Last week’s
post (9/17/14), “Treat the Symptoms Vs. Treat the Disease,” got me thinking
about my real job when I was working for the state. Yes, my title was “State Director of Innovative Redesign,”
but the actual job was more along the lines of Plumber.
When systems
fail, there is either a broken component, a clog or a lack of flow. What is true in plumbing is true in a
school system. My job was to
identify the issue and correct it as quickly as possible. But where others saw the fault as broke
curriculum (component), ineffective teachers (clog), inadequate resources
(flow), I recognized that these are all symptoms of the same disease, Failure
of Leadership. A no curriculum or
a subpar curriculum is leadership failure. A mass of ineffective teachers is
leadership failure. Not providing adequate
resources is leadership failure.
My job then was to identify at what level the leadership failure had
manifested (Assistant Principal, Principal, Central Office, Superintendent or
Board) and based on the severity of the disease either provide support or
excise the problem.
In the case described
last week (9/17/14) the leadership failure had manifested itself at the board
level. Staff can’t run off
principal after principal if the Board is focused on student success and makes
decisions based on that focus. And
here is what is truly sad about leadership failure at the highest level. Not
only do students suffer (in terms of squandered performance driven opportunities),
but at some point so will teachers when the only course action left is
wholesale housecleaning and reorganization.
Think. Work. Achieve.
Your turn...
- Call Jo at (832) 477-LEAD to order your campus set of “The Fundamental 5: The Formula for Quality Instruction.” Individual copies available on Amazon.com! http://tinyurl.com/Fundamental5
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