A Leader Who Became my Example For Life
I have had the good fortune of working under a few
exceptional leaders in my life. The most
memorable of these, I met when I was thirteen years old. His name is Chris, and he was the youth
pastor at my parent’s church. His
example has become a standard by which I tend to evaluate others in leadership
positions even to this day. Now that I’m
a leader of young people, I can see why Chris’s leadership was so effective: He would not rest.
As a young person, I had always assumed that one day I’d
“arrive” at something. My teachers
seemed to have arrived at their knowledge and their methods. Many of the adults I was close to seemed have
done the same in their respective careers.
In fact, college was often pitched as a way to achieve knowledge (when
you get the degree, you have arrived!).
From there you can begin a career in which you will remain for the rest
of your life. Adults seemed like static
figures. Chris’s example seemed much
different. His attitude was that things
needed to change for the better, and this could only be accomplished by reaching
young people where they were. He, better
than anyone else, understood that this was a moving target. The culture of youth changes slightly from
decade to decade, and this is often guided by the technology to which young
people have access. So, when Chris found
success reaching students in one generation, he was would never assume that
this would work for the next group coming in.
This guy was always reading a book youth leadership for the next
generation, and I am convinced he could write a few. He has always been an early adopter of
communication technology (and the philosophy and lingo that go with each new
wave), and since his career began in the early 1990’s he has a multitude of
changes. I think Chris’s skillful use of
everything from e-mail, to podcasts, to web design, to Twitter has been
instrumental in helping many teens through the emotional, social, moral, and
spiritual turmoil of one of the most difficult periods of growing up.
From his example I have learned that I cannot rest…
especially not in public education.
Things have changed even in the past seven years of my career, and I
have no doubt that the next seven will bring many more changes. I have to adapt, and I have to lead others to
adapt as well.
Leadership Skills Assessment
I scored a 65.
According to the grading scale, that means I am on my way to being a
good leader, but I have a few things to work on. I wasn’t surprised that my strengths were believing
in others, caring about morale, and trying to be a good example. I also wasn’t surprised to find that my
weaknesses were providing a good sense of goals to my people. I am notorious
for keeping the end-vision in my head without really taking the time
communicate that to others. Perhaps this
is why I work so hard, and do not expect others to work as hard as I do. If they can’t see the ending goal as clearly
as I do, how do they know what they are working toward. I scored only a 4 out of 10 on managing
performance effectively, so I think I need to learn to ‘let people in’ on what
we’re trying to do here. No one should be outside the loop.
Secrets of Change
“Love Your Employees” is an important concept. I you love them enough, you can encourage
them strive for better in both personal and organizational goals, while giving
them room to take risks (and possibly make mistakes). I get this!
If you make employees afraid to try new things, they won’t. As Eric Shaninger says, “trust and support
them unconditionally” (2014).
“Learning is the Work” means that everyday growth is
important. Real development is a process
in which all participants take an attitude of lifelong learning. This much more important than occasional
professional development sessions.
Philosophy on Social Media
Schools should stop shunning social media. When I started teaching, social media was
looked at a serious problem for both students and teachers. It was a place where employees went to ask
for trouble. Around the country, some teachers
were fired for what they had said about students or co-workers… or for pictures
they had posted. The warnings were
issued, “Avoid social media.” However,
social media did not go away, and now there are more people on Facebook than
there are Catholics in the world. That’s
no exaggeration. Even the grandparents
are on social media. And with students,
social media of all kinds is the preferred form of afterschool communication
when they can’t be face to face with peers.
Teachers can’t hide in a cave.
Policies about social media are outdated and should be revised. Here are the guidelines I use: In general, don’t “friend” or “follow”
students on non-school media. The
exception to this is on public sites like blogs, etc. “Friend” or “follow” students on school
social media, such as Schoology.com, where teachers set up digital classrooms
and can regulate content. Schoology, for
instance, is a ‘members only’ type of site where you must be enrolled in the
class to interact… and teachers can moderate comments to help catch harassment
and bullying before students can see it.
Schools should embrace this type of social media. It meets the students where they are.
2 comments:
You are right about not sitting still. The world keeps changing and moving forward, and schools need to do the same thing. Lots a parallels can be drawn between the church and school systems, I've found, when it comes to direction, leadership, etc.
Jared,
Extremely insightful post! What an amazing description of the leader that influenced you! You stated, “From his example I have learned that I cannot rest… especially not in public education. Things have changed even in the past seven years of my career, and I have no doubt that the next seven will bring many more changes. I have to adapt, and I have to lead others to adapt as well.” - This really made an impression, and I may have to quote you when working with teachers Your statement, “Real development is a process in which all participants take an attitude of lifelong learning. This much more important than occasional professional development sessions.” – could not be more true! Professional Development is a process, a process that must be supported and embraced by leadership.
Post a Comment