1 / 23

PROM/SE Summer Science Institute

PROM/SE Summer Science Institute . © 2005 MSU PROM/SE Promoting Rigorous Outcomes in Mathematics and Science Education, Supported by NSF Cooperative Agreement EHR-0314866. PROM/SE Summer Science Institute. Day 3: Leadership “Understanding the Nature of Change” Barbara Markle Ben Perez

liora
Télécharger la présentation

PROM/SE Summer Science Institute

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. PROM/SE Summer Science Institute © 2005 MSU PROM/SE Promoting Rigorous Outcomes in Mathematics and Science Education, Supported by NSF Cooperative Agreement EHR-0314866

  2. PROM/SE Summer Science Institute Day 3: Leadership “Understanding the Nature of Change” Barbara Markle Ben Perez Chris Reimann © 2005 MSU PROM/SE Promoting Rigorous Outcomes in Mathematics and Science Education, Supported by NSF Cooperative Agreement EHR-0314866

  3. Change as a Force in Our Lives • Change is all around us: all we need to do to verify this is to look around and see the effects of time. • Our own physical changes • The neighborhoods we grew up in • Alumni gatherings • So, the question for us to consider: Is all change the same? © 2005 MSU PROM/SE Promoting Rigorous Outcomes in Mathematics and Science Education, Supported by NSF Cooperative Agreement EHR-0314866

  4. Your Experience with Change • Think back about a time in your personal or professional life when you experienced change. • What was the change? • What did you experience? • How did you react to it? • How did you resolve or accommodate the change? • Share your experience with a colleague at your table. © 2005 MSU PROM/SE Promoting Rigorous Outcomes in Mathematics and Science Education, Supported by NSF Cooperative Agreement EHR-0314866

  5. Reflecting on Change • So, what do your experiences about change tell us about the nature of change? • Hard or easy to accommodate to change? • What determines whether it’s hard or easy to adjust to change? • What can we conclude about the nature of change? © 2005 MSU PROM/SE Promoting Rigorous Outcomes in Mathematics and Science Education, Supported by NSF Cooperative Agreement EHR-0314866

  6. Current Research on Change • McREL (Mid-Continent Research on Education & Learning) has completed a Meta-Analysis on the impact of leadership on student achievement. • A key finding focuses on what McREL calls: The Magnitude of Change. • Change has personal and organizational implications. © 2005 MSU PROM/SE Promoting Rigorous Outcomes in Mathematics and Science Education, Supported by NSF Cooperative Agreement EHR-0314866

  7. McREL’s Definition of Change A change is defined by the implications it has for the people expected to implement it and/or those who will be impacted by it. The same change can be perceived differently by different stakeholders. Source: Balanced Leadership Participant’s Manual, McREL, 2005 © 2005 MSU PROM/SE Promoting Rigorous Outcomes in Mathematics and Science Education, Supported by NSF Cooperative Agreement EHR-0314866

  8. Incremental Technical Continuous First-Order Fundamental Adaptive Discontinuous Second-Order Magnitude of Change Source: Balanced Leadership Participant’s Manual, McREL, 2005 © 2005 MSU PROM/SE Promoting Rigorous Outcomes in Mathematics and Science Education, Supported by NSF Cooperative Agreement EHR-0314866

  9. Order of Change • Definition: Order of Change Order of change is the magnitude & implications of change for the people expected to implement them or those who will be impacted by them. Source: Balanced Leadership Participant’s Manual, McREL, 2005 © 2005 MSU PROM/SE Promoting Rigorous Outcomes in Mathematics and Science Education, Supported by NSF Cooperative Agreement EHR-0314866

  10. First-order Change • Definition: First-order Change First-order change implies a logical extension of past & current practices intended to make incremental improvements in the current situation. First-order changes can be implemented with current knowledge and skills. Source: Balanced Leadership Participant’s Manual, McREL, 2005 © 2005 MSU PROM/SE Promoting Rigorous Outcomes in Mathematics and Science Education, Supported by NSF Cooperative Agreement EHR-0314866

  11. Second-order Change • Definition: Second-order Change Second-order change implies a fundamental or significant break with past & current practices intended to make dramatic differences in the current situation. Second-order changes require new knowledge and skills for successful implementation. Source: Balanced Leadership Participant’s Manual, McREL, 2005 © 2005 MSU PROM/SE Promoting Rigorous Outcomes in Mathematics and Science Education, Supported by NSF Cooperative Agreement EHR-0314866

  12. Change in Your School • Think about something in your school that you would identify as 1st order change: • What characteristics made it 1st order change? • Now, think about something in your school that you would identify as 2nd order change? • What characteristics made it 2nd order? © 2005 MSU PROM/SE Promoting Rigorous Outcomes in Mathematics and Science Education, Supported by NSF Cooperative Agreement EHR-0314866

  13. The Change Stages Stage 2 Learning, acquiring, & practicing Stage 3 Stability Source: The Leadership Assignment: Creating Change, Raymond L. Calabrese Stage 1 Awareness

  14. Interaction of Relationships Board Pressure Special-interest Parent groups Change Cycle Curriculum Revision Initiation Of Change Delaying Tactics Regression Cycle Pressure from State agencies Pressure From unions Source: The Leadership Assignment: Creating Change, Raymond L. Calabrese

  15. Enthusiasm Leaders Under-standing Change Moral Purpose Coherence Making Relationship Building Knowledge Creation & Sharing Hope Energy Members Commitment (Internal & external) More good things happen; Fewer bad things happen Results Source: Michael Fullan, 2001

  16. Moral Purpose: • Making a positive difference © 2005 MSU PROM/SE Promoting Rigorous Outcomes in Mathematics and Science Education, Supported by NSF Cooperative Agreement EHR-0314866

  17. Understanding • the Change Process: • Innovating the most is not the goal • Having the best ideas is not enough • Appreciate the Implementation Dip • Respect resistance • Create a culture of change • Understanding change as complex; not a checklist © 2005 MSU PROM/SE Promoting Rigorous Outcomes in Mathematics and Science Education, Supported by NSF Cooperative Agreement EHR-0314866

  18. Building Relationships: • Understand collaboration • in an alliance of external & • internal partners • Create positive relationships; • work to resolve negative • relationships • Appreciate diverse partners © 2005 MSU PROM/SE Promoting Rigorous Outcomes in Mathematics and Science Education, Supported by NSF Cooperative Agreement EHR-0314866

  19. Creating & Sharing • Knowledge: • Generate & increase • knowledge both inside & • outside your school • Create a collaborative culture • that encourages knowledge • sharing © 2005 MSU PROM/SE Promoting Rigorous Outcomes in Mathematics and Science Education, Supported by NSF Cooperative Agreement EHR-0314866

  20. Making Coherence: • Work through ambiguity that is • present in the change process • Recognize that creativity results • at the edge of chaos • Create coherence through the • alignment of policies, assessment • & professional development © 2005 MSU PROM/SE Promoting Rigorous Outcomes in Mathematics and Science Education, Supported by NSF Cooperative Agreement EHR-0314866

  21. Principles of Adult Learning • BASIC ASSUMPTIONS: • People learn in different ways. • Different methods facilitate learning for different people. • Learning in any group will depend on the design of the session. © 2005 MSU PROM/SE Promoting Rigorous Outcomes in Mathematics and Science Education, Supported by NSF Cooperative Agreement EHR-0314866

  22. Principles of Adult Learning • Adults learn best when… • They’re motivated. Motivation comes from the context, relevance & involvement level of the work. • Learning is conducted as a partnership. • Learning involves the learner’s primary learning mode & is interactive & experiential. © 2005 MSU PROM/SE Promoting Rigorous Outcomes in Mathematics and Science Education, Supported by NSF Cooperative Agreement EHR-0314866

  23. Principles of Adult Learning • Adults learn best when…(cont.) • There is an understandable structure & reinforcement. • People’s attention & energy stay engaged & focused. © 2005 MSU PROM/SE Promoting Rigorous Outcomes in Mathematics and Science Education, Supported by NSF Cooperative Agreement EHR-0314866

More Related