COACHING AND TECHNICAL ASSISTANCE

Program | Practice | Policy

Overview

Early care and education (ECE) coaching and technical assistance are essential strategies for strengthening the knowledge, skills, and effectiveness of the ECE workforce and improving outcomes for young children and families. The quality of children’s early learning experiences is directly shaped by the adults who care for and educate them, yet many ECE providers lack access to sustained, individualized professional support. Coaching and technical assistance address this gap by offering personalized, job-embedded guidance that supports continuous improvement, strengthens instructional practice, and enhances program quality. 

ECE coaching is a one-on-one, collaborative relationship between an educator and a trained coach, grounded in mutual respect, trust, and shared accountability. Through ongoing observation, goal-setting, reflection, feedback, and modeling, coaching helps educators translate theory into effective classroom practice. Unlike traditional training, which is often one-time and removed from daily work, coaching is embedded directly into the learning environment and tailored to the individual needs, strengths, and goals of each provider. This individualized approach increases both the relevance and the lasting impact of professional learning. 

Technical assistance complements coaching by providing targeted, problem-solving support in response to specific challenges faced by ECE providers and programs. Coaches, mentors, specialists, or consultants may provide onsite consultation, facilitate workshops, lead communities of practice, share resource materials, and connect programs to additional services. Together, coaching and technical assistance create a continuous improvement system that supports both immediate instructional needs and long-term professional growth. 

Coaching and technical assistance support multiple high-impact areas of ECE practice. These include curriculum implementation, where coaches help educators plan developmentally appropriate learning experiences and strengthen instructional strategies; inclusive practices, where coaches support early identification, environmental adaptations, and strategies for serving children with disabilities in the least restrictive environment; behavior management and social-emotional development, where providers gain tools for promoting positive behavior and self-regulation; parent and family engagement, where educators strengthen communication and partnerships with families; program quality improvement, where leaders assess quality and implement improvement plans; and data-informed decision-making, where educators learn to use observation and assessment data to guide instruction and monitor progress. 

Research consistently shows that high-quality, sustained coaching improves educator practice, classroom quality, and child outcomes while also increasing educator confidence and job satisfaction. In a field facing chronic workforce shortages, high turnover, and burnout, coaching also plays a critical role in strengthening retention by helping educators feel supported, valued, and effective in their roles. Together, coaching and technical assistance build professional capacity, elevate instructional quality, and strengthen early learning systems—directly benefiting children, families, and communities. 

EFFECTIVE IMPLEMENTATION

Step 1: Establish a Clear Purpose and Focus. Implementation begins by clearly defining the goals of coaching and technical assistance. Communities must determine the primary focus areas—such as curriculum quality, inclusion, social-emotional development, family engagement, leadership capacity, or data use—and align coaching activities to those priorities. 

Step 2: Build a Skilled Coaching Workforce. High-quality coaching requires trained professionals with expertise in child development, developmentally appropriate practice, and adult learning. Coaches must be prepared not only to provide feedback, but to build trusting relationships, model effective strategies, and support reflective practice. 

Step 3: Design a Continuous Improvement Coaching Cycle. Effective coaching follows an ongoing cycle of goal-setting, observation, feedback, reflection, and practice. Coaches and educators work together to identify strengths and growth areas, develop action plans, observe instruction, and reflect on progress. This cycle repeats regularly to support sustained improvement. 

Step 4: Integrate Technical Assistance. Technical assistance should be embedded alongside coaching to address immediate classroom or program challenges. This may include onsite consultation, targeted workshops, communities of practice, and referrals to specialized services such as early intervention or mental health consultation. 

Step 5: Align with Program Leadership and Systems. Administrators and program leaders must actively support coaching by protecting time for observation and reflection, promoting a growth-oriented culture, and ensuring coaching is viewed as supportive rather than evaluative. 

Step 6: Use Data to Guide Coaching. Observation tools, child assessments, and program quality measures should inform coaching goals and track progress. Data strengthens accountability and ensures coaching leads to measurable improvements. 

Step 7: Monitor Outcomes and Improve Continuously. Key indicators include changes in educator practice, classroom quality, child outcomes, and workforce retention. Ongoing evaluation allows communities to refine coaching strategies and strengthen impact. 

When implemented effectively, coaching and technical assistance strengthen teaching practice, improve program quality, and support continuous professional growth—driving better outcomes for children and families. 

REQUIRED RESOURCES

To implement early care and education coaching and technical assistance effectively, communities need: 

  • A Strong Talent Identification System: Communities must be able to identify highly effective educators and specialists who can serve as coaches based on demonstrated expertise and instructional skill. Observation systems and performance measures support this process. 
  • Trained Coaching Workforce: Coaches require specialized preparation in relationship-based coaching, adult learning theory, instructional modeling, and feedback strategies. Ongoing professional development for coaches is essential. 
  • Dedicated Time and Staffing Supports: Programs must have protected time for observation, feedback, and reflection. This often requires access to substitute teachers or floating staff to maintain classroom ratios while coaching occurs. 
  • Sustainable Funding: Funding is needed for coach compensation, training, travel, data systems, materials, and coordination. Resources may come from state early childhood funds, federal quality improvement funding, workforce grants, or philanthropy. 
  • Data and Evaluation Systems: Communities need shared tools to track educator participation, coaching goals, progress, classroom quality, and child outcomes. Data supports continuous improvement and accountability. 
  • Program Leadership and Organizational Buy-In: Administrators must prioritize coaching, support staff participation, and foster a learning culture. Without leadership support, coaching loses effectiveness and sustainability. 
  • Workforce Stability: High turnover undermines coaching impact. Communities must address compensation, benefits, workload, and working conditions alongside coaching investments to ensure stability. 
  • Cross-System Partnerships: Strong connections with higher education, screening and early intervention programs, mental health services, and professional development systems ensure that coaching is aligned and comprehensive. 

The most important resource is coordination—coaching and technical assistance succeed when funding, workforce, leadership, data, and partnerships are aligned around the shared goal of strengthening ECE practice and improving outcomes for children. 

So it's important.

How will we know if we are succeeding of failing?

Track both early signals and long-term outcomes.

Signs of Progress

(Early Indicators)

Warning Signs

(Lagging Indicators)

This Indicator is Relevant to These Strategies