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Explore ways to foster effective leadership and drive change in educational institutions. Learn about motivating faculty and students, managing conversations, and creating a culture of innovation. Discover key principles and case studies.
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Change Agency Leadership Patrick F. Bassett, NAIS Presidentbassett@nais.org
Required Reading for the Admin Team
Creating the Conditions for Success What is (or should be) on your leadership/change agenda? Message to Parents: “We’re preparing children for their future, not your past.” Message to Faculty: “Don’t bother with the ‘The colleges (or secondary schools) won’t like it’ excuse: The colleges (or secondary schools) will like it.” (Ask them.) • Leading from the Middle • Managing Difficult Conversations: High EQ needed. • Cultivating the First Followers • Dan Pink on the “Science of Motivation.” • Dan & Chip Heath on Orchestrating Change: Switch: “How To Change Things When Change Is Hard” • IDEO on Design. • Robert Kegan on Immunity to Change • Pat Bassett on Seven Stages of the Change Cycle Crises Leadership Case Studies
PFB: Of the first three dancing guys, how many are really good dancers? Creating a Movement~ Derek Sivers, Ted Talk
Creating a Movement – 4 Principles • A lone nut does something great... (PFB: Leaders don’t have to be talented, just a bit crazy.) • …but no movement without the first follower. (PFB: You can’t care about the risk of looking crazy.) • Cultivate and celebrate the first follower… (PFB: Show the way, then honor the first followers: e.g., Joe Biden in catechism class) • …or have the courage to be the first follower. (PFB: Moral courage the 1st virtue: Be the John Hancock to Thomas Jefferson or the Reverend Abernathy to Martin Luther King, Jr.) Return
Play Return See 11:00 – 13:07 http://www.ted.com/talks/dan_pink_on_motivation.html • Drivers: • Autonomy • Mastery • Purpose
Dan Pink’s Drive: The Surprising Truth about What Motivates Us • Extrinsic Motivators (carrot & stick) for Faculty? • Carrot (“pay for performance”); and • Stick (“probation and firing”). • How are these motivators going in school? • What are the equivalent extrinsic motivators for students? • Intrinsic Motivators for Faculty? • Autonomy • Mastery • Purpose • What are the equivalent intrinsic motivators for students? Where do we see these at work for kids? • Case Study: Name a school change agenda item we’re not making much progress on: How could we motivate a la Pink?
The Best Way To Pay “How Gen Y & Boomers Will Reshape Your Agenda” HBR Jul-Aug 2009 What employees value “at least as much as compensation” Pink’s first principle, autonomy Pink’s second principle, mastery Pink’s third principle, purpose
The Best Way To Pay “How Gen Y & Boomers Will Reshape Your Agenda” HBR Jul-Aug 2009 What employees value “at least as much as compensation”
The Best Way To Pay “How Gen Y & Boomers Will Reshape Your Agenda” HBR Jul-Aug 2009 What employees value “at least as much as compensation”
Which motivator can be counter-productive to organizational goals? Professional Development in Independent Schools: • “Here’s $2000 per year to spend as you like: go grow.” • As opposed to, “Here’s $2000 each, join or form an online PLC -professional learning community- on one of the following topics, and design your professional development program around that topic, reporting out to the faculty at the end of the year: 1.) differentiated instruction; 2.) brain-based learning; 3.) blended high-tech/high touch classroom environments; 4.) formative testing.” Return
Switch: How To Change Things When Change Is Hard ~Chip and Dan Heath (Sticky Messages) The Rider vs. the Elephant (e.g., adoption of new technology) 1. Direct the Rider (mind) • Find the bright spots • Script the first critical moves • Send a postcard of the destination 2. Motivate the Elephant (heart) • Find the feeling • Shrink the change (limit the choices – cf. Sheena Ivenger)
Switch: How To Change Things When Change Is Hard ~Chip and Dan Heath (Sticky Messages) 3. Shape the Path (path) • Tweak the environment • Build the habits • Rally the herd • Example: • Crystal Jones, TFA first-grade teacher in an inner city school in Atlanta where there was no kindergarten. “By the end of this school year, you are going to be third graders.” • Geoffrey Canada: “If you child attends this school, he or she will go to college.” • Case Study: Name a school change agenda item we’re not making much progress on: How could we motivate a la the Heath brothers? Return
Robert Kegan’s Immunity to Change Intentions and Actions: The Gap -----------
Robert Kegan’s Immunity to Change Foot on gas……………………and on brake
Robert Kegan’s Immunity to Change Change: Identify drivers and assumptions. Test the assumptions.
Source: Center for Ethical Leadership (Bill Grace, Pat Hughes, & Pat Turner), Kellogg National Leadership Program Seminar, Snoqualine, WA, 7/10/97. Reference: William Bridges, Transitions; Kurt Lewin, Field Theory in Social Science; Virginia Satir, The Satir Model; George David, Compressed Experience Workplace Simulation; Elizabeth Kubler-Ross, On Death & Dying; Tom Peters, In Search of Excellence. • The research on change indicates that there are predictable stages individuals experience whenever a major change event appears. What are they? • Exercise: • Identify 2 major change events in your life • Indicate the stages you went through as the change occurred. • As a small group determine what stages you had in common despite differences in the change events you were thinking of. PFB on the Seven Stages of the Change Cycle
Source: Center for Ethical Leadership (Bill Grace, Pat Hughes, & Pat Turner), Kellogg National Leadership Program Seminar, Snoqualine, WA, 7/10/97. Reference: William Bridges, Transitions; Kurt Lewin, Field Theory in Social Science; Virginia Satir, The Satir Model; George David, Compressed Experience Workplace Simulation; Elizabeth Kubler-Ross, On Death & Dying; Tom Peters, In Search of Excellence. Business as Usual: the routine; the frozen state; the status quo External Threat: potential disaster; propitious change event; an ending; a “death in the family”; an unfreezing via the introduction of a foreign element; disequilibrium; dissatisfaction with the status quo. Denial: refusal to read the Richter scale; anger and rage; chaos. The Seven Stages of the Change Cycle
The Seven Stages of the Change Cycle • Mourning: confusion; depression. • Acceptance: letting go. • Renewal: creativity; the incubation state of new ideas and epiphanies; new beginnings; movement; vision of what “better” might look like; reintegration; first practical steps; practice of new routines. • New Structure: sustainable change; the new status quo; new “frozen” state of restored equilibrium; spiritual integration; internalization and transformation of self.
Conventional Wisdom: Raise the Volume… • Declare war, demonize the enemy, mobilize the public • Problems with Raising the Volume in School Culture… • Skepticism: Teachers are intellectuals--declarations of imminent collapse are met with suspicion. • Good is the enemy of great: Jim Collins’ Good to Great. Absence of provoking crisis makes avoidance easy. Overcoming Resistance to Change
Problems with Raising the Volume in School Culture… • Success: Track record of independent schools the greatest impediment to change: We can’t declare war when schools are enjoying decades of peace and prosperity. So why advocate change???? • Increasingly the public identifies high quality schools with innovativeness, and least identifies innovativeness with independent schools. • The independent school model may not be financially sustainable in it current incarnation of skyrocketing tuitions. • What’s best for kids needs to be reasserted as institutions almost always over time gravitate towards doing what’s best for adults. Overcoming Resistance to Change
Effecting Change • Developing Followership for Change: • Coercive model works (“We’re about to close unless all faculty including department chairs teach five classes instead of four with 20-25 kids in each class”)… …but it works at a high cost to morale. • Appeal to idealism works (“We have an opportunity to create a new model here and become pioneers”)… …but it works only if you have a highly committed “band of brothers” and strong, visionary, and inspirational leadership.
Effecting Change • Developing Buy-in for Change: • Mutual benefit (“What’s in it for me?”) model works (“Beyond supporting this direction because ‘it’s the right thing to do,’ we are designing a new framework that is mutually beneficial to the school and its staff”)… …but it works only if you build in significant incentives.
Alternative to Conventional Wisdom (Raise the Volume)… • Lower the Noise… • By… • Talking about/Personalizing Change: Anticipating the Seven Stages • Betting on the Fastest Horses Overcoming Resistance to Change
Acknowledging Denial & Mourning Stages of Change • All change begins not with a beginning but an ending. • Example: Getting married = end of… • being single • unconditional love • having your own bathroom (and towels) • the sports car
Effecting Change Abstracting and Personalizing Change Faculty exercise: What are your own major change events? A move? Marriage? Admin job? Can we predict & prepare for stages?
Change Agency: Bet on the Fast Horses • Main Impediment to Change: • Consensus model of decision making. • (“My biggest challenge is convincing my faculty • members that they are not self-employed.”) ~Lou Salza • Coalition-building Model: Betting on the Fastest Horses: targeted buy-in via modeling. Ride the “tipping point” horses. (Malcolm Gladwell’s mavens, connectors, and salespeople). • Recruiting “the coalition of the willing.” Margaret Mead Dictum: “Never doubt that a small group of thoughtful, committed citizens can change the world; indeed, it’s the only thing that ever has.”
Case Studies • Professionalizing the Profession • Student and School Outcomes for the 21st C: Demonstrations of Learning
Change Agency Case Study #1 Professionalizing the Profession at your School
Strategic Issue: Professionalizing the ProfessionSource: Katherine Boles, HGSE/NAIS Seminar, Nov. 2006 Return
The End! “So what’s it gonna be, eh?” A Clockwork Orange
NAIS Strategic Planning: Breakout Groups (partnerships; school of future; sustainability, etc.) Return Why doesn’t anyone want to sit at the innovation table?
Design Thinking by IDEO (Fred Dust) • Know the threats to your value proposition. For Higher Ed? For independent schools? • Fred Dust: The moment Google starts hiring smart self-educated people who submit digital portfolios of what they can do instead of college transcripts of what they know, the higher ed value proposition is in jeopardy. • PFB: High Tech High. Denver & St. Louis Magnet Schools • Think people first, not business or technology first. • Segway vs. Zip cars & bikes • PFB: Hardware before peopleware? • Question assumptions about your users. Look but don't ask, because you'll get misinformation: What kind of music do you listen to when alone in your car? Watch people in context. (IDEO design teams include psychologists and anthropologists.) • What assumptions do we make about our students? Colleagues? • How do we punish those who don’t conform to cultural norms?
Design Thinking by IDEO (Fred Dust) • Expand your comparative set. For schools? • Grad schools. Military. Museums. Summer Camp. • Expand your Ecosystem. School 2.0. Do you really need a new building? • New School in NYC & Lighthouse School in Nantucket (and all the Semester Schools). • Dartmouth quarter plan. Blended learning ½ time. • Build your own metrics. • PFB: Demonstrations of Learning. Digital portfolios. • Undertake small scale experiments. Figure out what do you immediately. • PFB: Challenge 20/20 Return
Demonstrations of Learning: “What you do, not what you know, the ultimate test of education.” ~PFB Tweet • Conduct a fluent conversation in a foreign language about of piece of writing in that language. • Write a cogent and persuasive opinion piece on a matter of public importance. • Declaim with passion and from memory a passage that is meaningful, of one’s own or from the culture’s literature or history. • Demonstrate a commitment to creating a more sustainable and global future with means that are scalable • Invent a machine or program a robot capable of performing a difficult physical task.
Demonstrations of Learning • Exercise leadership in arena which you have passion and expertise. • Using statistics, assess if a statement by a public figure is demonstrably true. • Assess media coverage of a global event from various cultural/national perspectives. • Describe a breakthrough for a project-based team on which you participated in which you contributed to overcoming a human-created obstacle. • Produce or perform or interpret a work of art. Return
Tiananmen Square Return