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Evidencebased Coaching

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Evidenced based medicine: What it is and what is isn't. British Medical Journal, 13, 71-72. ... The Fontana dictionary of modern thought. London: Fontana Press. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Evidencebased Coaching


1
  • Evidence-based Coaching
  • What, How and Why?
  • Anthony M Grant PhD
  • Coaching Psychologist and Director
  • Coaching Psychology Unit
  • School of Psychology
  • University of Sydney
  • Australia
  • NSW 2006
  • anthonyg_at_psych.usyd.edu.au
  • www.psych.usyd.edu.au/coach

2
  • What, how and why of Evidence-based Coaching.
  • Is coaching a fad?
  • Issues for the professionalism of coaching.
  • Theoretical grounding and evidenced-based
    practice.
  • Options for the future.

3
  • What is Coaching?
  • A collaborative, solution-focused,
    results-orientated and systematic process in
    which the coach facilitates the enhancement of
    performance, life experience, self-directed
    learning and the personal growth of people from
    normal (non-clinical) populations. (1)
  • Coaching is a potentially effective tool to help
    create and maintain change . It is NOT a panacea

4
Who are Coaching Clients?
Coaching Population
Low Psychopathology / High Functionality
5
What is Coaching?
Client-centredASKING
Solution-constructionHOW TO?
Problem-analysisWHY ?
Expert-centredTELLING
6
What is Coaching?
7
What is Coaching? Three Meta-Categories
Coaching is not a monolithic process Three main
different types of coaching Understanding
differences important for research and practice
outcome ROI
8
What is Coaching? Three Meta-Categories
S K I L L S
9
What is Coaching? Three Meta-Categories
PERFORMANCE
S K I L L S
10
What is Coaching? Three Meta-Categories
DEVELOPMENT
PERFORMANCE
S K I L L S
11
What is Coaching? Three Meta-Categories
Development
Skills
Performance
12
  • Is Coaching a Fad?
  • To date very little published peer-reviewed
    research on Executive and Workplace Coaching (2)
    and almost none on Life Coaching (3 4)
  • Solid research needed to avoid being a fad
  • University-level coach education needed to create
    a coaching profession

13
  • Is Coaching a Fad?
  • First mention of Workplace Coaching in academic
    press in 1937 (5)
  • A long-standing fad !
  • Genuine interest from business (6)
  • Business looking for credibility and substance
  • Coaching touted as a huge growth industry
  • Driven by coach training schools
  • Many claim to be qualified coaches (EMAHD Coach
    Accreditation) many are not well trained (7)
  • Do they have an understanding of coaching that
    goes beyond their own personal coaching system
    and explicitly links to established theory and
    practice ?

14
Peer-reviewed Coaching Papers from PsychInfo
(1937 July 2003)
15
Peer-reviewed Coaching Papers from PsychInfo
(1937 July 2003)
16
  • Evidenced-Based Coaching ?
  • If there is so little coaching-specific research
    how can we have evidenced-based coaching?

17
  • Evidenced-Based Coaching ?
  • If there is so little coaching-specific research
    how can we have evidenced-based coaching?
  • Use the broader body of coaching-related
    knowledge

18
  • Evidenced-Based Coaching?
  • Evidenced-based coaching involves the
    conscientious use of best current knowledge in
    making decisions about how to deliver coaching to
    coaching clients, and in designing and teaching
    coach training programs (8).
  • Current knowledge is up-to-date information from
    relevant, valid research, theory and coaching
    practice.
  • Evidenced-based coaching is not cook-book
    coaching. It requires rigorously evaluating the
    effectiveness of coaching theory and practice,
    and using those findings to further inform and
    develop theory and practice - and then
    disseminating that information.

19
  • What is Evidenced-Based Coaching ?
  • It is NOT statements like this (9)
  • My theories are based on quantum physics
    which says that when enough energy is collected
    in one place, it can move other entities
    unwittingly to cause a desired reaction.

20
  • The Professionalisation of Coaching
  • In general professionalism involves (10)
  • Significant Barriers to Entry
  • Formal Entry Qualifications based on
    University-level education Bachelor's level at
    minimum
  • Shared Body of Knowledge rather than
    proprietary systems
  • Regulatory Bodies with power to admit and
    discipline members
  • Enforceable Code of Ethics
  • State-sanctioned Licensing
  • Get this right and then Professionalisation will
    follow

21
  • The Body of Knowledge
  • 1. Philosophy
  • Critical thinking skills, Socratic Method,
    Philosophical insights
  • 2. Behavioral Science
  • How we think, feel and act in the way we do
  • 3. Adult Education Principles
  • How adults best learn
  • 4. Economics Business
  • How business runs and economic systems function
  • Personal Development Genre
  • Popularized, un-verified notions of motivation
    and change

22
  • Issues for Professionalisation
  • The Body of Knowledge Underpinning Coaching

Coaching Profession
Fad !
Evidenced-based Coaching
Behavioural Science
Adult Education
EMAHD Credentialing (EveryManAndHisDog)
Personal Development
Philosophy
Economics Business
I read-it-somewhere -and-it-feels-right-to-me
University-level Education
23
  • Evidenced-Based CoachingEducation and
    Professionalism
  • Need to explicitly link theory to practice
  • Need critical thinking skills
  • No Gurus established body of testable
    shared knowledge
  • Linked knowledge base means greater credibility
    and a future

24
  • Theory?

25
  • Theory?
  • I dont need theory.
  • I just do it !

26
  • Theory?

Theres nothing as practical as a good theory
! Lewin 1934
27
  • Evidenced-Based Coach Education
  • Explicitly drawn from all four areas
  • Mental health issues Coaches need basic
    diagnostic skills
  • 25 - 50 of Life Coaching clients have mental
    health issues (11)
  • Basic training in psychometrics
  • Some coaching assessment / development tools are
    very poor
  • Little or no critical appraisal of tools
  • Less focus on marketing
  • More solid theory and evidenced-based education
  • Less USA-influenced coaching OK for the USA
    but not for all
  • More local cultural flavour

28
  • Where to Next?
  • For Researchers
  • Theory development
  • Develop frameworks that help us understand
    coaching
  • Empirical research
  • Applied positive psychology
  • Outcome studies Individual, org. change ROI
  • Mechanisms in human change

29
  • Where to Next?
  • For Students of Coaching
  • Question, question and question your teachers
  • Dont have Gurus
  • Make sure your training is linked to the broader
    knowledge base
  • Ensure training material is properly referenced
  • Never stop learning

30
  • Where to Next?
  • For Coaching Practioners
  • Expand and develop your knowledge base
  • Be a scientist-practioner
  • Help develop an evidence-base
  • Remain coachable not the expert

31
  • Evidenced-based Coaching
  • What, How and Why?
  • Draws on a wide body of knowledge
  • University-level education is vital
  • Focus on substance over marketing and hype
  • Research and theory development is crucial
  • An evidence-base will lead to professionalism
  • Enjoy coaching done well it really works !

32
  • Evidence-based Coaching
  • What, How and Why?
  • Anthony M Grant PhD
  • Coaching Psychologist and Director
  • Coaching Psychology Unit
  • School of Psychology
  • University of Sydney
  • Australia
  • NSW 2006
  • anthonyg_at_psych.usyd.edu.au
  • www.psych.usyd.edu.au/coach

33
  • References
  • Grant, A. M. (2001). Towards a psychology of
    coaching The impact of coaching on
    metacognition, mental health and goal attainment.
    Unpublished doctoral dissertation, Macquarie
    University, Sydney, Australia.
  • Kampa-Kokesch, S., Anderson, M. Z. (2001).
    Executive coaching A comprehensive review of the
    literature. Consulting Psychology Journal
    Practice and Research, 53(4), 205-228.
  • Grant, A. M. (2000). Coaching psychology comes of
    age. PsychNews, 4(4), 12-14.
  • Grant, A. M. (2003). The impact of life coaching
    on goal attainment, metacognition and mental
    health. Social Behavior and Personality, 31(3),
    253-264.
  • Gorby, C. B. (1937). Everyone gets a share of the
    profits. Factory Management Maintenance, 95,
    82-83.
  • Wales, S. (2003). Why coaching? Journal of Change
    Management, 3(3), 275-282.
  • Brotman, L. E., Liberi, W. P., Wasylyshyn, K.
    M. (1998). Executive coaching The need for
    standards of competence. Consulting Psychology
    Journal Practice and Research, 50(1), 40 - 46.
  • Sackett, D. L., Haynes, R. B., Guyatt, G. H.,
    Tugwell, P. (1996). Evidenced based medicine
    What it is and what is isn't. British Medical
    Journal, 13, 71-72.
  • Fortgang, L. B. (Sept 26th, 2002) Ask Laura QA
    Archive www.laurabermanfortgang.com
  • Bullock, A., Stallybrass, Trombley, S. (Eds.).
    (1988). The Fontana dictionary of modern thought.
    London Fontana Press.
  • Green, L. S., Oades, L. G., Grant, A. M.
    (2002). An evaluation of a life coaching group
    program Preliminary findings from a wait-list
    control study. Paper presented at the 3rd Annual
    Conference of the Illawarra Institute for Mental
    Health, Wollongong, NSW.

34
  • Evidence-based Coaching What, How and Why?
  • First Australian Conference on Evidenced-based
    Coaching
  • University of Sydney
  • Australia
  • July 7th 8th 2003
  • Dr Anthony M Grant
  • Abstract
  • Evidenced-based coaching involves the informed
    use of best current knowledge in making decisions
    about how to deliver coaching to coaching
    clients, and in designing and teaching coach
    training programs. An evidence-based approach to
    coaching is important as professional coaching
    has the potential to be a effective methodology
    for enhancing human performance, work/life
    experience and personal development. This paper
    addresses the what, how and why of evidence-based
    coaching. Executive and Personal (or Life)
    coaching has become increasingly popular, and
    coaching is an emerging professional discipline.
    There are a large number of individuals who are
    positioning themselves as coaches and claiming
    ownership of the field, but the knowledge base
    for coaching is not yet defined. Although there
    is little empirical research which is
    specifically about coaching, there is a large
    existing knowledge base which can inform
    Executive and Personal coaching. Professional
    coaches need to tap into this broader knowledge
    base. It is argued that there are four key areas
    which form a foundation for professional
    evidence-based coaching the behavioural
    sciences adult learning principles philosophy,
    and economics and business. It is further argued
    that the establishment of a discipline of
    professional coaching is essentially and
    inescapably linked to rigorous empirical research
    and coherent theoretical development.
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