My current principal is by far the most
effective leader I've known.
This year, she has worked on building our
technology base towards blended learning and 1:1. She encourages us to leverage
online resources to network with stakeholders and each other. We are striving
to be a true 21st century
center of learning.
Recently we had an issue at our school
involving social media which she personally addressed with each affected grade
level, and watching her in action gave me a great opportunity to analyze her
leadership style. She is the embodiment of the 6 characteristics of leadership,
as noted by Mendez-Morse:
·
having
vision,
·
believing
that the schools are for learning,
·
valuing human
resources,
·
being a
skilled communicator and listener,
·
acting
proactively, and
·
taking risks.
Right away, she told the students that
they each had value, and she connected the implications of the issue with the
vision of our school, asking that individuals consider our collective goals and
the effects individual acts can have, for good or bad, on our community. She
encouraged students to open up about their beliefs and points of view, and
worked through scenarios and resolutions with them. At no time did she raise
her voice or get angry with them. She gave acknowledgement and appreciation to
the students, reminding them our school is a place for learning and enrichment,
and left it in their hands to change the outcome for the better. They responded
by communicating and taking positive actions to resolve the situation.
Her communication and listening skills
defused what could have been a debacle, and although it was risky to trust the
students to do the right thing without mandating it, her proactive stance
encouraged them to do better, so the situation was resolved positively without
further escalation.
Because our school has been the victim of
internet slander in the past, we are hyperaware of how quickly things spread on
the web. Our school makes very little use of social media at this point. I’d
like to see all schools use social media as a way to connect with and
communicate to stakeholders in real time, and to highlight achievements by
students. We could leverage social media to effectively spread and grow our
vision, and to help form larger and more effective learning networks for the
adults. It could provide a positive boost for the school climate and culture.
Integral to all of this would be building our brand image to reflect our
values. I’m realizing this might be a task I can help achieve at my school.
As for my own leadership skills
assessment, two areas were tied at 10/10 for me: Being a Good Role Model, and
Positive Attitude and Outlook. Working with tweens all day has made me keenly
aware of the need to stay positive, and to model and demonstrate what I expect
of them so they have a tangible example to use as a springboard for their own
work. Students benefit from teachers who are positive, as positive teachers are
less likely to devolve into yelling at the classroom to gain control and more likely
to offer a safe and inviting learning environment. Being positive is also a
great way to support coworkers, who sometimes are having bad days and just need
that little bit of encouragement to feel better and refocus.
Providing a Compelling Vision for the
Future is an area I can improve, and is one reason I enrolled in the Digital
Media, New Literacies, and Learning M.Ed. program. One of my aspirations is to
become a TIS, and to be accessible and proactive as such. In the meantime, I am
focusing on helping transition classrooms into blended or flipped learning
situations where integrated technology presents students with opportunities for
research, development, and problem solving at my school. By introducing and
modeling use of technology during team meetings, I have been able to provide
ideas and support to other teachers looking for ways to better utilize the
technology we have at hand to maximize student achievement. I am fortunate to
work in a setting where time is given for us to collaborate both at and across
grade levels in flexibly structured “professional learning communities.” I’d
love for my school to shift from a PLC focus to a broader PLN, and I plan on
being a change agent to help us get there.
Two of the Six Secrets of Change that can
help with these objectives are Capacity Building Prevails and Systems Learn. To
build capacity, distributed leadership must be enacted in an environment where
trust is present so that stakeholders can come together; participants must feel
valued. Those with the competencies and internal motivation to emerge as
leaders must be provided with resources to help the school achieve the goals
stated within the vision. For the system to learn, those leaders must be given
the chance to transparently share and seek knowledge and practices in order for
school culture to evolve through synthesis of knowledge from almost limitless
PLN opportunities via transparent communication. We can learn from others and
apply relevant information and practices to catalyze dynamic change.
2 comments:
Two things...
First, I believe that students live up to expectations. It doesn't matter if they are positive or negative, they live up to them. The way you explained it, I believe that the students felt like they mattered and that's why they worked together to resolve the issue. I like that kind of principal. The students I have now say that they are expected to behave like adults but they are treated like children. I agree with them and I don't think their behavior will change until teachers and administration starts treating them with respect, talking to them not down to them, like your principal did.
Second, is that a picture of your school taken from the student parking lot? If so, I think I went to the school where you work. And your principal, if this is the school I think it is, was my senior English teacher. Small worlds.
Michelle,
Thank you for providing a thorough description of why your principal is an effective leader. It's great that you have an administrator that embodies the characteristics of leadership. I’m sure you will learn from this principal and embrace the modeled leadership skills. Your statement, “Students benefit from teachers who are positive, as positive teachers are less likely to devolve into yelling at the classroom to gain control and more likely to offer a safe and inviting learning environment. Being positive is also a great way to support coworkers, who sometimes are having bad days and just need that little bit of encouragement to feel better and refocus.” - well stated. I believe being positive is an example of having a growth-mindset and maintaining a positive outlook is crucial for leaders to display on a daily basis. Please keep me informed of your progress in making the change to a PLN – what a great goal!
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