inver grove heights administrator session wednesday, april 3, 2013

38
INVER GROVE HEIGHTS Administrator Session Wednesday, April 3, 2013

Upload: jonah-black

Post on 28-Dec-2015

215 views

Category:

Documents


0 download

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: INVER GROVE HEIGHTS Administrator Session Wednesday, April 3, 2013

INVER GROVE HEIGHTSAdministrator Session

Wednesday, April 3, 2013

Page 2: INVER GROVE HEIGHTS Administrator Session Wednesday, April 3, 2013

Agenda• Discussion on Authentic Leadership

• Leadership Practice Matters• Connecting Authentic Leadership to the Chicago 5

• Making a Connection to your Achievement Gap goals

Page 3: INVER GROVE HEIGHTS Administrator Session Wednesday, April 3, 2013

AUTHENTIC LEADERSHIPEffective leadership is not about making speeches or

being liked; leadership is defined by results not attributes.--Peter Drucker

Page 4: INVER GROVE HEIGHTS Administrator Session Wednesday, April 3, 2013

Grounding• Read your quote and share with the group• Create a group phrase that captures your understanding

about authentic leadership.• Authentic leadership is….

• Share with the group

Page 5: INVER GROVE HEIGHTS Administrator Session Wednesday, April 3, 2013

A little bit more…• Jigsaw the article Truly Authentic Leadership by Bill

George US News and Work Report October 2006.• Count off in twos…

• Group One- Greater Purpose• Group Two- Passion and Compassion

• Pair up with someone who read the same section and come up with the top three most important ideas in your section.

• Create a shared thinking map.

Page 6: INVER GROVE HEIGHTS Administrator Session Wednesday, April 3, 2013

Four Tasks of Authentic Leaders• When leadership is authentic, the positive organizational

behaviors states of confidence, hope, optimism and resilience become rallying points for establishing ability, support, and effort as individual performance foundations.

Rudy Guiliani• Build confidence• Raise hope• Create optimism• Strengthen resilience

Page 7: INVER GROVE HEIGHTS Administrator Session Wednesday, April 3, 2013

Four things Authentic leadership do• When leadership is authentic, the positive organizational

behaviors states of confidence, hope, optimism and resilience become rallying points for establishing ability, support, and effort as individual performance foundations.

Rudy Guiliani• Build confidence• Raise hope• Create optimism• Strengthen resilience

Gardner and Schermerhorn, 2004

Page 8: INVER GROVE HEIGHTS Administrator Session Wednesday, April 3, 2013

Build Confidence• The first task…• How to

• Enactive Mastery – provide mastery experiences that empower employees to apply and develop talents into strengths

• Vicarious Learning – demonstrate confidence in oneself and others, model authentic behavior and trust others to do the same

• Verbal Permission – provide verbal support by expressing confidence in abilities and encouraging development

• Managing Physiological States – reduce the emotional threat of failure

Page 9: INVER GROVE HEIGHTS Administrator Session Wednesday, April 3, 2013

Raise hope• The second task

• Involves two components• Skill• Will

Personaland

ProfessionalDrive

ExternalMotivation

Internal Motivation

Repertoireof Skill

Apply Knowledg

e

AcquireKnowledg

e

Page 10: INVER GROVE HEIGHTS Administrator Session Wednesday, April 3, 2013

Create optimism• The third task…• Realistic optimism

• Take credit for your success while recognizing the role of other contributions.

• Assume responsibility for performance shortfalls, but avoid debilitating attributions to personal or permanent causes.

• ABCDE approach for building optimism• Adversity- recognize self-defeating Beliefs- realize the Consequences of

those beliefs – Dispute the counterproductive beliefs by challenging faulty assumptions and explore realistic and optimistic explanations – Experience the energy that comes from substituting optimism for pessimistic explanations. Seligman 1986

Page 11: INVER GROVE HEIGHTS Administrator Session Wednesday, April 3, 2013

Strengthen resilience• The fourth task

“Some magic takes place in the crucible of leadership… The individual brings certain attributes into the crucible and emerges with new improved leadership skills. Whatever is thrown at them, leaders emerge from the crucible stronger

and unbroken.”• Factors:

• Cognitive skills• Ability to self-regulate• Feelings of efficacy• Positive views of self• Intrinsic motivation• A support system

Page 12: INVER GROVE HEIGHTS Administrator Session Wednesday, April 3, 2013

5Essentials• Using the 5Essentials handout, how would you use

information from the article in application against the prompts in the handout to improve outcomes? • Describe the actions you have taken and name the authentic

leadership trait you have actualized in doing so

Page 13: INVER GROVE HEIGHTS Administrator Session Wednesday, April 3, 2013

Connecting to your Achievement Gap Plan

• Are these critical tasks included in your plan to reduce the Achievement Gap in your school?

• What steps toward school improvement can you focus on yet this school year that will establish the foundation and culture you need in your school to reduce the achievement gap?

• What steps do you want to be ready to take in August of 2013? And what can you do NOW to prepare?

• You cannot do this alone… supporting your teacher leaders.

Page 14: INVER GROVE HEIGHTS Administrator Session Wednesday, April 3, 2013

TEACHER RESPONSIBILITY

STUDENT RESPONSIBILITY

Focus Lesson

Guided Instruction

“I do it”

“We do it”

Collaborative

Independent “You do it alone”

A Model for Success for All Students Fisher, D., & Frey, N. (2008). Better learning through structured teaching: A framework for the gradual release of responsibility. Alexandria, VA: Association for Supervision and Curriculum Development.

Page 15: INVER GROVE HEIGHTS Administrator Session Wednesday, April 3, 2013

DIY Style

TEACHER RESPONSIBILITY(none)

STUDENT RESPONSIBILITY

Independent

“You do it alone”

Fisher, D., & Frey, N. (2008). Better learning through structured teaching: A framework for the gradual release of responsibility. Alexandria, VA: Association for Supervision and Curriculum Development.

Page 16: INVER GROVE HEIGHTS Administrator Session Wednesday, April 3, 2013

The Sudden ReleaseTEACHER RESPONSIBILITY

STUDENT RESPONSIBILITY

Focus Lesson“I do it”

Independent

“You do it alone”

Fisher, D., & Frey, N. (2008). Better learning through structured teaching: A framework for the gradual release of responsibility. Alexandria, VA: Association for Supervision and Curriculum Development.

Page 17: INVER GROVE HEIGHTS Administrator Session Wednesday, April 3, 2013

TEACHER RESPONSIBILITY

STUDENT RESPONSIBILITY

Focus Lesson

Guided Instruction

“I do it”

“We do it”

“You do it together”Collaborative

Independent “You do it alone”

A Model for Success for All Students Fisher, D., & Frey, N. (2008). Better learning through structured teaching: A framework for the gradual release of responsibility. Alexandria, VA: Association for Supervision and Curriculum Development.

Page 18: INVER GROVE HEIGHTS Administrator Session Wednesday, April 3, 2013

Authentic Leadership

• How do you become an authentic leader? In my

experience it take many years of personal

development, experience, and just plain hard

work. Although we may be born with leadership

potential, all of us have to develop ourselves to

become good leaders. The medium for

developing into an authentic leader is not the

destination but the journey itself- a journey to find

your true self and the purpose of your life’s work.

Bill George, Medtronic CEO

Page 19: INVER GROVE HEIGHTS Administrator Session Wednesday, April 3, 2013

I PROMISE CARDSet a goal for yourself to grow as an authentic leader.

This goal will be mailed to you in six weeks.

In closing, let us, as McGregor, expect only the best from you. It means accepting that the leader’s primary

role is to value and support human talent in a high performance context.

Gardner and Shermerhorn, Jr. 2004

Page 20: INVER GROVE HEIGHTS Administrator Session Wednesday, April 3, 2013

INVER GROVE HEIGHTSTeacher Leadership Session

Wednesday, April 3, 2013

Page 21: INVER GROVE HEIGHTS Administrator Session Wednesday, April 3, 2013

AGENDA• Building Evaluation

• Using SATIR model

• Full circle: beliefs to behaviors• Your leadership defined

Page 22: INVER GROVE HEIGHTS Administrator Session Wednesday, April 3, 2013

Grounding• Read your quote and share with the group• Create a group phrase that captures your understanding

about authentic leadership.• Authentic leadership is….

• Share with the group

Nothing endures but change. Heraclitus 500 BC

Page 23: INVER GROVE HEIGHTS Administrator Session Wednesday, April 3, 2013

Satir Model – Transformation through Change

Page 24: INVER GROVE HEIGHTS Administrator Session Wednesday, April 3, 2013

Satir Model

• The Satir model is a model for processing change.

• Foundational concepts to the model• Change is always possible.• Successful navigation of the change process needs to

be experiential and contextualized.• The process is systematic. • The problem is not the problem – coping is the problem. • Groups have the resources they need to cope and grow. • Most people choose familiarity over discomfort or fear of

change.

Satir Model

Page 25: INVER GROVE HEIGHTS Administrator Session Wednesday, April 3, 2013

Satir Model• There are 7 stages of processing change.

• Late Status Quo• Foreign Element• Chaos• Transformation• Integration• Practice• New Status Quo

Growth and change happen in an open and functional system.

Where people are heard, valued, validated and acknowledged.

Banmen 2002

Satir Model

Page 26: INVER GROVE HEIGHTS Administrator Session Wednesday, April 3, 2013

Satir Analysis• Read the Satir document silently. • On your sheet, put an X where you think your building is

in terms of:• A collection of professionals working together with shared

responsibility and• A Professional Learning Community focusing on meeting the needs

of all learners

• Discuss with each those in your group why you marked your building the way you did. As a group, develop a shared response to each of the two conditions listed above.

Page 27: INVER GROVE HEIGHTS Administrator Session Wednesday, April 3, 2013

Satir Model

Page 28: INVER GROVE HEIGHTS Administrator Session Wednesday, April 3, 2013

Beliefs to Behaviors• What are the beliefs impacting behaviors in your building?• In what ways can you as a teacher leader influence

people to change their beliefs?• In your group, discuss a time when you have worked to

influence an individual or group to change their belief, what did you do?• Give a name to the action you took to change the belief• As a group, develop a list of “actions” you can use to influence

beliefs

Page 29: INVER GROVE HEIGHTS Administrator Session Wednesday, April 3, 2013

PRACTICE CHANGE• Look over the grade/MCA achievement graph• In your group, list the beliefs that might be influencing the

data in the graph• In what ways do those beliefs influence adult behavior?• In what ways do adult behaviors influence student beliefs?• In what ways do adult behaviors influence student

learning?

• Develop five sequential actions you would take to address the beliefs and behaviors your perceive may be present in the graph

Page 30: INVER GROVE HEIGHTS Administrator Session Wednesday, April 3, 2013

Achievement Gap• Does your SMART goal address the achievement gap or is it working around the fringes?

• Evaluate what you have accomplished this year.

• What action or two can you take yet this year?

• What beliefs are underlying any resistance or obstacles your school is experiencing in closing the gap?

Page 31: INVER GROVE HEIGHTS Administrator Session Wednesday, April 3, 2013

AUTHENTIC LEADERSHIPEffective leadership is not about making speeches or

being liked; leadership is defined by results not attributes.--Peter Drucker

Page 32: INVER GROVE HEIGHTS Administrator Session Wednesday, April 3, 2013

Authentic Leadership • Review your one sentence description of Authentic

Leadership. • Discuss how authentic leadership will help the people in

your school embrace the five sequential actions you will take in your school.

Page 33: INVER GROVE HEIGHTS Administrator Session Wednesday, April 3, 2013

Four Tasks of Authentic Leaders• When leadership is authentic, the positive organizational

behaviors states of confidence, hope, optimism and resilience become rallying points for establishing ability, support, and effort as individual performance foundations.

Rudy Guiliani• Build confidence• Raise hope• Create optimism• Strengthen resilience

Gardner and Schermerhorn, 2004

Page 34: INVER GROVE HEIGHTS Administrator Session Wednesday, April 3, 2013

10 Things Authentic Leaders Do• They speak the truth.• They lead from the heart.• They have rich moral fiber.• They are courageous.• They build teams and create communities.• The deepen themselves.• They are dreamers.• They care for themselves.• They commit to excellence rather than perfection.• They leave a legacy.

Page 35: INVER GROVE HEIGHTS Administrator Session Wednesday, April 3, 2013

I PROMISE CARDSet a goal for yourself to grow as an authentic leader.

This goal will be mailed to you in six weeks.

In closing, let us, as McGregor, expect only the best from you. It means accepting that the leader’s primary

role is to value and support human talent in a high performance context.

Gardner and Shermerhorn, Jr. 2004

Page 36: INVER GROVE HEIGHTS Administrator Session Wednesday, April 3, 2013

Year 2• What do you see as the next step for yourself in your

journey as a teacher leader?• What actions will you take in the next year to build on the

learning we have shared?• What is your personal goal for improvement – where do

you want to be at the end of year 2?

Page 37: INVER GROVE HEIGHTS Administrator Session Wednesday, April 3, 2013

Year 2 – Cohort 1 and Cohort 2• Plans for year 2

Page 38: INVER GROVE HEIGHTS Administrator Session Wednesday, April 3, 2013

THANK YOU!