1 / 19

CSA Retreat

CSA Retreat. LEADERSHIP AT THE TOP. July 2012. Focus . District leadership Building leadership Coaching of principals Developing a culture dedicated to improvement. CONNECTING MISSION AND VISION TO STANDARDS AND RUBRICS. ISSLC STANDARD 1 FUNCTIONS Strategic planning Improvement

kayla
Download Presentation

CSA Retreat

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. CSA Retreat LEADERSHIP AT THE TOP July 2012

  2. Focus District leadership Building leadership Coaching of principals Developing a culture dedicated to improvement

  3. CONNECTING MISSION AND VISION TO STANDARDS AND RUBRICS • ISSLC STANDARD 1 • FUNCTIONS • Strategic planning • Improvement • Results

  4. The Magic Question • How Can I Help? • What is REALLY important? • How am I doing? • How is our team doing? • Do you care? • What difference do we make? • Are you worth following?

  5. Re-culturing Schools for CollaborationFocus on the Principal… adapted from ERS Spectrum Fall 2011 • Capacity for leadership • Moving past resistance • Distributed leadership • Solution oriented Instructional leader • Change agent • Knowledgeable • Research and practice

  6. continued • Monitoring and evaluation • Impact of practice • Flexible • Relationships with all staff • Seeks opinions • Strong ideals and beliefs • Moral purpose • Advocate

  7. Roles Under the Regents Reform Agenda What Superintendents Do: • Build Principals' Capacity and hold them accountable for implementing: CCLS, DDI and Evidence based Observation • Foster the use of district-wide, common interim assessments aligned to CCLS • Demand that principals foster systems for test-in-hand analysis of interim assessment data to drive changes in teacher practice • Implement effective & aligned professional development at all levels of the district • Demand and protect principal time in classrooms What Principals Do: • Build teacher awareness and establish common language around the Shifts in Instruction demanded by adoption of the CCLS • Protect teacher time to plan units which adhere to the Shifts demanded by the CCLS • Have a laser-like focus on teaching and learning and build a culture of reflection and continuous improvement • Spend as much time as possible in classrooms to collect evidence and artifacts to drive improvements in teacher planning and practice • Engage in evidence-based, action oriented conversations with teachers; build teacher capacity & hold them accountable • Foster systems for test-in-hand analysis of interim assessment data to drive changes in teacher practice

  8. The Magic Question • The team with the best leader usually wins • The best leaders have developed skills to understand people and how to get results through the efforts of other people

  9. What is REALLY important? • Mission, Vision, Values and Goals • ISLLC Standards • Principal and Teacher Evaluation Rubrics

  10. What is REALLY important? • Focus-eliminate what can get in the way of important things • Confusion, CADD, HSPS • Contradictions-when mission, vision, values and goals do not align • Unclear Expectations---Clarity

  11. How am I doing? Coach-to bring someone from where they are to where they want to be

  12. How am I doing? Myths of Coaching: • People do not want to be held accountable • Solely about working with your lowest performers • Silence sends the signal that your team is doing just fine • Annual performance reviews are enough coaching

  13. How am I doing? Five Coaching Tips • Candor • Two-way process that involves talking and listening • Scheduled and in the moment sessions • Active feedback • Freedom

  14. How is our team doing? • Define what the goal is • Regularly communicate progress • Coach • Keep the focus and eliminate obstacles • Celebrate success

  15. Do you care? • Build relationships • Listen • Time • Hiring

  16. What difference do we make? • What is our business? • How is business? • How I contribute to the larger good?

  17. Are you worth following? Great leaders aren't born..they develop! How do you as superintendents develop great leaders? • Understanding • Learners • Great people • Courage

  18. How can I help? • Set a meaningful course of action (Mission and RRA) • Stay committed (minimize distractions) • Monitor progress (Set goals and report results) • Be present and available (coach, feedback) • Engage in learning

  19. Roles Under the Regents Reform Agenda What Superintendents Do: • Build Principals' Capacity and hold them accountable for implementing: CCLS, DDI and Evidence based Observation • Foster the use of district-wide, common interim assessments aligned to CCLS • Demand that principals foster systems for test-in-hand analysis of interim assessment data to drive changes in teacher practice • Implement effective & aligned professional development at all levels of the district • Demand and protect principal time in classrooms What Principals Do: • Build teacher awareness and establish common language around the Shifts in Instruction demanded by adoption of the CCLS • Protect teacher time to plan units which adhere to the Shifts demanded by the CCLS • Have a laser-like focus on teaching and learning and build a culture of reflection and continuous improvement • Spend as much time as possible in classrooms to collect evidence and artifacts to drive improvements in teacher planning and practice • Engage in evidence-based, action oriented conversations with teachers; build teacher capacity & hold them accountable • Foster systems for test-in-hand analysis of interim assessment data to drive changes in teacher practice

More Related