Trust must come before honesty
Without trust, people protect themselves. Coaching becomes silence or compliance.
How safe, clear, and effective coaching cultures are built in Bangladeshi schools
At Evidence Based Teacher Development (EBTD), coaching exists to help teachers and leaders improve practice in ways that directly benefit students — not to judge, label, or control staff.
Our coaching approach is grounded in global evidence on effective feedback, psychological safety, and professional learning, and carefully adapted to the realities of Bangladeshi schools: large classes, heavy workloads, strong hierarchies, and high community expectations.
These principles sit above all EBTD coaching, mentoring, feedback, and leadership development work.
They are non-negotiable.
They are not eight separate ideas. They are a connected system.
Effective coaching cultures are not created by a single technique or conversation. They are built through a clear sequence:
Without trust, people protect themselves. Coaching becomes silence or compliance.
Safety is what makes people able to hear feedback and act on it without fear.
If support is missing, accountability turns into blame and people stop taking risks.
Dignity and follow-up determine whether improvement becomes habit or fades away.
Each principle depends on the ones before it. Together, they create the conditions in which honest feedback, sustained improvement, and professional trust can thrive.
Without trust, people protect themselves. Without trust, coaching becomes silence or compliance.
Adapted from “Care Personally, Challenge Directly”
Effective coaching combines genuine care for people with clear expectations for practice. Leaders and coaches show care by protecting dignity, listening carefully, and recognising the pressures teachers face. They provide clarity by naming what needs to improve, why it matters, and what effective practice looks like.
Care without clarity leads to silence and stagnation.
Clarity without care leads to fear and compliance.
EBTD coaching insists on both, because trust is built when people feel respected and supported to improve.
People only improve when they feel safe enough to be honest. EBTD coaching creates psychological safety by ensuring that:
This does not mean lowering standards.
It means creating the conditions in which high standards can actually be met.
Together, care, clarity, and safety create permission to engage honestly in professional growth.
Once trust exists, feedback must be framed in a way that people can act on — not defend against.
EBTD coaching focuses on what was seen and its impact, not on personal traits or intentions. We avoid language that labels people (for example, “unmotivated”, “weak”, “careless”) and instead describe:
People can improve behaviours.
Judging character shuts improvement down.
Research consistently shows that vague feedback increases stress and reduces performance. EBTD coaching prioritises:
Feedback such as “improve behaviour management” or “be more professional” is replaced with clear, observable actions that can realistically be tried tomorrow.
Clarity is not harsh.
Clarity is kind.
Together, behaviour-focused feedback and clarity ensure that people know exactly what to work on — without fear or confusion.
Even the best feedback fails if people are expected to change without support.
Accountability is only fair when people have been properly supported. Before expecting change, EBTD coaching ensures access to:
Holding people to account without support creates fear.
Support without follow-up creates drift.
EBTD coaching deliberately balances both.
EBTD coaching rejects overwhelming targets and one-off training. Instead, it aligns with the EBTD Deliberate Practice Model by focusing on:
This approach respects the realities of Bangladeshi classrooms — limited time, high pressure, and diverse needs — while still driving sustained improvement.
Together, support and small steps make improvement realistic, fair, and sustainable.
Culture is shaped not by single conversations, but by what happens over time.
How feedback is given matters as much as what is said. EBTD coaching ensures that:
Protecting dignity is not about avoiding difficult conversations.
It is about making those conversations productive.
Checking back on agreed actions is part of professional support. EBTD coaching treats follow-up as:
Follow-up is done with curiosity and support, not suspicion.
Without follow-up, coaching becomes talk.
With thoughtful follow-up, it becomes culture.
Define the values and conduct expected of leaders.
Open pageShows how coaching turns safe conversations into sustained improvement.
Read Page 2A practical reference: language that carries DEFINE–MODEL–PRACTISE–REFINE–REFLECT.
Read Page 3Together, they ensure that professional growth in Bangladeshi schools is evidence-informed, respectful and inclusive, practical and sustainable, and focused on better outcomes for students.
These principles are not a checklist to be inspected or enforced. They are commitments to be lived.
When applied consistently, they help schools move away from:
and towards a culture where improvement is normal, supported, and shared.