Shared Leadership Keith Eades Melanie Honeycutt. Shared Leadership What does it look like – Give...
-
Upload
lambert-stafford -
Category
Documents
-
view
222 -
download
0
description
Transcript of Shared Leadership Keith Eades Melanie Honeycutt. Shared Leadership What does it look like – Give...
Shared LeadershipKeith Eades
Melanie Honeycutt
Shared Leadership• What does it look like
– Give power.– Define the limits– Cultivate a climate– Give qualified people discretion and autonomy– Don’t second guess
Leadership• Is Proactive• Is transparent• Transforms schools• Creates an environment where students learn and
teachers grow• Needs to be embedded in all job roles• Is a social act• Creates processes and systems• Aligns horizontally and vertically• Sets the vision, aligns and motivates the people to
implement positive sustained improvement
“A highly effective school leader can have a dramatic influence on the overall academic achievement of
students.”
BreakThrough Fullan, Hill 2005
Real 21st Century transformation cannot occur unless administrators free people to
• Lead with questions, not answers. • Engage in dialogue and debate, not
coercion. • Conduct autopsies, without blame. • Speak up when they identify a problem.
Daniel Pink - DRIVE
The most effective change in school culture happens when principals,
teachers, and students model the values and beliefs important to the institution. The actions of the principal are noticed and interpreted by others as "what is
important."
Roadblocks• Reactive• Poor communication of goals,
vision or motivates• Process and systems are
restrictive or counterproductive• Leadership is not distributed
Effective leadership means more than simply knowing what to do–it’s knowing when, how, and why to do it. Effective
leaders understand how to balance pushing for change while at the same time, protecting aspects of culture, values, and
norms worth preserving. They know which policies, practices, resources, and incentives to align and how to align them with
organizational priorities. They know how to gauge the magnitude of change they are calling for and how to tailor
their leadership strategies accordingly. Finally, they understand and value the people in the organization. They know when, how, and why to create learning environments that support people, connect them with one another, and provide the knowledge, skills, and resources they need to succeed. This combination of knowledge and skills is the
essence of balanced leadership
The new Superintendent of the Perfect School System wants to implement 1:1.
• His teachers do not have access to laptops• No 21st Century Skills training has been
offered in the district• Traditional Classrooms• Traditional Community
Scenario
Craft a 2 minute elevator speech to share
how you will support this initiative
http://bit.ly/scenario1bcV
Transformation High School has 920 students. The principal, Will Succeed, is a first year
principal and was hired two weeks before the start of school. He is consistently purchasing technology equipment, without consulting
with you or your team. His last purchase of 25 iPads, he wants set up to connect to the
network wirelessly.
Scenario
• His school has no wireless• Your team has never set up iPads for connection to
the network• This is the fifth time that he has purchased
something and you have to go in and make it work
Discuss in groups How do you handle this?What are your options?
Good To Read• Drive and A Whole New Mind – Daniel Pink• BreakThrough – Fullan, Hill 2005• School Leadership that Works – Marzano• Leading Change in Your School – Douglas
Reeves• Leading Change and Our Iceberg is Melting –
John Kotter• Who Moved the Cheese? – Spencer Johnson• Leading in a Culture of Change – Michael Fullan
Thank you!