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School RelationshipBuilding Community Engagement

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Need training/coaching? ... Enhanced Feelings of Personal Accountability ... Commitment to Own Professional and Personal Development. Service Orientation. Empathy ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: School RelationshipBuilding Community Engagement


1
School Relationship-BuildingCommunity Engagement
  • Presented by Mia Urick
  • Minnesota Rural Education Leadership Program
  • September 20, 2007
  • Radisson Hotel and Conference Center, Plymouth, MN

2
Big Broad Topic
  • Community Engagement School Board Relations
  • Communications Public Relations
  • Reputation Management Public Ownership
  • Leadership

3
Supporting Student Achievement
  • If you are a new principal in a troubled
    inner-city school under orders from your
    superintendent to raise student test scores and
    involve parents, what should you do?

4
  • If I were you, I would look at the results of
    studies that show a convincing link between
    student achievement and various approaches to
    parent and community involvement.
  • Don Davies
  • Founder, Institute for Responsive Education
  • Visiting Professor, Northeastern University

5
National Center for Family and Community
Connections with Schools (part of the Southwest
Educational Development Laboratory) www.sedl.org/
connections/resources
6
(No Transcript)
7
National School Public Relations Association
(NSPRA) http//www.nspra.org/ cap.htm
8
Countless studies demonstrate that students with
parents actively involved in their education at
home and school are more likely to earn higher
grades and test scores, enroll in higher-level
programs, graduate from high school, and go on to
post-secondary education. --- Beyond the Bake
Sale
9
Relationships Relationships Relationships
  • Built on Trust
  • Trust confidence, reliance, certainty, safety,
    hope, belief

10
Trust-building and information-sharing with your
audiences board staff students parents
volunteers wider community and groups
within immediate school building
neighbors taxpayers business
community policymakers et cetera!
11
within the culture of your school district and
community. Culture has symbols language r
ules values woven into the fabric of the
culture.
12
Communications
  • Pervasive in the culture
  • Responsive to environment
  • Relationship-based
  • Skills can be taught/learned

13
It is human nature to create symbols that create
exclusivity (think of teenagers). But in order
for a culture to be inclusive and welcoming, the
elements of the culture must be communicated and
understood by audiences.
14
Including the rules!
15
Its important to understand your culture and
your community.
  • Factors that influence the feelings and attitudes
    your community has regarding the school district
  • History (stories)
  • Demographics
  • Relationships (Asset Mapping)
  • Perception vs. Reality

16
Communications
  • Pervasive in the culture
  • Responsive to environment
  • Relationship-based
  • Skills can be taught/learned

17
Relationships Build trust in an intentional way.
  • Focus on kids.
  • Intentionally build your community network.
  • Listen to your network.
  • Be open and honest.
  • Do what you say you are going to do.
  • Tell your story
  • Always ask Who needs to know about this?
  • Make trust a priority.

18
Focus on kids.
  • Key characteristics associated with academic
    improvement include high standards and
    expectations for all students and parent and
    community involvement. The importance of
    establishing and maintaining meaningful, direct,
    two-way communication between schools, parents,
    and the community is one of the defining features
    of effective parent and community involvement.
    (NSPRA, How Strong Communication Contributes to
    Student and School Success www.nspra.org)

19
Intentionally build your community network.
  • Group goals, reciprocity, and rewarding joint
    efforts are all essential for collaboration to
    occur, but what has the most powerful influence
    on whether those goals get achieved? Positive
    face-to-face interaction leaders must therefore
    provide frequent and lasting opportunities for
    team members to associate and intermingle across
    disciplines and between departments. Handy as
    virtual tools are for staying in touch, they are
    no substitute for positive face-to-face
    interactions. (Kouzes and Posner, The
    Leadership Challenge)

20
When there are bumps in the road
  • Confront the issue.
  • Tell the truth.
  • Follow up.
  • If you want to make peace, you dont talk to
    your friends. You talk to your enemies. (Moshe
    Dayan)

21
Role of the Leader
  • The object of leadership in the concept of
    cultural community is the stirring of human
    consciousness, the integration and enhancement of
    meanings, the articulation of key cultural
    strands, and the liking of organizational members
    to them. (Sergiovanni, Leadership and
    Organizational Culture)
  • Thus, school leaders enliven day-to-day district
    activity with meaning and significance through
    constant communication.

22
Intent
  • Leaders use attention to focus the lens of
    intention. Watch what youre paying attention
    to, for others are going to pay attention to the
    same things. (Houston and Sokolow, The
    Spiritual Dimension of Leadership)

23
Communications
  • Pervasive in the culture
  • Responsive to environment
  • Relationship-based
  • Skills can be taught/learned

24
Relationships
  • Opinion Leaders
  • Key Communicators
  • Internal (Employee Engagement)
  • External (Community Engagement)

25
When you allow human relationships to fall by the
wayside, people tend to anticipate a bureaucratic
agenda.
  • suspect
  • dehumanized
  • rules-driven
  • start referring to The District

26
Relationships
  • Opinion Leaders
  • Identify them and make a database
  • Develop a plan to communicate with them on a
    regular basis
  • Check in with them to insure they are getting the
    message
  • Review the list -- it is dynamic and can change
    in a heartbeat.

27
Relationships
  • Key Communicators
  • Who associated with your district has voice on
    any particular topic? Make a list.
  • Are they skilled in communicating? Need
    training/coaching?
  • Each time a decision is made, identify the key
    communicators and plan the message and method of
    communicating.

28
Relationships
  • Internal (Employee Engagement)
  • The nature of relationships among the adults
    within a school has a greater influence on the
    character and quality of that school and on
    student accomplishment than anything else.
    (Barth, Improving Relationships Within the
    Schoolhouse handout)
  • Internal/External audiences may be the samemake
    sure that internal hears what external hears

29
Relationships
  • Internal (Employee Engagement)
  • Employee Engagement is not your fathers Internal
    Communications.
  • Requires 2-way communication that creates a
    conversation and therefore a personal
    relationship!
  • ROI on Employee Engagement
  • Lower Staff Turn-over
  • Better Performance
  • Lower Absenteeism
  • Enhanced Feelings of Personal Accountability
  • Higher Level of Satisfaction as Members of
    (Wider) School Community
  • Employee as District Ambassador and Cultural
    Translators

30
Relationships
  • External (Community Engagement)
  • Planning - be intentional.
  • Define your goal(s).
  • Inform audiences about the Boards twenty goals
    for student achievement and achieve audience
    buy-in.
  • Notify the community about the intent to create
    and execute a strategic plan, build interest and
    participation.
  • Pass the levy.
  • Recruit eight high quality candidates for the
    middle school principal position.

31
Plan RACE
  • Research
  • Action Plan
  • Communicate
  • Evaluate

32
Plan RACE
  • Research
  • Determine Opportunities and Challenges (SWOT
    Analysis)
  • Get data.
  • Anecdotal/Conversational
  • Formal
  • Surveys
  • District Records
  • Government Reports

33
Plan RACE
  • Research
  • Identify audiences and stakeholders
  • Who will care?
  • Where do you connect with them?
  • Home
  • School
  • Businesses
  • Media
  • Events

34
Plan RACE
  • Action Plan
  • An effective interaction of
  • Message geared toward outcome, tailored for
  • Audience, using an appropriate
  • Method
  • Develop your message(s)

35
Plan RACE
  • Action Plan
  • Key Messages
  • Decided upon ahead of delivery.
  • Concise, brief, memorable
  • Honest
  • Pertinent
  • Timely
  • Key messages are not about spin.

36
Tell the truth.Tell the truth.Tell the truth.
  • Its OK to say nothing,
  • but if you say anything,
  • tell the truth.

37
Plan RACE
  • Action Plan
  • Decide on the method
  • Face to Face One-to-One
  • Face to Face Group Presentation, Small or Large
    Group
  • Phone Calls
  • Print via District (Letters, Brochures,
    Newsletters)
  • Media
  • Electronic (Internet, Video, Podcasting, Etc.)
  • Other (Logo Items, Billboards, Etc.)
  • Budget!
  • Tasks, Responsibilities/Accountabilities, and
    Timeline

38
Plan RACE
  • Communicate
  • Execute the plan.
  • Pay attention to buzz.
  • Keep a wide focus.
  • Just because there is a plan for one initiative
    doesnt mean there arent other communication
    needs.

39
Plan RACE
  • Evaluate
  • Did it work?
  • How do you know?
  • What are you seeing and hearing?
  • Goals met?
  • Any hard data?

40
Help I need somebody Not just anybody (The
Beatles)You are in a unique position to help
your district develop and execute an incredibly
effective communication plan that will help to
engage all of your community and maximize the
success of your students.
41
Help ...
  • Build your infrastructure!
  • Enhance your skills and the skills of your key
    communicators
  • Leadership Skills
  • Commitment/Enthusiasm
  • Teaming/Collaboration
  • Good Judgment
  • Respect
  • Honesty
  • Confidentiality
  • Loyalty/Focus on District Goals
  • Commitment to Own Professional and Personal
    Development
  • Service Orientation
  • Empathy
  • Etc.

42
Help ...
  • Build your infrastructure!
  • Enhance your skills and the skills of your key
    communicators
  • Writing
  • Speaking
  • Listening
  • Group Facilitation
  • Use of Technology
  • Etc.
  • Make communications skills an essential aspect of
    assessment and feedback to one another!

43
Help ...
  • Build your infrastructure!
  • Develop your database of opinion leaders
  • Meet with them often.
  • Communicate with them often.
  • Dont lose touch until an issue appears.
  • Review and update the database regularly!
  • Find methods to provide regular and expected
    communication to your community.
  • Communicate both good and bad news.
  • Use a variety of communication methods--print,
    electronic, video, etc.
  • Be strategic about building trust and confidence
    within all of your relationships.

44
Help ...
  • Assess and Plan
  • Standard logo identifying all district (and
    school) materials?
  • Expectations regarding communications for all
    staff?
  • Up-to-date, content rich web site?
  • Processes to harvest feedback from stakeholders?
  • Communications vehicle for staff (i.e.
    newsletter)?
  • Solid, standard staff orientation?
  • Staff recognition?
  • Regular parent communication vehicle?
  • Staff training regarding communication with
    parents/wider community?

45
Help ...
  • Assess and Plan
  • Standards for receiving messages and returning
    calls/emails?
  • Program for welcoming new families?
  • Community-wide communication vehicle?
  • Way to communicate with citizens who do not have
    children in the schools?
  • Method of receiving/responding to community
    input?
  • Way to monitor public opinion and buzz?

46
Help ...
  • Assess and Plan
  • Concise, jargon-free, understandable information
    regarding the quality of education in your
    district?
  • Method of ongoing assessment of facility
    presence?
  • Relationships with local service organizations
    and faith communities?
  • Regular meetings with local media?
  • Submit articles/opinion pieces for local
    publications?
  • A plan for crisis communications?

47
Help ...
  • Remember
  • If you are going to communicate to external
    audiences, communicate first to your internal
    audiences.
  • Stay on message.
  • Be open and honest.
  • Listen.
  • Teach and Learn.

48
Were here for you!
  • Mia Urick
  • Director of Communications
  • MASA
  • 1884 Como Avenue
  • St. Paul, MN 55108
  • (651) 645-6272
  • toll free 1-866-444-5251
  • fax 651-645-7518
  • urickm_at_mnasa.org
  • www. mnasa.org

49
  • Just do your best and everything will turn out
    just great.
  • Mias Grandma Wanda
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