Title: Leading with Leverage
1Leading with Leverage
2Outline of the workshop
- How do we apply the theory and research?
- How can we get better at it?
- How do we create time to lead?
- We want to briefly trace our project, share some
of our key learnings - Were keen to connect with and learn from
like-minded school leaders
3Aiming high
- How can we stimulate our staff to divert precious
time and energy from their crammed daily
schedules to work together on ambitious goals?
We live in the world our questions
create. Barrett and Fry
4The Butler Model of Professional Learning
5Why are we focused on Leadership?
- Its all about maximising student learning
- We know from Hatties work that the key
influences on student learning are around - feedback
- thinking skills
- teaching and learning
- home encouragement
6What is Feedback?
- Data heres what, so what, now what?
- Cognitive coaching
7The challenges of leadership
- What might be some of the challenges of
leadership that you see in this cartoon?
8The challenges of leadership
When you think of your work, your context, and
reflect on your career so far, what would you say
are the key leadership challenges? Take a minute
to reflect.
9Bill MartinsSix Challenges of Leadership
- Choose leadership over management
- Know that its about people, most importantly
about you and your mental models leading is
about caring for people and knowing them - Align peoples efforts in the same direction
through shared vision - Hold your nerve through the storm love the pit
- Know and tell the truth about your current
reality so you grow and learn - As a leadership team be of one mind and one voice
10Vision
- Vision without action is a daydream.
- Action without vision is a nightmare
- Japanese proverb
Our work in Teacher Designed Schools began with
the generation of a shared vision.
John Kotter is the inspiration behind this he
argues that working to a vision allows people to
work both autonomously and interdependently.
Without a vision, every tiny decision becomes an
interminable debate.
11- This is the current version of our vision
12(No Transcript)
13The casual observer will typically only see the
tip of the iceberg
Events
Patterns of behaviour
Systemic Structures
Look below the surface for leverage
Mental Models
Vision
14Aligning Mental Models
- We suspect this is our most critical challenge,
and offers us the highest leverage.
15Some Mental Models we adopt about Leadership
- Leadership has higher leverage when it
- is exercised authentically
- pursues a shared vision
- is actively developed in others
- is exercised by and within teams
- is informed/guided by data
- is exercised through high quality relationships
- constantly challenges and reflect upon its own
perspectives, assumptions and practices - encourages continuous learning, reflection and
action - is given the time it needs there are no quick
fixes - values habits of wholeness and balance
(work-life, mind, body, emotion, spirit).
16Brief Breather
- An opportunity to
- share some thinking
- make some connections
- ask a question
17Whole-Staff Learning
- Research Teams worked for a year and reduced
their findings to two recommendations per team.
These formed the basis of our long term
development plan.
18Beware the pit
- John Edwards and Bill Martin cautioned us about
the pit -
Research is just plain hard work, made more
agonising by the behaviours experienced as your
school sails through its storm. Bill Martin,
June 2007
Innovation implementation
time
0
19Optimism, fun and Rule No 6
- Zander, Quinn and others remind us to consider
opportunities, strengths and possibilities rather
than obstacles and problems often easier to
notice
- Lets have a bit of fun along the way
- Rule No 6
I am always doing that which I cannot do, in
order that I may learn how to do it Pablo Picasso
20Summing up what are we learning about leading
with leverage?
- a genuine, shared vision is the touchstone
- keep the vision alive by strategically working
- on peoples Personal Practical Knowledge to
- change and align their mental models with the
vision - surface the predominant values and mental models
through focused dialogue - organisational learning and change are more than
rational processes they are social, so there is
an emotional dimension - use robust data to guide action
- ongoing, iterative, action learning in teams
- focus on one clear priority
- develop a long term view
- remain authentic and hold your nerve
- constantly reflect, ask questions and learn
21Recommended Reading
- Bruce Avolio and Fred Luthans The High Impact
Leader McGraw Hill USA 2006 - Chris Argyris Reasons and Rationalizations The
Limits to Organizational Knowledge Oxford
University Press UK 2004 - Frank Barrett and Ronald Fry Appreciative Inquiry
TAOS Institute Publications USA 2005 - Jim Butler Professional Development Practice as
Text, reflection as process self as locus
Australian Journal of Education, Vol 40, No 3,
1996, 265-283 - Robert Fritz The Path of Least Resistance for
Managers - Bill George Authentic Leadership Jossey-Bass San
Francisco 2003 - Bill George True North Jossey-Bass San Francisco
2007 - Daniel Kim Organizing for Learning Pegasus
Communications Inc USA 2001 - Robert E Quinn Building the Bridge as you Walk on
it Josey-Bass USA 2004 - Peter Senge, Otto Scharmer, Joseph Kaworski and
Betty Flowers Presence Doubleday USA 2004 - Peter Senge The Fifth Discipline and The Fifth
Discipline Fieldbook New York Currency
Doubleday, 1990 - Bruce Wellman and Laura Lipton Facilitating
Data-Driven Dialogue A Facilitators Guide to
Collaborative Inquiry USA 2004 - Margaret Wheatley Leadership and the New Science
Berrett-Koehler USA 2006 - Rosamund Zander and Benjamin Zander The Art of
Possibility Penguin USA 2000
22Thank you for your participation!If you wish to
contact us, please do so at lucy.mccarthy_at_educa
tion.tas.gov.augreg.morgan_at_education.tas.gov.au