School Management: Making Schools Work For Everyone

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School Management

Making schools work for everyone

MODERN SCHOOL August 4, 2011 Authored by: AMQ

School Management
Making schools work for everyone We have had well over a century of school reforms that have failed. Such Reforms fail because they are imposed reforms rather than systemic reforms, and they are imposed on a system that operates under a management structure that by its very nature cant really build a sustainably effective learning community. Systems thinkers clearly demonstrates that when a system is pushed (imposed upon), it will usually push back. Effective changes must be made systemically within the system and not imposed on it, and systemic changes require knowledge and an understanding of the system being changed (since we are beginners we must try to avoid any postpone in implementation of systems) Schools often get reformations, but these reformations dont last for long or sustain. Many of the reforms have usually failed even after intense teacher training because those teachers failed to integrate what they have learned in training to the curriculum administrators imposed what they felt was needed to be integrated into the program without involving the teachers in the change process: a change model that breeds resistance by making teachers into presenters of others' agenda rather than professional instructors or educators Common practice of reform in many schools: imposition on but without collaboration of the professional staff, or of any other stakeholders.(result? Failure!) Administrators treated teachers in much the same way that many teachers treat their students: command and control negative validation. Psychologists have long asserted that positive validation builds effective people while, conversely, negative validation generally does the opposite. Innovative teachers are the least validated ones; they are usually held in suspect, despite how well their students are doing. Innovative teachers, he added, are commanded to fall back in line with the ordinary teachers.

School Management | 8/4/2011

(www.montessorihighschool.org.au/News/Q_A/How%20will%20this%20high%20 school%2)

What happens during the 91% time? Certainly, some of that time is sleep time, but most of that is awake time and much of that is spent with media. The media are giving our children an education that strongly runs counter to the schooling that schools give. The media of our youth are highly captivating

School Management | 8/4/2011

Teacher-bashing has become the favorite sport of politicians and superintendents who dont know what to do about the schools and are looking for someone to blame. He further adds that research shows that even with improved teacher training schools dont necessarily improve and thats because ...the fundamental problem is not the teachers. Invariably, teachers knew what excellent teaching looked like, but when they were asked if this was what they were doing in their schools, the frequent answer was, "No, they (administrators) wouldn't let us do that." Teachers are also the best educated but poorest trained workforce in the country. Take a look at any recent school reform, including NCLB and most of the reforms of the last century, and you will see that they are directed at the curriculum and the teachers. Very little is said in most reform efforts about the organizational structure and management styles used in our schools. Finland has the smallest gap between best and worst students, the smallest gender gap in results between boy and girls, and the second smallest differential in results between schools. The report, posted on the Montessori High Schools web site, says that Bordewich found some key innovations in Finlands education system: over twenty years ago the system shifted to a studentcentered approach giving increased attention to each students needs, stopped streaming students, decentralized administration (Too much authority creates resentment.), and gave more power to teachers. Further, it is incredibly difficult to get into teaching in Finland (more difficult than even medicine or law), teachers are highly trained and highly respected, and they have the autonomy to select their own materials. Standardized tests are shunned so as to avoid teaching to the tests, students are taught to evaluate themselves and to work independently, and slow learners are given intense support.

School Management | 8/4/2011

and highly interactive: characteristics that are sorely missing in most school programs. And that reminds me of a story often told in the 1960s that still rings true, today: lots of kids were dropping out of school in those years, and someone asked a dropout why he didnt want to return to school. The drop out answered that if he came back to school it would interrupt his education. That speaks volumes! Many of the new games and applications involve conversing and interacting with other users. More and more the 91% factor is encroaching deeper and deeper into our schools. (Access to outside world, the 91% factor) He says that as customers, parents need to be both informed and actively involved, and as suppliers they need to know that they have a responsibility to send children to school ready to learn. (You cant get quality products out the door if you dont have quality supplies coming in the door.) If everyone matters, then everyone has to be treated as such and empowered to be a full partner of the organization. In our school, though we had some division of tasks, there was no administration. Each teacher was considered a co-director of the school and all decisions were made by consensus, often with kids and parents in on the process.( Though we want our principles and decisions imposed, we can present it before these participants so that it is accepted.) School reforms usually fail because they are usually "schooling" reforms, reforms of the curriculum and/or of the teaching process, brought into an organizational structure that is ou of date and not conducive to organizational or learning effectiveness. These reforms are imposed and monitored by a hierarchical management system that is equally out of date and equally not conducive to organizational or learning effectiveness. Knowing and keeping alive an organizations history is vital to an organizations health, giving it continuity and a sense of long-term existence. today's problems come from yesterday's non-systemic solutions The heroic manager, feeling overly worried that his subordinates cannot carry their full responsibilities, begins to micromanage and takes on more responsibilities than he or she can handle. This causes two very serious consequences: the manager makes bad decisions and the subordinates, seeing

that responsibility is being taken away from them, are now unwilling to take on the responsibility, preferring to sit on the sidelines and watch the manager fumble. The two conditions and their resulting behaviors feed off each other. Close to 55% of employees surveyed feel "exhausted, confused, and unsupported." I see a lot of the same in many schools. They call the situation as burn out. Rivalries are to be avoided. It further supports my thinking that in schools that fail to validate the teachers, most teachers would resist any attempt by such leaders to involve them in a modicum of collaboration. In a climate of mistrust, employees much prefer stepping back and watching their bosses bungle. It's a sinister synergy that prevails in command and control workplaces. To guide us in creating a learning organization, Senge offers five disciplines that we need to integrate into the organization: Personal mastery: "cultivating of individual aspiration and awareness" Mental models: "becoming more aware of the sources of our thinking" Shared vision: "fostering commitment to common purpose" Team learning: "transforming our skills of collective learning" Systems thinking: "developing awareness of complexity, interdependencies, change, and leverage. Systems thinking is the key discipline that integrates the other disciplines.

Effective administrators teach. They teach teachers the skills they need to be successful in the classroom. They have a plan for the teachers success and know how to convey this plan to establish a culture of effective teachers. Effective administrators model good teaching to their teachers, for their teachers. Unsuccessful administrators buy programs. They lack insight into what is needed for teacher success. They sink money into programs that promise results and when the programs dont live up to the hype, the blame is put on the program for not producing results. They do not have the big picture plan to produce results for teachers and achievement for kids. Legacies are not left by installing programs.
School Management | 8/4/2011

Successful administrators know that the greatest asset of a school is its teachers and that teachers are the single most important factor in improving student

learning and achievement. The teacher is the difference in an effective classroom.

With a classroom management plan in place, the curriculum can be taught. Otherwise, time is wasted and energy expended putting out fires and dealing with behavior problems. The teachers, students, administration, and parents love a school that is safe, predictable, consistent, and nurturing. Research shows that providing such an environment for students will increase achievement.

Negative workplace cultures are not conducive to effective learning. They are "we/they" cultures, rather than "all-of-us" ones. It doesn't have to be this way.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Appreciative_inquiry

An Appreciative Inquiry

Overview
Gail Johnson Spring 2003

ai-overview

School Management | 8/4/2011

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