"I believe that being an effective, inspiring leader for my teachers means staying in touch with what it's like for them to work in our building – and striving to make our school a place they'll never want to leave."
- Melissa Harvey, Principal, Bobby Summers Middle School, Royse City I.S.D., TX
The longer a leader is out of the classroom, the easier it is to forget the day-to-day reality of a teacher.
…How frustrating it is to be constantly interrupted during a lesson
…How challenging it is to teach while handling classroom management issues
…How mentally and physically exhausting a full day of teaching can be
That's not to say that being a leader doesn't have its own challenges, but leaders carry different burdens. One of the most important parts of being a leader is to build a positive school culture, and that starts with maintaining realistic expectations and empathy for the everyday experience of teaching.
Many teachers cite the administrators as a deciding factor in staying in a school. As Jennifer Gonzalez of Cult of Pedagogy says, "Behind every teacher story is an administrator who is interpreting policy, setting expectations, and establishing a tone that will determine the quality of their teachers' work, and by extension, the education their students receive."
Here are four things that can easily creep up and steal a teacher's joy!
Faculty meetings, team meetings, professional development meetings, last-minute meetings, crisis meetings, IEP meetings, parent meetings, and committee meetings, and any meeting that could have been an email. Teachers are understandably frustrated when their precious time is taken up in unnecessary or unnecessarily long meetings.
So, some quick tips for meetings:
The Branching Minds MTSS platform will make your MTSS meetings faster and more productive. The platform saves teachers' time by doing the hard work of data collection, making the data easy to understand and visual, with everything they need to collaborate on data-based decisions in one place. Learn more here! |
As Jennifer Gonzalez from Cult of Pedagogy says, "Time is a finite resource that can't be recovered once it's lost, and although your teachers might still show up, the quality of their instruction is what's ultimately going to suffer." Do what you can to protect your teachers' sacred time, which they have to spend doing what you hired them to do.
Learn more, watch the on-demand webinar with Angela Watson now:
With all that teachers are juggling, they need a "just-right" amount of information - not too little, but not so much that the important details are lost. Information gathered in a central, accessible location, along with a regular cadence of communcation makes a huge difference.
Here are a few tips to consider for your communication:
Stay in tune with what your teachers experience by gathering feedback regularly, and then using it. "Asking for feedback also creates a culture of trust and transparency." (Scott, Fosslien, and Duffy 2023). One kind of feedback you may not have considered is a "Stay Interview."
→ Learn more about "Stay Interview" on this podcast episode of Schoolin' Around
Doing "Stay Interviews" with your high-performing staff members can provide insight into what is working and provide insight into blind areas of the school culture. This kind of interview is a deliberate conversation with invited staff members, initiated and performed by the principal to learn more about the motivations and frustrations of staff (Heubeck and Klaisataporn 2022). "Stay interviews are the opposite of exit interviews: They give us administrators a chance to learn about shifts we can make to encourage our most high-performing educators to stay in our buildings." (Harvey 2023)
→ Resource: Download Stay Interview Questions
One of the perks of being an educator is that kids are FUN. They say funny things, they love to laugh, and they are experts at enjoying life. School should be a fun place to be, for students and teachers alike. Fun is a bridge builder, especially when pressure is high.
Some of the best school leaders I know don't take themselves seriously and really enjoy spending time with the students. Silly costume days, jokes of the day, and even playing with them at recess. Although it's easy to think that the fun stuff can be postponed when urgent tasks and crises occur throughout the day, fun isn't frivolous. Playful connection is critical to the relationships students need to be successful at school. Prioritize fun as a critical part of building a healthy culture – students will feel this, and so will your teachers.
Idea for fun: Create a free and easy fun tradition, like "High Five Friday," greeting students as they walk into the building with High FIves and music.
What a great High Five Friday today!!! Members of our Ag Society came today to welcome our kids!! Lots of smiles today at North Park!! @darrentobey @jellis312000 @DanHelbergbbps pic.twitter.com/IeXjjjYxOm
— Justin Petersen (@coachp4017) November 3, 2023
→ Additional Resource: Nurturing a Sense of Belonging in Schools
School leaders have long days filled with challenges and tough decisions. It is easy to get wrapped up in the daily urgent tasks and lose track of the small things that mean a lot to teachers. With meaningful meetings, consistent communication, opportunities for feedback, and, of course, fun, your school culture will thrive.
You are the culture captain! Even the smallest turn of the wheel can get you where you want to go.
Give your teachers the gift of time by using Branching Minds to centralize and organize your MTSS data. The Branching Minds platform is built from the ground up to help teachers streamline the work of supporting students.
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"One thing that we've been very successful with is those monthly MTSS meetings with each grade level. Before, without Branching Minds, the meetings were just kind of all over the place. Now, we've been able to really hone in on certain things, and we can keep those meetings very data-driven. We're actually spending less time meeting." - Jodee Nelson, Lincoln County, Wyoming |
Key Takeaways:
Citations/Resources:
Gonzalez, Jennifer. 2017. "What Teachers Want You To Know: A Note to School Administrators." Cult of Pedagogy. https://www.cultofpedagogy.com/letter-to-administrators/.
Harvey, Melissa. 2023. "My 4 tips for holding positive, powerful stay interviews." Principal Project. https://principalproject.org/my-4-tips-for-holding-positive-powerful-stay-interviews/?utm_source=&utm_medium=twitter.feed&utm_campaign=&utm_content=.
Heubeck, Elizabeth, and Dilok Klaisataporn. 2022. "The Stay Interview: How It Can Help Schools Hold Onto Valued Staff." Education Week. https://www.edweek.org/leadership/the-stay-interview-how-it-can-help-schools-hold-onto-valued-staff/2022/06.
Scott, Kim, Liz Fosslien, and Mollie W. Duffy. 2023. "How Leaders Can Get the Feedback They Need to Grow." Harvard Business Review. https://hbr.org/2023/03/how-leaders-can-get-the-feedback-they-need-to-grow.
Larissa Napolitan is the Digital Content Creator for Branching Minds and the host of Branching Minds' podcast "Schoolin' Around." As a former middle school English teacher and instructional coach, she has over 13 years of experience building systems for improvement, training and coaching teachers in new technology and instructional methods, and leading efforts to build curriculum and literacy initiatives. She holds Masters's degree in Curriculum and Instruction and Education Administration from Emporia State University. Not only is she passionate about using her experience and academic knowledge, but loves to use her writing and voice to make a broader impact on education, teachers, and students.
Tagged: Instituting MTSS, Leadership in MTSS
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