional learning often falls short because it stops at awareness. Teachers attend workshops, agree with the ideas, and then return to classrooms without meaningful implementation. The missing ingredient is guided practice in a safe, supportive environment.
Research reinforces this approach. Deliberate practice shows that skill development requires repeated, feedback-rich experiences. Psychological safety demonstrates that people take risks when they feel supported. Social learning theory emphasizes the importance of modeling and shared experience.
“Can we do it together?” activates all three.
For school leaders, this insight is critical. If we want instructional improvement at scale, we must move beyond telling teachers what to do and instead create structures for practicing together. This builds not only competence, but also trust and professional community.
Leadership Action Steps
Shift from advice to action.
In coaching conversations, move quickly from discussion to practice. Ask, “Can we try this together right now?”
Model first, then co-practice.
Demonstrate a strategy, then invite the teacher to join you in practicing it step-by-step.
Normalize imperfection.
Reinforce that practice is a space for mistakes, not evaluation. Growth happens through iteration.
Build in multiple reps.
Encourage repeated attempts with feedback to strengthen skill development.
Create a culture of shared learning.
Promote collaborative practice among teachers—peer coaching, team rehearsals, and co-planning sessions.
Leader Reflection
Am I creating opportunities for teachers to practice new strategies with support—or am I expecting them to implement change alone?
Closing Thought
People don’t need more advice—they need more practice.
“Can we do it together?” is a small question with a powerful impact. It transforms coaching into collaboration, reduces fear, and builds real skill. In schools committed to growth, learning is not something we talk about—it’s something we do, side by side.
Great Coaches Use This Question: Can We Do It Together?
by Michael Keany
on Monday
Can We Do It Together?
Coaching Question of the Week
SUMMARY FOR EDUCATORS
“Can We Do It Together?”: The Coaching Move That Turns Talk into Real Practice
Summary for Educators Based on the article by Jo Lein
Source: (Coaching Question of the Week, Apr. 27)
The Big Idea
One of the most powerful—and deceptively simple—questions in instructional coaching is: “Can we do it together?”
Jo Lein’s article highlights a common challenge in schools: educators often agree with new strategies in theory but hesitate to try them in practice. The barrier is not resistance to the idea—it is the vulnerability required to attempt something new in real time. Trying exposes uncertainty, invites mistakes, and can feel like a threat to professional identity.
This single coaching question lowers that barrier. Instead of placing pressure on the teacher to perform independently, it offers partnership and shared risk. The shift is subtle but significant: from evaluation to collaboration, from advice to action.
By inviting co-practice, leaders and coaches transform learning into a supported experience. The result is not just understanding—but skill development through real-time application.
Key Takeaways for Educators
Why It Matters
In schools, professional learning often falls short because it stops at awareness. Teachers attend workshops, agree with the ideas, and then return to classrooms without meaningful implementation. The missing ingredient is guided practice in a safe, supportive environment.
Research reinforces this approach. Deliberate practice shows that skill development requires repeated, feedback-rich experiences. Psychological safety demonstrates that people take risks when they feel supported. Social learning theory emphasizes the importance of modeling and shared experience.
“Can we do it together?” activates all three.
For school leaders, this insight is critical. If we want instructional improvement at scale, we must move beyond telling teachers what to do and instead create structures for practicing together. This builds not only competence, but also trust and professional community.
Leadership Action Steps
Leader Reflection
Am I creating opportunities for teachers to practice new strategies with support—or am I expecting them to implement change alone?
Closing Thought
People don’t need more advice—they need more practice.
“Can we do it together?” is a small question with a powerful impact. It transforms coaching into collaboration, reduces fear, and builds real skill. In schools committed to growth, learning is not something we talk about—it’s something we do, side by side.