Educators Strike Back: How Lessons Learned During Covid-19 will Change Education — #SH302

Educators Strike Back: How Lessons Learned During Covid-19 will Change Education — #SH302

Covid-19 Strikes First 

Early in March, 2020, the conversation around the Novel Coronavirus started to gain momentum as it spread, but concerns remain limited. Then, like a wave crashing without warning, COVID-19 hijacked our communities and the educational system with it, changing how we think about schooling for young people into the far future. No one predicted that the virus would consume us and dictate how we were going to live or fundamentally alter education. At first strike, talks were about finding temporary solutions, leading us to a time now when we must consider the nature of this vast and very long-term problem. 

At the time it hit, many of us were gearing up to head to California and learn at ASCD’s Empower20 conference, and the next moment, the unthinkable occurred–schools across the U.S. and the world were shutting down. Suddenly, we were communicating to families about schools being closed for two weeks, possibly cancelling Spring Break, and how we would make the shift to remote learning. As we now know, the rapid spread of the virus, and the serious nature of its health concerns, resulted in nothing less than a scramble to figure out everything from meal programs to offering instruction online. Since then, schools around the country have been working around the clock to respond to this ever-changing pandemic. 

The good news is that we’ve learned a ton in the past 8 months. It’s been a pressure-cooker for learning, growth, and transformation. The takeaways are endless–both personal and professional–but we’ve curated a number of them so that we can all benefit as teachers and leaders as we press forward. The concept of “going back to the way things were” is gone. The code to our success in schools is not cracked by what we used to do but by creating something new that we can live with for the foreseeable future. Our hope is that each of the 5 Key Takeaways in this post will help you to do that very thing. 

Hope In Sight

Hope is being able to see that there is light despite all of the darkness. ~ Desmond Tutu

It wasn’t just that we didn’t anticipate ending the school year remotely, we didn’t predict that we would begin the 2020-2021 school year in a modified instructional setting with words like remote and hybrid and synchronous and asynchronous becoming everyday eduspeak. Most of us held out hope that the news reports would indicate that the virus was weakening or a vaccine would soon be discovered. Our longing to offer students in-person instruction and to engage them in all of the wonderful advantages of the brick-and-mortar classroom increased day-by-day, despite the ever-looming awareness that COVID-19 was redefining how we would educate our students and live safely within our communities. 

Fast forward several months later and although we’ve adjusted to many aspects of “normal” life, it’s hard to quantify the human cost of the virus. It’s an ongoing concern for educators who know that despite all of our efforts to engage students and connect with them, virtually or behind masks, this virus has taken an educational, emotional, and psychological toll on all of us. Fundamental activities associated with schools were dropped from calendars completely or significantly altered to respond to social distancing. Proms were postponed, then cancelled, graduations went virtual, and moving-up grade-level celebrations resorted to Zoom. Quarantining and face coverings are new norms of our daily lives.

That said, hope is the key to a successful future, living with or without this pandemic or into the next. Hope is an attitude. It’s a skill. As leaders, we must strive to be more hopeful and to spread hope for others. We’ve learned to lead in new ways, through hope and grace, by communicating better, by thinking with new methods, and by pivoting in a moment’s notice. It’s our ability to learn and grow through tough times that defines who we are on the other end. Regardless of the pandemic, or even in the use of it to become a stronger leader, the need for leaders is clear and those who have stepped up to lead better and grow faster are out in front. 

You can’t predict pandemics or always anticipate major crises. However, you can develop critical skills–like adaptability, communication, self-control, divergent thinking, grace, and even hope–that will help you to lead better and grow faster when put in unpredictable circumstances.

Surveying the Situation

The real man smiles in trouble, gathers strength from distress, and grows brave by reflection. ~ Thomas Pain

Once the reality set in that social distancing was a new fundamental expectation, educators moved forward to plan effectively. One way to evaluate the educational situation created by COVID-19 is through a simple and straightforward two-by-two matrix, developed by Paul Bolton. Many lessons were learning in the Spring, the goal is to identify them and use the new found knowledge to plan ahead.

Source: Paul Bolton of Johns Hopkins University

This tool guides us to evaluate and review certain issues and ideas through four quadrants. Each quadrant requires us to analyze situations and outcomes to fully gain a thorough understanding of what occurred, aiding us in our ability to make the most informed decision possible as we move forward. Quadrants A and C require us to reflect on what we anticipated, both positive and negative; Quadrants B and D require us to think about what we did not anticipate, also through a positive and negative lens. 

Teachers and school leaders can use the matrix to evaluate each of the instructional models that we’ve used since March, giving us a clearer picture of what’s working and what needs to be improved for the next round of modifications. 

Allocate and schedule specific time to evaluate situations through the Bolton Matrix to understand the impact of various issues and outcomes. Reflecting on what we anticipated, for better or worse, along with what we didn’t see coming, helps to make clearer decisions for the future.

Impact on Instruction

In times of rapid change, experience could be your worst enemy. ~ J. Paul Getty

One thing that is certain through this pandemic is that instruction has changed and will continue to do so. In a recent Ed Week article, the author identified the need for teachers to offer “targeted support” for students and model “explicit instruction” by creating avenues for independent learning through the use of videos. The argument is that these are anticipated positive effects that occurred due to the crisis, which will have a lasting impact on lesson delivery, Quadrant A. Our own experiences revealed several challenges and benefits in this domain as well. 

The monumental task of moving beyond the initial focus regarding access to technology and internet connectivity to providing sophisticated online lesson delivery has given us much upon which to reflect. Despite many schools using learning management systems prior to the outbreak, these platforms were not necessarily designed to be used as full-blown cyber schools. Adjustments were made overnight. Systems that were used to house assignments were altered to offer fully remote instruction. The speed of our efforts to provide blended learning experiences for students were drastically escalated.

Teachers across the country have learned to embrace new online models for learning and have even created virtual classrooms. Schools worked tirelessly to discover how online options can be viable for lesson delivery. Conversations shifted from how to get learning online to what does virtual school look like from home. Additionally, as social distancing restrictions became clearer for schools and we received news that we could open our doors in some capacity, another question was raised, how do we offer both in-person instruction and remote learning simultaneously? 

Despite federal and state guidance, not every household was in favor of the same model of instruction. Schools adjusted to reconcile the very real fears that families and communities faced. These issues continue and concerns range from students receiving a quality education to social and emotional support to contracting the virus at school. But one thing is true for educators, as much as we’ve learned to adapt to the online and hybrid versions of school, we need to focus on what works and get better at a simple set of critical strategies, methods, and platforms. The tools are infinite but our capacity for using them is limited by our expertise. Everyone is a brand new teacher this year, and that requires us to be humble learners and to focus on a set of best practices. 

Of course there are a host of online tools to use, but inundating ourselves can create tech-overwhelm. The key is to pick 3-5 tools to get good at using before moving on. Below is our list of Powerful Online Learning Tools and Powerful Virtual Formatives that we’ve curated as a place to start. 

Powerful Online Learning Tools

  • Screencasts
  • Padlet
    • Padlet is amazing. Essentially a digital canvas that can be used very creatively in the classroom. 
  • Flipgrid
    • Flipgrid, although similar to a screencast, effectively allows for digital conversations. 
  • Seesaw
    • Seesaw is a powerful way for students to demonstrate their learning.

Powerful Virtual Formatives

  • 3-2-1
    • Students post 3 new things they learned, 2 things they still have questions about, and 1 aspect of the lesson that helped them the most. 
  • I used to think, but now I know…
    • Students write one sentence about the content–what they thought at the beginning of the lesson and what they learned by the end of it.
  • Muddiest Point
    • Students have to identify one thing that is a little unclear from what was learned to date or something that they fully understand but didn’t before.
Identify 3-5 key strategies or tools to be learned by all staff. Avoid tech-overwhelm and settle on a simple list of key tools and methods that will enable teachers to achieve their goals.

Social Interactions 

Human beings are social creatures. We are social not just in the trivial sense that we like company, and not just in the obvious sense that we each depend on others. We are social in a more elemental way: simply to exist as a normal human being requires interaction with other people. ~ Atul Gawande 

Our current learning environments, whether in-person or remote or a blend of the two, have unveiled another major issue with which administrators and teachers continue to wrestle–providing meaningful engagement for all students with the ability to connect, communicate, and collaborate with one another. With the goal of offering rigorous learning opportunities for each and every child, schools have always worked creatively to build networks of support and develop activities that strive to face the needs of all learners. We’ve come so far in the ways that we prompt students to think and respond, using their network and collaborative structures inside and outside of the classroom. COVID-19 seemingly swept away our ability to connect kids to one another, but we moved past that quickly to get them together in new and improved ways, often at a distance but still learning with and from each other. 

When done well, our new blended approach to learning has at its core the essence of our fundamental human need to connect with other people. Using virtual break-out groups, the continuous use of low-stakes formative assessments, and deliberately orchestrated time during a session to build the classroom community, teachers are creatively finding ways to support collaboration online and in-person. The chart below illustrates a social interaction structure specifically used to help students forge relationships, especially when some of them are online (either all at once together or spread between the classroom and their homes). 

Day of the Week Engagement Activity Additional Notes
Monday Weekend Highlights Students share out one highlight from the weekend and build relationships with other students.
Tuesday Terrific Tuesday Students have to identify one thing they would love to happen to have a Terrific Tuesday!
Wednesday Wednesday Wow One thing that they learned so far that “wowed” them.
Thursday Thankful Thursday Done in lighting round fashion not to take up too much instructional time, students identify one thing they are thankful for.
Friday Favorite Part of the Week Students identify one thing that they really enjoyed this week. This does not have to be related to school but can be done as a formative assessment as well. 
Just because we’re distanced, doesn’t mean that we don’t need to interact with one another. Communication and collaboration are still the most important aspects of learning. Humans are social by nature so the need for interactions is even greater when we’re not together very often. 

Moving Forward By Learning and Growing

We keep moving forward, opening new doors, and doing new things because we’re curious and curiosity keeps leading us down new paths. ~ Walt Disney

One last takeaway is that leaders should never think in the temporary. Every temporary–”we’ll do this until we can return”–strategy has only required an eventual rebuild. Let’s just move forward by learning and growing, building what the future of schools should and can be (and maybe should have been anyway). Although this crisis has created some limitations for how students engage as learners presently, it has the potential to bring about unforeseen opportunities for how we learn to do schooling differently in the future. 

Educators have learned so much so fast during these times that the educational system has already evolved immensely and only stands to be better during each iteration. The focus for leaders should be on growth and the leaps and bounds that can be made with, for the most part, a blank canvas. It’s important to promote teachers and the supports they need, including professional experiences like an EdCamp, Google Certifications, and other wonderful learning opportunities. Technology, the internet, and other digital skills all became critical for teaching and learning, and moving forward we will all have new techniques and faster ways to acquire them as long as we explicitly acknowledge what we’ve learned and how we’ve grown. 

Capitalize on unprecedented growth experiences. Don’t leave learning to chance. Make sure that everyone is growing in ways that support the professional and praise the people around you for taking risks and trying new things. 

We hope that these 5 Key Takeaways from what we’ve learned and practiced during COVID-19 will help you to lead better and grow faster. These unsettling times are less than ideal, but they have provided new ground for educators to tread upon and a future for students that has potential to transform the way we think about school forever. 

Stay tuned for more nuggets of wisdom, podcasts, books to read, reflection sessions, and the best resources for leading better and growing faster in schools. Follow us at dereka206.sg-host.com to join thousands of leaders who get our content each month. Send this to a friend. 

As always, let us know what you think of this with a like, a follow, or a comment. Find us on Twitter, YouTube, iTunes, Facebook, & SoundCould. And, again, if you want one simple model for leading better and growing faster per month, follow this blog by entering your email at the top right of the screen.

TheSchoolHouse302 is about getting to simple by maximizing effective research-based strategies that empower individuals to lead better and grow faster.

Joe & T.J.

3 Books You Need to Read to Build Better Trust on Your Team — #readthisseries

3 Books You Need to Read to Build Better Trust on Your Team — #readthisseries

Don’t miss this vblog on books you need to read to lead better and grow faster. We recommend three titles that are must reads on the topic of trust

The Speed of Trust by Stephen M.R. Covey

Motion Leadership by Michael Fullen

10% Happier by Dan Harris

Let us know what you’re reading by contacting us at [email protected]

We can’t wait to hear from you. 

Joe & T.J.

PS — If you have a topic you want us to cover or need recommendations on books to read in a particular area of leadership, just send us a tweet or an email. 

And, let us know if you want to join our next MasterClass on Candid and Compassionate Feedback. Proven, effective, strategies for transforming the culture of your school. Just email us at [email protected] and we’ll add you to the growing list of leaders who picked themselves to get better. 

The 7 Ways that School Leaders Can Build Trust

The 7 Ways that School Leaders Can Build Trust

Trust is the glue of life…the foundational principle that holds all relationships. ~ Stephen Covey 

Trust is a Social Contract in Schools

Trust is a multi-faceted, complex phenomenon that has the ability to strengthen schools when it is high and cripple them when it is low. To dive into this topic, let us begin with a clear definition of trust: “a psychological state comprising the intention to accept vulnerability based upon positive expectations of the intention or behavior of another.”

Essentially, trust is a belief–it’s a social and organizational contract, built on a faith in positive regard for self and others. Trust gives us confidence that the people in our lives will do the right thing, especially in the absence of oversight or direction. And even though one of the best ways to build trust is to extend trust, most people don’t offer trust until they feel that it has been earned. That’s the biggest problem with trust. It’s paradoxical. On one hand, it must be gained over time in the creation of a bond; on the other hand, it needs to be demonstrated at the onset of a relationship.

The absence of trust in a school or on a team is detrimental. In the business world, it equates to the loss of revenue. In education, it means that relationships are torn and both achievement and wellbeing suffer for students. But in an altruistic environment like education, why do we suffer from diminished trust when we all came into this profession to help people, when all of us started with the same why. The answer lives within our leadership capacity to confront a culture of distrust and the 7 ways that leaders can build and restore trust in their schools.

The bottom line about the following 7 aspects of trust in schools is that each of them takes courage, candor, and compassion to execute well. To get good at being candid takes practice, and you can’t hesitate in an effort to begin if you want to transform your school into a place where people love to work and kids love to learn. That’s why we wrote Candid and Compassionate Feedback, because we know that leaders need a guide for being candid regarding teacher performance, shared decisions, and teacher leadership. For the following 7 trust scenarios to be at their best, you need candor and compassion.

7 Ways That School Leaders Build and Sustain Trust

1. With Self: The first, and most important, layer of trust is the trust that we place in ourselves to be effective in any given scenario. It’s the power of self-efficacy, and the strength to push yourself to meet your own and even higher expectations. When people say, “that took guts,” what they’re really saying is, “that took a ton of self-trust.” An extreme form of physical and mental self-trust is depicted in the picture below. That took guts!

2. With Others: The second place where leaders must learn to build trust is with others. This is the trust that a leader is able to garner with each individual person on the team. We earn trust with people by exhibiting an outward integrity–we mean what we say and we say what we mean. Our words and actions must be aligned for others to see us as honest and consistent. We must keep commitments–even the promises that others perceive us to make. The biggest fault of a leader who struggles to establish a trusting relationship with others is that they say one thing and then do something that doesn’t entirely match their words.

3. Restored With Others: This is where trust is paramount. Leaders are put in a position that often requires a decision to be made that others disagree with or might not have anticipated. Trust restoration is the layer of trust-building that effective leaders do well in order to move an organization past status quo. Whenever we have a relationship with someone, especially if that relationship is typically predictable or transactional, and we want to make a change within the organization, we put a strain on what the other person perceives as honesty. All aspects of trust require vulnerability, and, in this case, it takes a great deal of humility to restore trust once it has been strained or lost. This happens when a leader pushes a person past their level of comfort or makes an unwelcome decision that, at first, harms the relationship they have with that person, but then the leader repairs that relationship through a stronger sense of purpose, an explanation of the motives, and an understanding about the decision. Sometimes this is intentional from the outset, other times it’s brought on by a mistake. In any case, the leader restores the social contract, which strengthens the trust beyond its original form. With that said, leaders who know how to restore trust can build even greater bonds with the people they serve, even more so than leaders who create solid relationships but never put them to a test.

 

4. Between Others: Great leaders don’t just know how to develop a strong rapport with other people; they know how to create connections between other people. You can probably think of a leader who has a great relationship with almost everyone in the organization, but those people don’t necessarily have great relationships with one another. It’s for this reason that we built the Passionate Culture Dichotomy model in our Passionate Leadership book. It shows the distinction between high functioning schools with a dynamic work culture (high trust) from those that suffer from isolation (low trust).

A Passionate Leadership Culture

This layer of trust-building creates true team spirit. When leaders don’t have this skill, they often don’t understand why the team isn’t functioning well despite their positive rapport with each individual. The most effective way to build relationships between others is to use active affirmations. We can create collective efficacy by communicating the mastery experiences that we observe the members of our team having and verbally recognizing them in front of others (especially when they’re not around to hear our praise).

5. Restored Between Others: Disagreement, strife, and discord will inevitably occur between two or more people on your team. If it’s not addressed quickly and directly, a minor dissension can easily grow into a deep animosity and the inability to work well together. The key to rebuilding trust is by having what we call Empathy-Centered Conversations (ECCs). ECCs are facilitated by the leader when two people aren’t getting along. The basis of the argument is likely a lack of perspective so the conversation is meant for the leader to reveal to each party the other person’s outlook about the situation that occurred. Leaders are reluctant to engage in this way for fear that they’ll make the situation worse. They either hope that the situation will resolve itself or they believe it to be a function of human resources. But that’s not helpful. ECCs are designed to get at the heart of a problem for everyone involved to see and hear a point-of-view other than their own. Leaders who are skilled at ECCs and employ the tenets of C.A.L.M. are good listeners and use effective techniques to restore relationships.

6. On A Team: Team dynamics can be intense, especially among A-players. School leadership teams are typically composed of the best and most senior teachers. These folks are both highly effective in their classrooms and socially powerful in the school. It can be tricky to congeal a team of diverse tough-minded people, but that’s exactly what you want surrounding you when things get tough or when you’re trying to change a culture. We like Blanchard’s model for the ABCDs of trust on a team (depicted below). It’s a good test for if the right people are on your leadership team or if you need to replace one or two people like we learned from Katherine in Lencioni’s fable about teamwork. If any of your people are consistently unable to serve with competence, lacking in believability or integrity, seeming to not care about people, or unreliable in their role, you need to switch out that team member. It’s not easy, but it’s necessary, and we see it all the time where school leaders hang on to steering committee members who fail at one of these four pivotal characteristics of trust.

7. Restored On A Team: Because your leadership team members are all dominant in one way or another outside of the team meeting, they can be unintentionally off-putting to one another when the team gathers. For teams, trust is almost never static. It’s either strengthening or weakening, flowing in one direction or another at all times. Scientists have demonstrated that trust is biological. Having it or not stems from a chemical reaction in the brain that prompts or diminishes trust. If your team’s trust is low, it’s likely because there’s either too much testosterone pumping in the veins of your teammates during a meeting or not enough oxytocin. Sparing you the actual science, theory of mind is one activity that supports team empathy when trust is fragile. It’s simple but effective. One team member poses a problem that they’re having with their department (or the leader exposes one), and you go around the table whereby each person starts with this sentence stem: “If I were going to tackle that, I would do it this way…” Not only does this harmonize our intentions as a group, it also coordinates our behaviors over time. The impact is that we all start to react similarly to problems. It’s far better to work on group-think than group distrust.

 

Malcolm Gladwell’s Take on Trust

In his typical way, Malcolm Gladwell’s Talking to Strangers unravels the inherent human problems that we have with trust and with judging others by their actions. He points to truth-default theory as the presumption we make that others are telling the truth (when we don’t really have evidence of the real truth or not). At the end of the book (spoiler alert), he says that we have guilt about it, and we shouldn’t. We drive against our own default, because of that guilt, and we suspect the worst in others as a defense against assuming the best. This seems to be exacerbated in schools these days. Instead of trusting one another to have the best intentions for each other and our students, we fight our human default, which produces skepticism and even paranoia. The reason that leaders are constantly restoring trust rather than building upon it is because we default to something other than the truth.

 

Habits of Distrust

But we’re not strangers. We’re educators. We’re colleagues. We’re friends. And friends can default to truth, to trust, especially in a world where Gladwell is asking us to do that with people we don’t even know. The problem with trust is not that we don’t have it within us as a natural predisposition. It’s that we rage against that disposition. And when we do so for long periods of time, we build a habit of distrust that only a skilled leader can break. It’s the job of a leader to confront and alter a culture that lacks trust, a culture that needs restoration. Because collective efficacy and teacher credibility are two of the highest effect sizes for any single strategy that impacts learning, trust in schools is a moral imperative. It’s more important now than ever before, and we know that our readers are poised to make the first, next, best move to lead better and grow faster.

 

TheSchoolHouse302

Stay tuned for more nuggets of wisdom, podcasts, books to read, reflection sessions, and the best resources for leading better and growing faster in schools. Follow us at dereka206.sg-host.com to join thousands of leaders who get our content each month. Send this to a friend.

 

As always, let us know what you think of this with a like, a follow, or a comment. Find us on Twitter, YouTube, iTunes, Facebook, & SoundCould. And, again, if you want one simple model for leading better and growing faster per month, follow this blog by entering your email at the top right of the screen.

TheSchoolHouse302 is about getting to simple by maximizing effective research-based strategies that empower individuals to lead better and grow faster.

Joe & T.J.

3 Books You Need to Read to Get Better at Overcoming Obstacles — #readthisseries

3 Books You Need to Read to Get Better at Overcoming Obstacles — #readthisseries

Don’t miss this vblog on books you need to read to lead better and grow faster. We recommend three titles that are must reads on the topic of overcoming your hindrances. 

Upstream by Dan Heath

David and Goliath by Malcolm Gladwell

The Greatest Miracle in the World by Og Mandino

Let us know what you’re reading by contacting us at [email protected]

We can’t wait to hear from you. 

Joe & T.J.

PS — If you have a topic you want us to cover or need recommendations on books to read in a particular area of leadership, just send us a tweet or an email. 

Our #ReadThisSeries is sponsored by Principals’ Seminar. Many schools struggle as a new principal works through the learning curve, and our hearts break for new principals who are overwhelmed with information and noise, frustrated by not having the time to build relationships with staff and walking around in a constant state of fear that they are missing something. The Three in Three Principals’ Seminar is designed for new, existing, and aspiring principals and assistant principals who would like to gain 3 years of experience in 3 weeks, without the pain, risks, and time it would take otherwise. Follow the content at your own pace as you learn with others who are just like you. Go to principalsseminar.com for details. Register today to save. 

Bridging the Gap Between Where You Are and Where You Want To Be — #SH302

Bridging the Gap Between Where You Are and Where You Want To Be — #SH302

Ask me to play, I’ll play, ask me to shoot, I’ll shoot. Ask me to pass, I’ll pass, Ask me to steal, block out, sacrifice, lead, dominate, anything. But it’s not just what you ask of me. It’s what I ask of myself.

~ LeBron James

Success, achievement, and fulfillment, whether in your personal or professional life, demand an honest and thorough evaluation of where you are and where you want to go. The standards we set for ourselves impact everything that we do from our relationship with our family to our level of fitness. We often begin this journey of self-development with goal-setting, and although goals are important, we want to introduce an introspective process that should precede goal-setting, called the H-Gap Activity

Turning goals into reality requires a level of commitment and dedication that include specific phases, which must be established and planned. Our four-part model below is proven effective as a critical aspect for getting from where you are now to where you want to be in the future. But it’s only the first step to success. Follow the model and then use the H-Gap Activity as well. 

Phase 1: Set One Big Important Goal. Identify one goal that you are deeply passionate about. This can be personal or professional or one for both. 

Phase 2: Bring It to Life. Write it down and visualize it. 

Phase 3: Create a Master Plan. Identify the specific details and deadlines that will guide you to achievement.

Phase 4: Be Accountable. Find a friend, an accountability partner, to help you along the way. 

This goal-setting model demonstrates the need for continuous self-improvement, accounting for specificity and accountability. But, prior to goal-setting, we need a different process that crystallizes not only where you are heading but what you need to do to get there. On a psychological level, we have to understand that we are really only ever driven by our why. Without this understanding, we end up chasing goals that leave us empty and unfulfilled. The process for uncovering our why requires time and introspection–a quiet space and place to clarify our thoughts and intentions. Headspace is one of our favorite apps that help us to achieve this state-of-mind. 

Within organizations, the process is not much different. The team’s why must define everyone’s attitude, actions, and efforts towards a common goal that is aligned to the vision. This leads to an initial step of self- and organizational-discovery. This is where our Hinderance-Gap Model comes into play. Because life and work can seem complicated, with all of the “things” that either prevent or promote what we are trying to achieve, we need strategies to get past the hindrances. We can’t let bad habits, poorly written rules, and bureaucratic red tape stifle great ideas and a better future for all of us.

The H-Gap Activity requires you to identify where you are and where you want to be. This establishes the pillars of the H. After the pillars are clear, the next critical step is to determine what needs to be done to get from one pillar to the next, which serves as the bridge between the two. The bridge is the action steps, activities, and program of work that support your attempt to make a change. During that process, it’s also important to identify what you need to stop doing. These are the things that are getting in your way from making it from one pillar to the next. They surround the bridge, making the trek from one side to the next see daunting. The visual below illustrates the concept.   

To gain a better understanding of how the H-Gap works, let us introduce you to Dr. Jennings, who is in her fifth year at Keystone Academy High School.

Her school has committed resources and energy to PSEL Standard #5: Community of Care and Support for Students. This effort was prompted by the demographics of the school rapidly changing over the last few years and the school determining that it needed to be more culturally responsive in order to best educate the students. Within Standard #5 is Principle F, which reads “Infuse the school’s learning environment with the cultures and languages of the school’s community,” which can be accomplished in a variety of ways. 

In this instance, Dr. Jennings and her team decided that the steering committee should take a thorough look at the school’s curriculum, specifically within the English coursework that they offer. 

The H-Gap process allows for an individual or group to work collaboratively together to determine the best method to move forward.

Where Are We Now?Where Do We Want to Be?What Do We Have To Start Doing?What Do We Have to Stop Doing?
A responsive curriculum that is aligned to the Common Core State Standards but that has not undergone a thorough review to determine if it is culturally and racially responsive.A curriculum that is aligned to the standards but that is also culturally and racially representative of the students who are learning from it.  
Form teams to review the current curriculum and learning activities using a prescribed checklistAssume that the staff knows how to be culturally and racially responsive and that they know how to supplement the curriculum as needed. 

Once Dr. Jennings employs the H-Gap Activity with her team, they can get to work on their path toward what they set as a goal. Notice that even if her team set clear goals using the model that we previously described, they still might encounter problems in making their change if they didn’t have the H-Gap Activity at the core of their process. 

Leading change is always a challenge. Going from goal-setting to goal-getting isn’t easy. That’s why it’s imperative that we use models to guide our process. We hope that you’ll find our H-Gap Activity useful so that your team finds success with the goals that you set this month and beyond. 

Stay tuned for challenges, nuggets of wisdom, reflection questions, technical tips, and the best resources for leading better and growing faster. Follow us at dereka206.sg-host.com to join thousands of leaders who get our alerts, blogs, podcasts, and more.

Let us know what you think of this #SH302 post with a like, a follow, or a comment. Find us on Twitter, YouTube, iTunes, Facebook, & SoundCould. And, again, if you want one simple model for leading better and growing faster per month, follow this blog by entering your email at the top right of the screen.

TheSchoolHouse302 is about getting to simple by maximizing effective research-based strategies that empower individuals to lead better and grow faster.

Joe & T.J.

This blog post is sponsored by Principals’ Seminar. Many schools struggle as a new principal works through the learning curve, and our hearts break for new principals who are overwhelmed with information and noise, frustrated by not having the time to build relationships with staff and walking around in a constant state of fear that they are missing something. The Three in Three Principals’ Seminar is designed for new, existing, and aspiring principals and assistant principals who would like to gain 3 years of experience in 3 weeks, without the pain, risks, and time it would take otherwise. Follow the content at your own pace as you learn with others who are just like you. Click here for details. Register today to save. 

Defining Your Focus and Using Models in Practice

Defining Your Focus and Using Models in Practice

You cannot change your destination overnight, but you can change your direction overnight.

~ Tony Robbins

Organizational change management is something that great leaders must master to be successful. The infographic below, 12 Common Types of Organizational Change, is a powerful visual that clearly demonstrates the complexities of change and how well-versed leaders understand, navigate, implement, manage, and lead change.

Regardless of the type of change we seek, it is always a process. The six step process that we created for leaders subscribes to the idea that change should be transformational, even disruptive, as our guest, 2017 NASSP Digital Principal of the Year, Jethro Jones, described. The challenge is actually leading the change so that it makes the desired difference. School cultures and norms are very powerful and can unintentionally absorb the initiative and reduce it to what the community can handle, limiting its impact. Too often change initiatives are so incremental that they don’t make a dent in the current culture of “what we’ve always done.” 

This is why the 5th step in our process is so vital, which is the development of a Defined Focus. Once we know the proven research-based methods that best support our effort, we need to narrow them down to only a few or we’ll end up overwhelming our people and overburdening the system, which does the opposite of creating change by putting stressed out people in a position to defend the status quo. This refined approach in having a defined focus increases the likelihood of the change being embraced and,ultimately, having success in creating new outcomes. 

Consider our current reality in education with many schools starting the 2020-2021 school year in a remote learning environment. Teaching remotely is a difficult skill to master and requires not only a keen understanding of the tenets of effective virtual teaching and learning, but also understanding how to use technology well and the associated platforms. 

Let’s imagine a school that willingly embarked on instructional transformation last year by deciding to use highly effective strategies, like jigsaw, on a routine basis to improve student achievement. This same school is now faced with learning how to teach in a remote learning environment with very little experience. Early change efforts can easily be dismantled, but leading the change process effectively combines new efforts with the old. The focus now shifts to how to do jigsaw activities virtually. The teachers don’t have to determine what new strategies to use because of the virtual environment, but rather how to implement best practices, in this case the jigsaw, in an online scenario. This takes the idea of the Defined Focus to what people need to be able to actuate that focus on in practice: Solid Models. 

Well vetted models accelerate learning. Continuing with our jigsaw example, there are a ton of resources to support its use, but in this instance we look no further than the work of Catlin Tucker.

Not only does she describe how to use the jigsaw effectively in an online environment, she also provides a jigsaw activity template. This becomes the model for both students and teachers to implement with success. Take the following challenge to ensure that your change initiative has the defined focus that it needs, including the models that support the focus in practice. 

  1. Reflect: Take time to reflect on a recent change initiative. Is there a defined focus filtered down to a few key practices that best support the work? If so, fantastic. Move to #2. If not, spend time narrowing down to a few focus strategies so that your efforts truly make an impact.
  2. Identify: Identify models that support the focus strategies and share them with the expectation that they will reinforce the specific elements of the desired change. Do not reinvent the wheel but do give proper attribution.
  3. Do: Don’t just communicate the models and share them widely. Of course, that’s important. It’s critical that leaders model the models. Use them in meetings and other online environments to demonstrate their usage. Show, don’t just tell.  

Take a look at the questions in the grid below to ensure that your change initiative is following the six-step process on your way to a new future that’s aligned to the vision you have as a leader. Reach out if you need support: [email protected]. We love to hear from you. 

Joe & T.J.

PS — If you have a topic you want us to cover or need recommendations on books to read in a particular area of leadership, just send us a tweet or email.