CalTPA Coaching for Credential Candidates

A calmer way through Cycle 1 and Cycle 2

All programs

A candidate stuck on the assessment analysis is rarely stuck on teaching. More often the rubric language is doing one thing while the lesson plan was written to do another, and the two need to be brought into alignment. The work of coaching is making that alignment visible, then helping you write and film in a way the scorers can actually follow.

Who this is for

California teacher candidates in a credential program who are preparing CalTPA submissions. You may be staring at a rubric that feels written in a foreign language, or sitting with three hours of classroom video and no idea which six minutes to pick. That is a normal place to start.

Rubrics That Read in Plain English

Each rubric row translated into the specific evidence a scorer is looking for, with plain-English notes on phrases like asset-based and productive struggle.

A Learning Segment That Holds Together

Context, focus students, objectives, lesson plans, assessments, and reflection all pointing at the same thing, not five documents written in five different moods.

Video Clips That Show What You Claim

Honest review of your footage, with timestamped notes on which moments earn the rubric language and which ones quietly contradict it.

What Coaching Covers

Where We Help

Cycle 1: Plan and Teach

Working through context for learning, the focus-student rationale, the lesson plan sequence, and the instructional materials. We line up your decisions with the rubric language before you film anything.

Cycle 1

Cycle 2: Assess and Reflect

Assessment design, student work analysis, and the reflection narrative. The points lost here are usually about thin evidence, not thin thinking, so we fix the evidence trail.

Cycle 2

Video Clip Selection and Annotation

We watch your raw footage together and choose clips that actually show the teaching moves you wrote about. Annotations get drafted alongside, not bolted on at the end.

Both cycles

Write-Up Review and Revision

Line-by-line feedback on your narratives with rubric anchors in the margin. You see exactly which sentence is doing work for which score and which sentences are filler.

Document review

Reflection Coaching

The reflection section asks for honesty about what did not work. We practice writing it in a way that is genuine and still earns the rubric.

Cycle 2

Timeline and Submission Planning

Mapping your filming window, draft deadlines, and submission date backward from when the cycle is due, so the last week is not a sprint.

Planning
How Coaching Works

Read the Rubric, Then Teach to It on Purpose

The CalTPA rewards candidates who can name what they did and tie it to evidence. That is a writing problem and a noticing problem more than a teaching problem. Coaching focuses on both.

Every session is anchored to the actual rubric language and your actual artifacts: your lesson plan, your student work, your footage. No generic templates.

You finish with a submission you understand from the inside, not a stack of documents you hope will be enough.

A note on what this is and is not

This is independent coaching. There is no affiliation with the Commission on Teacher Credentialing, with Pearson, or with any university credential program. Your program supervisor and university coursework remain your primary support; this work sits alongside them for candidates who want a second set of eyes from someone who has been through both cycles.

No coach can guarantee a passing score, and anyone who promises one is not being straight with you. What coaching can do is reduce the number of unforced errors, clarify what the rubric is actually asking, and give you a calm process for the parts that feel overwhelming, especially the video and the reflection.

What to Expect

How the Work Flows

  1. Intake. A short conversation about which cycle you are in, your subject and grade band, your program deadlines, and where you feel stuck. You send any drafts and the rubric version you are working from.
  2. Rubric and plan alignment. We read the rubric together, then look at your learning segment and lesson plans against it. Most of the early work is small adjustments that make your evidence legible to a scorer.
  3. Filming, clip selection, and write-up. Before you film, we talk through what the camera needs to capture. After you film, we choose clips, draft annotations, and revise the narrative sections in parallel rather than in sequence.
  4. Final pass and submission. A full read-through of the submission as a whole, checking that the context, plan, video, analysis, and reflection are telling one coherent story. You hit submit when it is ready, not when the calendar says so.
Questions Candidates Ask

Common Questions

Can you guarantee I will pass?

No, and please be cautious of anyone who says they can. The score is determined by trained scorers using the official rubric. Coaching helps you submit your strongest, clearest work; the outcome is not something a coach controls.

Are you affiliated with the CTC or my credential program?

No. This is independent coaching. Your university supervisor and program coursework are your official supports. We work alongside that, not in place of it.

What subjects and grade levels can you coach?

Keith's classroom background is elementary math and science in a high-ELL, Title I setting, and he has coached credential-program interns through this process. The rubric and the writing craft are the same across content areas, so most candidates are a fit. If your subject and grade band are unusual, we can talk it through in intake.

Do you review video?

Yes. Reviewing footage and helping with clip selection and annotation is one of the most useful parts of the work. You share video securely and we look at it together.

Ready to Make the Rubric Make Sense?

Send a short note about which cycle you are in and when your submission is due. We will set up an intake call and look at where you are.

Book an Intake Call
Format: One-on-one, online
Scope: Cycle 1, Cycle 2, or both
Independent: Not affiliated with the CTC