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Training & Synthesis: Making Your Goal a Reality

Successfully complete your dissertation in Educational Leadership and Accountability through the best education, research-based literature, and hard work. Benefit from a valuable portfolio process to synthesize and reflect on program learnings, collaborate with educational leaders, and study with the masters.

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Training & Synthesis: Making Your Goal a Reality

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  1. Susan A. MacDonald Digital Portfolio Overview Program Synthesis

  2. Training to Reach your Goal • Making your goal a reality • Training to reach your goal • Gather the Best Tools • Observe and Study the Masters • St. John’s Doctorate in Educational Leadership & Accountability • Study with the Masters • Research the best literature • Theorists • Thanks

  3. Making Your Goal a Reality Successfully completing a dissertation in Educational Leadership and Accountability can only be realized by receiving the best education, utilizing research-based literature and a lot of hard work. The portfolio process was very valuable because It helped me to synthesize and reflect upon the things that we learned throughout the program. The cohort model exposed me to educational leaders at every level. We had time to learn from each other, utilize each others strengths and collaborate to get our projects completed.

  4. Training to Reach your Goal Dressage is not only a type of equestrian competition but a system of training. The word, in fact, comes from a French term that can be translated as "schooling" or "training". The discipline's precise movements are derived from the defensive maneuvers of the French cavalry of the early 19th century, a time when it was necessary to protect horse and rider on a crowded battlefield.

  5. Gather the Best Tools

  6. Observe and Study the Masters Click here to view dressage

  7. St. John’s University Doctorate in Educational Leadership and Accountability

  8. Study with The Masters • Dr. Jonathan Hughes • EDU 5721, EDU 5415, EDU 5665, EDU 7801 • Dr. Kevin McGuire • EDU 5103, EDU 5743, EDU 5571, EDU 5741 • Dr. Roxanne Mitchell • EDU 5105, EDU 7211 • DR. Frank Smith • EDU 5420, EDU 5743, EDU 5571, EDU 5741 • Dr. Korynne Taylor-Dunlop • EDU 5990, EDU 7900 • Dr. Joan Hughes • EDU 5721

  9. Reseach the Best Literature

  10. Theorists • Jim Collins • Michael Fullan • Deborah Stone • Bolman and Deal

  11. Jim Collins • Level 5 Leadership • The Right People • Brutal Facts • Hedgehog Concept – The Three Circles • Culture of Discipline • Technology Accelerators • Flywheel • Preserve the Core/Stimulate Progress

  12. Jim Collins • Becoming a Level 5 leader • The Right People on the Right Bus • Getting to the truth. • Which circle is the hardest to get right? • Culture of discipline • Technology • The Flywheel or the Doom Loop? • BHAG Application

  13. Michael Fullan • Four Phases of Change • Initiation – Quality of innovations, Advocacy, External Change Agents • Implementation – Characteristics of Change, Local Factors, External Factors. • Continuation – Change is built into the structure through policy/budget/timetables • Outcome - • Active initiation and participation. • Pressure, support and negotiation • Changes in skills, thinking and committed actions • Overriding problem of ownership

  14. Michael Fullan • Application: • Being able to work with “polar opposites” • Dynamic interdependency of state accountability and local autonomy • Combine individuals and societal agencies • Internal connection within oneself and within one’s organization and external connections to others and to the environment • * Fullan 1993

  15. Deborah Stone • The Struggle over Ideas • “ Ideas are a medium of exchange and a mode of influence even more powerful than money, votes and guns. Shred meanings motivate people to action and meld individual striving into collective action. Ideas are at the center of all political conflict. Policymaking, in turn, is a constant struggle over the criteria for classification; the boundaries of categories, and the definition of ideals that guide the way people behave • (Deborah Stone, 2002)” • Equity • Security • Efficiency • Liberty

  16. Deborah Stone • Application: • Nothing is linear. Policy making does not occur first by defining the issue, look at solutions based on data, select and refine solutions, then implementation. • Equity – Who are the recipients, what do they get and how it gets done. • Security – Peoples needs prioritized. • Efficiency – Effectively making change. • Liberty – Protecting individual liberties and preventing harm.

  17. Bolman & Deal • Four Frames • Structural – This frame emphasizes efficiency and effectiveness. “The assembly plant” - goals, specialized roles, formal relationships, division of labor, rules, policies, procedures, and hierarchies. • Human Resources – This frame emphasizes the individual. “The clan” -extended family, feelings, prejudices, skills, and limitations, tailor organization to people. • Political – This frame emphasizes competition. “The coliseum” -arenas, contests, jungles, interests compete for limited resources, conflict is rampant, bargaining, negotiation, coercion, and compromise. Problems arise when power is concentrated in wrong place or when so broadly dispersed nothing gets done. • Symbolic – This frame emphasizes meaning. “The shrine” -cultural and social anthropology, tribes, theater, or carnivals, cultures on rituals, ceremonies, stories, heroes, myths, organization is actors.

  18. Bolman & Deal • Application: • Structural – Structural leaders make the rational decision over the personal, and strive to achieve organizational goals and objectives through coordination and control. They value accountability and critical analyses. Specialization and division of labor are used to increase performance levels. Problems in performance may result in restructuring. • Human Resources – Human resource leaders value camaraderie and harmony within the work environment, and strive to achieve organizational goals through meaningful and satisfying work. They recognize human needs and the importance of congruence between the individual and the organization. • Political – This type of leader value practicality and authenticity, and strive to achieve organizational goals through negotiation and compromise. They recognize the diversity of individuals and interests, and compete for scarce resources regardless of conflict. • Symbolic – This type of leader is very subjective, and strives to achieve organizational goals through interpretive rituals and ceremonies. They recognize that symbols give individuals meaning and help to achieve organizational purpose.

  19. This doctoral program far exceeded my expectations in education.  The cohort model, the convenient location, the meeting times and most of all, the professors made my journey the best it could be.  I'd like to thank each of the professors for taking the time to deliver excellent and pertinent information throughout the courses that they taught.  Each brought their individual styles and expertise to the program.  I know I will need each of them as a resource in completing my dissertation and I foresee utilizing their counsel and advice throughout my career as an educational leader.  Thank you and bravo to:  Dr. Jonathan Hughes, Dr. Frank Smith, Dr. Kevin McGuire, Dr. Roxanne Mitchell, Dr. Korynne Taylor-Dunlop and  Dr. Joan Hughes. Special Thanks to, first and foremost, my husband Bruce who is always there for me. Thanks to my family who continually asks me “are you done yet?” and to one of my best buddies Brigid Collins for sharing both laughter and tears together. Thanks to all of my colleagues in cohort 6 for weathering the storm of monthly classes and assignments. These are the times we can look back on and feel proud of our efforts to become the best we can be.   Thank you, Susan A. MacDonald

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