The Six Secrets of Change Michael Fullan - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 37
About This Presentation
Title:

The Six Secrets of Change Michael Fullan

Description:

Classroom through all levels. Re-design the strategy at every level ... to pierce him than to penetrate the hard shell of a tortoise with a rye straw. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:1485
Avg rating:5.0/5.0
Slides: 38
Provided by: bcelcI
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: The Six Secrets of Change Michael Fullan


1
The Six Secrets of ChangeMichael Fullan
www.michaelfullan.ca
2
Tri-Level Reform
Fullan, 2005
3
Third Phase
  • Birth to 5
  • Classroom through all levels
  • Re-design the strategy at every level
  • Strengthen professionalism
  • Communication, communication, communication

4
Triple P Core Components
Fullan, Hill, Crévola, 2005
5
Have Theory Will Travel
  • Nothing is as practical as good theory.

Kurt Lewin, 1948
6
Recent books
  • Whats Worth Fighting for in the Principalship
    (Teachers College Press, January, 2008)
  • The Six Secrets of Change (Jossey Bass, March
    2008)

7
Fullan, 2008
8
The Six Secrets of Success 1
  • Love Your Employees

9
1. Love Your Employees
  • Everyone knows what a miserable job is.
  • Its the one you dread going to and cant wait
    to leave.

Lencioni, 2007
10
1. Love Your Employees
  • Over a 10 year horizon, FoEs outperformed the
    Good to Great companies 1,026 percent return
    versus 331 percent (a 3-to-1 ratio).

Sisodia et al, 2007
11
1. Love Your Employees
  • Our aim is to treat our candidates as well as we
    treat our customers. In essence it is to turn
    every employee into a potential recruiter.

Taylor and Labarre, 2006 (regarding Starbucks)
12
Strategy Outline
  • Outcomes
  • Core Priorities
  • Surrounding Priorities
  • Means of Getting There

13
The Six Secrets 2
  • Connect Peers with Purpose

14
2. Connect Peers with Purpose
  • Companies that are serious about what makes
    people tick equip their people with a serious
    understanding of what makes the company tick.

Taylor and LaBarre, 2006
15
2. Connect Peers with Purpose
  • Employees begin to take a greater interest in
    their colleagues, help them find meaning and
    relevance in their work, and find better ways to
    gauge their own success, and they do all this
    without specific direction from their bosses.

Lencioni, 2007
16
The Six Secrets 3
  • Capacity Building Prevails

17
3. Non-judgmentalism
  • Assume to dictate to his judgment, or to command
    his action, or to mark him as one to be shunned
    or despised, and he will retreat within himself,
    close all avenues to his head and his heart and
    tho your cause be naked truth itself,
    transformed to the heaviest lance harder than
    steel can be made, and tho you throw it with
    Herculean force and precision, you shall no more
    be able to pierce him than to penetrate the hard
    shell of a tortoise with a rye straw.

Lincoln, in Miller, 2002
18
3. Non-judgmentalism
  • For those who had never fallen victim to drink
    have been spared more from an absence of appetite
    than from any mental or moral superiority.

Lincoln, in Miller, 2002
19
3. Capacity Building Over Judgmentalism
  • We can succeed only in concert. It is not can
    any of us imagine better, but can we all do
    better.

Miller, 2002(regarding Lincoln)
20
3. Capacity Building
  • People who thrive here have a certain humility.
    They know they can get better they want to learn
    from the best. We look for people who light up
    when they are around other talented people.

Taylor and LaBarre, 2006
21
The Six Secrets 4
  • Learning is the Work

22
4. Learning is the Work
  • If we were to identify the single greatest
    difference between Toyota and other organizations
    it would be the depth of understanding among
    Toyota employees regarding their work.

Lier and Meier, 2006
23
The Six Secrets 5
  • Transparency Rules

24
5. Transparency Rules
  • To fix medicine we need to do two things
  • - measure ourselves, and
  • - be open about what we are doing.

Gawande, 2007
25
5. Classroom Improvment
  • Transparency
  • Non-judgmentalism
  • Good Help

26
5. Promising Change Forces
  • Strategies with potential
  • Recruitment and succession
  • Clusters, networks, and partnerships
  • International benchmarks

27
5. Problematic Change Forces
  • Initiativitis
  • High stakes vulnerability
  • Managerial diversion
  • Unfit for purpose

28
5. Leading
  • Leading legacies
  • Leading knowledgeably
  • Leading learning communities
  • Leading systems

29
5. WWFFP For Principals
  • De-privatize teaching
  • Model instructional development
  • Build capacity first
  • Grow other leaders
  • Divert the distractors
  • Be a system leader

30
5. WWFFP For System Leaders
  • Elevate and invest in the instructional
    leadership of the principal
  • Combine direction and flexibility
  • Mobilize the power of data
  • Use peers to change district culture
  • Manage the managerial requirements
  • Stay the course

31
The Six Secrets 6
  • Systems Learn

32
6. Systems Learn
  • The fact that Toyota can succeed over
    decades...and that the company shows no
    leadership effects or changes from succession
    speaks to building a robust set of interrelated
    management practices and philosophies that
    provide advantage above and beyond the ideas or
    inspirations of single individuals.

Pfeffer and Sutton, 2006
33
6. Systems Learn
  • Some people Ive encountered seem more certain
    about everything than I am about anything.

Rubin, 2003
34
6. Systems Learn
  • Wisdom is using your knowledge while doubting
    what you know.

Pfeffer and Sutton, 2006
35
The Ontario Strategy
  1. Guiding coalition
  2. Peace and stability/distractors
  3. The literacy numeracy secretariat
  4. Negotiating aspirational targets
  5. Building capacity
  6. Enhanced and targeted resources
  7. The evolution of positive pressure
  8. Connecting the dots with key complementary
    components

36
The Ontario StrategyAssumptions
  • A few critical key goals with public targets
  • A comprehensive strategy focused on capacity
    building with a link to results
  • A careful focus on sector engagement and
    developing and implementing the strategy
  • Creation of the necessary infrastructure (people
    and resources) to support effect implementation

37
The Ontario StrategyAssumptions
  • Leadership development at all levels
  • Proactive management of competing agendas and
    potential distractors to ensure a continuous
    focus on key goals
  • Research and evaluation strategy such that
    transparent results and effective practice inform
    further action
  • Constant open two-way conversation with the
    sector and the public

38
Top Performing Systems
  • The performance of the top school systems in
    the world suggests three things that matter
    most
  • 1. Getting the right people to become teachers
  • 2. Developing them into effective instructors
  • 3. Ensuring that the system is able to deliver
    the best possible instruction for every child
    (intervene early to address gaps)

Barber and Mourshed, 2007
39
Public Confidence
  • The ultimate goal of educational improvement is
    increasing the publics confidence in the public
    education system.
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com