Showing posts with label inspect what you expect. Show all posts
Showing posts with label inspect what you expect. Show all posts

Sunday, September 18, 2016

Shifting Thinking

So much of our work in school leadership is based on this idea of shifting the thinking of others - trying to get buy-in to the direction of our work or building capacity around the vision for our school. Since there is currently no technology that can allow us to upload our experiences and processes into those who work with us (I can definitely see how a Vulcan Mind-Meld would be a significant benefit here), shifting the thinking of others happens in conversation, reflection, re-direction, and clear visioning over time.

Clear visioning with new members of your team sounds simple, however, it is not about simply stating what the vision is. There are nuances and intracacies of what that vision may mean and it will take repeated reflection and practice in order to feel like it is truly a shared and supported vision. For example, in my school, we have built some common expectations around classrooms having tight routines and procedures in place and well practiced by the third week of school. We shared data to support the need for strong routines and procedures to be in place and built capacity around our shared belief in what routines and procedures need to be modeled, taught, practiced, and reinforced (all of them!), and then we built 8 week plans around how those routines and procedures would be laid out in real time in real classrooms. As school leaders, we have been "inspecting what we expect"(see last week's blog post) and giving feedback on where we are in terms of being tight as a school. This is where the clear visioning can be called to question - what if members of your leadership team have different perceptions of what it means to have "tight routines and procedures?" What if some of your staff has a different tolerance level around student misbehavior? What if your expectations of what it means to be tight in the cafeteria include everyone in their seat using a quiet voice and members of your staff are okay with students out of their seat as long as they are not fighting?

If you find yourself thinking that you would be better off if you had clones of yourself to work with, or musing that it would be so nice if everyone just did their job, then you have an issue with clear visioning.
Shifting thinking is a process. It involves purposeful planning and carefully crafted feedback conversations. If you want members of your team to share your vision for anything from classroom routines and procedures to student behavior to meeting deadlines, it falls to you as the leader to be clear about your expectations, check in on those expectations, and provide immediate feedback or course corrections in order to see progress. Back to the example of the tight routines and procedures, if I am not seeing from classrooms what I expect by week three, it falls to me as the leader to intervene, provide immediate feedback and allow for opportunities to put that feedback into action.

The next step to feedback is checking in. This is the difference between feedback and actionable feedback. If I have a conversations with a staff member about her clear signaling in her classroom and have an expectation that different strategies will be implemented in order to get student attention and allow for a culture of learning to take place in the classroom, then I must also follow up to check the progress. Because shifting thinking is not a one time thing, I should plan on this process happening repeatedly until there is clear progress in the classroom.

I know what you are thinking...who has time for this? If I have to check in with every person on my staff to ensure that their actions are aligned to the vision and give actionable feedback with follow ups, I will never be able to get my work done! I would try to shift your thinking around that (did you see what I did there?) because this is the work. Emails, phone calls, and meetings are not the work. Being in classrooms and making sure that the vision is alive in your classrooms is the work. Shifting the thinking of others so that they see how your vision lives in their students is what will allow you to answer emails and phone calls in a few weeks - once you feel like there is truly a sense of shared ownership and capacity.

So I would ask you to shift your thinking this week - clear your calendar to the extent that you are able and live in classrooms, in the cafeteria, in team meetings, and every place that you want to see your vision in action. Give immediate actionable feedback and follow up to see the progress. You will be glad you did.

Sunday, September 11, 2016

Inspect What You Expect

As leaders, we have spent the last weeks carefully outlining the expectations that we have for our school, our teachers, and our classrooms. How do you know that the work that is happening is meeting your expectations and that your students, staff, parents, families, and classrooms all share your vision for the culture of achievement? You must inspect what you expect - not once, not twice, but continuously, in order to ensure that the culture of achievement lives in the day to day work of the school. Likewise, if you are the classroom teacher, you must provide opportunities to model, teach, practice, and assess your expectations in order to ensure that the culture in your classroom will allow for students to reach high levels of achievement. 

Creating a classroom culture 
What are your beliefs for student learning? How are they in evidence in the day to day routines and procedures and what you expect or reinforce in your classroom? For instance, you might say that you believe in a culture of achievement in your classroom or in your school. How would I know what your beliefs were if I were to walk into your classroom? 

So, what is culture? According to NAESP, 
"Whenever a group of people spend a significant amount of time together, they develop a common set of expectations. These expectations evolve into unwritten rules to which group members conform in order to remain in good standing with their colleagues. Groups develop a common culture in order to pass on information to the next generation. That information, however, represents a set of beliefs that have been passed down by imperfect humans with personal preferences." https://www.naesp.org/resources/2/Principal/2008/M-Ap56.pdf

So, the amount of time that you as a leader must invest into ensuring that the culture - or unwritten set of expectations - of your school aligns to your vision cannot be discounted. It must be your top priority as a school leader or as a classroom teacher leader to ensure that your beliefs live in the culture of your building and your classrooms. 

Culture and climate are usually talked about in the same sentence - as if they are the same thing. Leaders often mistake making adjustments to the climate of the the school will impact the culture, but it is really two different things. Culture is the deep-seated beliefs of an organization and you can feel a school's culture in the exchanges between students and staff, staff members with one another, staff with parents and families, and the school and the community. 

Please take 10 minutes out of your busy day today to watch this video of Citizen's Academy in Cleveland, Ohio. The impact of school culture is evident in every purposeful teacher action, every student action, every leader action that has led to this school's academy and social successes. As a classroom teacher leader, think about your actions with students - are they are purposeful and on point as the teachers in the video? As a school leader, think about the expectations that you inspect and continuously reinforce in your school - do they all point in the same direction of high levels of student achievement? If your beliefs do not match your actions, then your school culture will reflect the fact that what you say and what you do are two different things. Kids, teacher, and families will know that and it will become the culture of your school or your classroom. Be purposeful. Say what you mean and mean what you say. Inspect what you expect.