Tuesday, March 15, 2016

I Believe ...


I recently applied for an administrative position. *YIKES* The application process involved the requirement of "a one or two-page description of their philosophy as an educational leader, including a vision statement describing the priorities they wish to establish as Principal." Please note that I applied for an associate principalship, but there is an expectation that as an applicant, I would be "[s]upportive of direction from principal and desire to advance to this role". 

This is tough stuff! I sweated. I Googled. I reviewed tweets. I posted to Facebook. Then I wrote the following. Then I rewrote, revised, shared, tweaked ... any feedback is appreciated! 

Vision Statement:
To foster continuous growth in a thinking community.

I believe …
This belief statement uses community for all environments, as the most supportive learning environment is a community, and learners for all participants within the community.

Every individual can experience growth given the right environment. Humans are curious by nature; igniting thinking is the goal of learning and the core of educating. The leadership team (principal and associate principals) work together to set direction and model behaviour for the community.  An effective collaborative team gives voice to all members when making decisions and are united in their message to the community.

School environments can foster growth for every individual (teacher, student, leader and parent) through a sense of community. Leaders develop strong relationships through acceptance and respect, and providing everyone with voice. In a healthy community, learners feel safe taking risks, and gain a deeper understanding of curriculum, each other and themselves. People thrive when they know they belong and are useful, when they feel valued for who they are. Recognizing strengths permits everyone to contribute to the community by using strengths to collaboratively reach goals.

A leadership team guides a community through change. Change is difficult for many and may seem daunting if presented as an endless series of goals; participants may become discouraged with the sheer immensity of the vision. Leadership can avoid this by clearly defining the vision in obtainable steps which are celebrated at every accomplishment. To foster risk-taking, disappointments need to be acknowledged for the growth they represent. Participants need to see that although change takes time, time passes either way, and growth is more worthwhile than stagnation. Furthermore, leaders cannot disregard the value of the naysayer. Those who oppose the vision can often help refine the goals and may reveal overlooked roadblocks. By acknowledging the contributions of opposition, relationships and community are strengthened. However, honesty and true acceptance of each individual may lead to moving forward without everyone on board. Hopefully the perceptions of stalwart resistors are changed by evidence of success, but leaders must be prepared to prioritize the health of the community over any individual.


https://www.flickr.com/photos/cogdog/14279306964
Measuring growth comes from asking meaningful and revealing questions about progress. Frequent and cyclic reflections provide checkpoints for growth measurement. Reflecting honestly on evidence gathered will reveal successes as well as problems and possible solutions. To help ensure success and improvement, leaders need to model the behavior they want to see. Leaders support risk taking by being honest about weaknesses and strengths, and disclosing struggles during goal attainment. An associate principal welcomes the feedback and direction from the principal. By seeking feedback from self, peers, teachers, and students, they model for teachers how feedback can be gathered and processed in an assessment cycle, enabling teachers to effectively reflect on their own progress, so they are better prepared to guide students in the cycle of feedback for growth.