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Title: Recipes for Successful Leaders


1
Recipes for Successful Leaders
  • ED 7304
  • Fall Semester

2
ED 7304 Class 2004 Fall Semester Delores
Campbell Becky Farrer Lourdes Henry Cheryl
Hoobler Ruben Carrillo Robert Gomez Michael
Hinesly Zana Moore Alex Ochoa Wayne Squires Dan
Webb Lana Seargeant Joshua Tovar
3
Recipe for Discipline
  • For discipline to be a successful and useful tool
    in public schools, administrators must be versed
    in their districts discipline policy.
  • The policy should reflect the community culture
  • School board
  • School administrators
  • Teachers
  • Community
  • Serves the needs of the local education community
    and is legal

4
Discipline
  • Who adopts a student code of conduct?
  • Chapter 37 of Texas Education Code
  • The local board of Trustees
  • Recommendation of the district-level of committee

5
Ingredients of Discipline
  • What should be included in the plan?
  • Specifications for circumstances leading to
    removal from school
  • Authorization to transfer student to alternative
    education program
  • Conditions for which student might be suspended

6
Ingredients cont.
  • Guidelines specifying the length of time a
    student may be suspended
  • Guidelines for punishment of children with
    disabilities
  • Guidelines for notifying students parents or
    guardians of violations

7
Recipe for Diversity
  • Diversity occurs when a company hires people who
    have a broad range of the following
  • Backgrounds
  • Characteristics
  • Qualities

8
Ingredients for Diversity
  • Respect for differences
  • Demonstrate commitment to community relationships
  • Accommodation for physical and developmental
    abilities
  • Power sharing
  • Tolerance of differences
  • Focus on innovation and creativity
  • Collaborative conflict resolution process
  • Diversity education and training

9
Application of Diversity
  • Begin by having genuine respect for differences
  • Commit to improve relationships
  • Take actions to accommodate differences
  • Be prepared to share the power
  • Practice tolerance with each other this will
    bring innovation and creativity
  • Conflicts will arise

10
Application of Diversity cont.
  • If conflicts arise practice conflict resolutions
  • When in doubt, add education and training

11
Recipe for Communication
  • A leader must have the ability to anticipate,
    understand, and respond efficiently
  • Communication must flow between administrator,
    staff, and the community

12
Ingredients for Communication
  • Honesty
  • Genuine Concern
  • Flexibility
  • Openness
  • Poise
  • Education
  • Sympathy
  • Multicultural understanding
  • Extrovert

13
Application of Communication (Examples or
Suggestions)
  • Use e-mail to communicate to employees and staff
  • Select appropriate department level coordinators
  • Employee and staff meetings need to occur at
    least once a month (PTA/PTO and board meetings)
  • Maintain good rapport with community through
    newsletters

14
Tips for Effective Communication
  • Watch your language (be careful not to offend)
  • Follow through (do what you say you will do)
  • Be truthful
  • Be an active listener
  • Manage conflict
  • Respond dont react

15
Tips for Communication, cont.
  • Give feedback
  • Invite participation
  • Keep your team up-to-date
  • Connect personally with employees

16
Recipe for Staff Development
  • Staff development is high-quality learning
  • Ingredients
  • Identifying needs and characteristics of
    participant learners
  • Identifying program characteristics of purpose,
    structure, content, process, and follow-up
  • Identifying organizational characteristics that
    contribute to effective staff development

17
Application of Staff Development
  • Information transferparticipants receive
    information about new approaches, techniques, or
    requirements
  • Skill acquisitionwhen participants are taught a
    particular way to do something
  • Behavior changewhen new information and/or
    skills are taught with expectations that
    participants will apply the new learning and
    change their behaviors

18
Recipe for Mentoring
  • Mentoring is a tool that organizations can use to
    nurture and grow their people
  • Mentees observe, question, and explore while
    mentors demonstrate, explain, and model

19
Ingredients for Mentoring
  • Mentor who is motivated, willing to invest time
    and energy, and has excellent communication
    skills
  • Mentee who is committed to expanding his/her
    capabilities, receptive to new ways of learning,
    and trying new ideas
  • An environment conducive to the mentor/ mentee
    relationship

20
Application for Mentoring
  • Orientation time used to get to know each
    other, build trust, and develop expectations
  • This stage will lay the foundation for a strong
    and beneficial relationship

21
Application for Mentoring cont.
  • Cultivation the most rewarding time for both
    mentor and mentee
  • Mutual trust has developed giving the mentee
    confidence to challenge the mentors ideas and
    visa versa

22
Mentoring cont.
  • Separation the relationship begins to draw apart
    after a year or two
  • The mentor, at this stage, should step back from
    the formal relationship and discuss with the
    mentee how they wish to continue their
    relationship

23
Mentoring cont.
  • Refining the relationship at this point both
    parties can regard one another as equals
  • They continue to have some form of interaction,
    although it is now on a more casual basis

24
Pitfalls
  • Mismatch between mentor and mentee
  • When one or both members feel uneasy with the
    other
  • Unrealistic expectations
  • Mentee expects or demands too much from mentor
  • Expectations need to be clearly defined from the
    beginning
  • Confidentiality breaches
  • Mentor must be trustworthy and able to keep
    confidence

25
Benefits of Mentoring Relationship
  • For Mentor
  • Increased motivation
  • Challenge
  • New insights and perspectives
  • An opportunity for self-development
  • Build self-esteem and job satisfaction
  • Opportunity to positively influence next
    generation
  • Peer recognition
  • Opportunity to improve communication

26
Benefits of Mentoring cont.
  • For Mentee
  • A non-threatening learning opportunity
  • Improved self-confidence
  • Developing business expertise and technical
    knowledge
  • Support and reassurance

27
Recipe for Morale
  • The general level of confidence and optimism felt
    by a person, or group of people, especially as it
    affects discipline and willingness
  • Everybody needs to feel like somebody.Anonymous
  • There is no limit to what can be accomplished if
    it doesnt matter who gets the credit.Ralph
    Waldo Emerson

28
Ingredients for Morale
  • Ingredients
  • Motivation
  • Communication
  • Trust
  • Cheerleading
  • Integrity
  • Praise
  • Culture of partnership

29
Application of Morale
  • Combine the above ingredients throughout the
    entire building
  • Liberally spread throughout the hallways
  • Add more of any ingredients as needed

30
Recipe for Motivation
  • Motivation is giving desire or incentive to work
    and do your best
  • Two types of motivators
  • Intrinsic motivators internal rewards
  • Extrinsic motivators tangible rewards

31
Ingredients for Motivation
  • Ingredients
  • Positive attitude
  • Recognition for good work
  • Notes of thanks
  • Small tokens of appreciation
  • Humor and appropriate play
  • Positive feedback and verbal praise

32
Motivation cont.
  • An effective leader mixes all these ingredients
    together to create a positive, happy, and fun
    work environment
  • Ingredients can be adjusted as needed to keep a
    good balance

33
Recipe for Leadership
  • Showing others the direction to follow
  • Getting somewhere first and setting an example
  • Believing in something other than self and work
    as a member of a team

34
Recipe for Leadership cont.
  • Involves hard work, and leaders must stick to
    promises made
  • Have focus and assist in establishing clear goals
  • Goals must remain at the forefront of all
    operations
  • Be willing to actively challenge the status quo
  • Inspire and lead others to new and challenging
    innovations
  • Adapt a behavior that adjusts to the needs of the
    current situation, yet be comfortable with
    dissent

35
Ingredients for Leadership
  • Trust
  • Patience
  • Flexibility
  • Ability to live with ambiguity
  • Self-mastery
  • Stewardship
  • Visioning
  • Persuasive communication
  • Responding with understanding
  • Empowerment
  • Empathetic listening
  • Open communication
  • Guidance
  • Excitement
  • Reflection
  • Discipline
  • Service
  • Willingness to ask for help
  • Encouragement
  • Channeling of action

36
Application of Leadership
  • The most important aspect of this recipe is to
    measure what really counts
  • Be a coach not a dictator
  • Explain the purpose and importance of what you
    are trying to teach, and explain the process to
    be used
  • Show others how it is done

37
Application of Leadership cont.
  • Watch carefully as the person practices the
    process, and provide immediate and specific
    feedback
  • Always express confidence in the persons ability
    to be successful at the task, and agree on
    follow-up actions

38
Leadership
  • Take all ingredients and adjust as needed
  • Allow people to learn from successes rather than
    from failures
  • People need direction, knowledge, skills,
    resources, and support
  • It is hard to preach people into changing their
    behavior
  • Work to develop confidence

39
Leadership cont.
  • Remember that changing behavior takes time
  • There is absolutely no substitute for practice
    with feedback
  • Leadership involves allowing others to practice
  • Watching someone else practice does not do it

40
Conclusion of Leadership
  • If the ingredients are not the right consistency,
    do not be afraid to offer a guiding hand and open
    doors to clear the way.
  • Help assess performance to enhance ability.
  • Do not control too much, but do not abandon that
    control.
  • Leadership involves being able to make decisions
    that others are not able to make.

41
The Ten Commandments of a Good Leader
  • Believe in something other than yourself
  • Listen to others
  • Work in a team never be a loner
  • Be considerate of a different opinion
  • Stand for what you believe even when criticized
  • Be a peacemaker above all
  • Be patient with other people, even though they do
    not see things your way
  • Stick to the promises you make
  • Work hard as a leader
  • Most important. Thank people for what they do
    for you even though you may not receive thanks

42
References
  • http//ideapractices.org General Reference for
    IDEA
  • http//ideapractices.org/law/brief/brief05.php -
    Questions and
  • Answers site for federal discipline laws for
    special populations.
  • http.www.tasb.org/policy/discipline/chapter37_clea
    n.pdf Texas
  • Education Code Chapter 37 Discipline

43
References cont.
  • Nelson, J., et. al. (2000). Positive Discipline
    in the Classroom, Revised 3rd Edition
    Developing Mutual Respect, Cooperation,
  • and Responsibility in Your Classroom. New
    York Prima Lifestyles
  • Marshal, M. (2001). Discipline Without Stress
    Punishments or Rewards How Teachers and Parents
    Promote Responsibility
  • Learning. Kansas City Piper Press

44
References cont.
  • National Staff Development Council www.nsdc.org
  • Association for Curriculum and Supervision
    Development www.ascd.org
  • Northwest Regional Educational Laboratory
    www.nwrel.org
  • Texas Elementary Principals and Supervisors
    Association (TEPSA) www.tepsa.org

45
References cont.
  • Texas Association of School Administrators (TASA)
    www.tasanet.org
  • University of Texas Dana Center
    www.utdanacenter.org
  • Dunleavy, James. Mentorship A Matter of
    Professional Responsibility. PT Magazine of
    Physical Therapy. March 2004
  • Hairston, Carolyn J. Mentorship. Reporter,
    March 200, Vol. 27 Issue, p31, 2p

46
References cont.
  • Mathis, Robert L John H. Jackson. 2000. Human
    Resource Management.
  • Atilla the Hun
  • The Leadership Pill
  • Who Moved My Cheese?
  • FISH by Stephen C. Lundin, Ph.D., Harry Paul, and
    John Christensen

47
References cont.
  • http//www.educationworld.com/a_admin/admin/admin2
    89.shtml
  • http//www.ericdigest.org/pre921/motivating.htm
  • Byham, W.C. Ph.D. (1992). Zapp! in education. New
    York Fawcett Columbine.
  • Sanborn, M. High impact leadership how to be
    more than a manager. Boulder
  • CareerTrack Publications.

48
References cont.
  • Waters, T., Marzano, R.J., McNulty, B. (2003).
    Balanced leadership what 30 years of research
    tells us about the effect of leadership on
    student achievement. http// www.mcrel.org/topics
    /productDetail.asp?topicsID7produc
  •  Managing Diversity--The Courage to Lead by Elsie
    Y. Cross
  • The Origins of Cultural Differences and Their
    Impact on Management
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