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Turning Negative Heat Into Positive Energy!

Turning Negative Heat Into Positive Energy!. Dr. John Draper For a copy of this presentation go to www.JohnDraper.org. Bubba got a cell phone. There ’ s 100 ’ s of ‘ em!.

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Turning Negative Heat Into Positive Energy!

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  1. Turning Negative HeatInto Positive Energy! Dr. John Draper For a copy of this presentation go to www.JohnDraper.org

  2. Bubba got a cell phone . . . There’s 100’s of ‘em!

  3. “There is a perfectly logical reason for every stupid thing that anyone does, because no one does anything that they think is stupid.”Rebecca Draper(Mom)

  4. Use this template . . .When you plan changeWhen you meet resistanceWhen change is stalledWhen you need an employee to change

  5. No involvement— No ownership! • No engagement— No commitment! • No input— No output!

  6. We are schizophrenics! • Rider—logical, analytical • Elephant—emotional, powerful • Clocky! The Happiness Hypothesis

  7. Successful change must address three factors . . . • Mind—Is there a good reason? Does it make sense? Is there a first step? Is there a goal? • Heart—Is it inspiring? Do you care? Will it make things better? Can we do it? • Environment—Are there obstacles? Can we make it simpler? Can we make it automatic?

  8. Switch by Chip and Dan Heath • Direct the Rider—the thinking part—resistance is often a lack of clarity • Motivate the Elephant—the emotions—laziness is often exhaustion, you need Elephant emotion to keep going • Clear the Path—the environment—a people problem is often a situation problem, eliminate the road-blocks

  9. Think about yourself • You have a preferred “change style” • Rider—logical, analyzer, critical, wary, subject to over think, big picture • Elephant—emotional, loyal, traditional, easy-going, stubborn, defender of status quo, now focus • Which are you?

  10. Direct the RiderMotivate the ElephantClear the Path

  11. Direct the Rider • Find the Bright Spots • Script the Critical Moves • Point to the Destination

  12. Direct the Rider . . .Find the Bright Spots • Avoid our tendency to see negative and reach for punishment solution • Superstars, Backbones and Mediocres (Todd Whitaker) • Clone the

  13. Your son brings home a report card with 1 A4 B’s1 FWhat do you talk about? “Bright Spots”is counter-intuitive . . .

  14. Most time-consuming discipline problem in High Schools?? • Tardies!!

  15. Direct the Rider . . . Find the Bright Spots • Found teachers who had few or no tardies and asked how they did it! • Then engaged all teachers in a discussion on tardy problem, suggestions, ideas for improvement, lot of listening and recording • Agreed on definition of tardy!

  16. Direct the Rider . . .Script the Critical Moves • Use Tardy definition (eliminate decision paralysis) • Put Pre-Assignment on Board • Start class on the bell

  17. Direct the Rider . . .Point to the Destination • Disney employee language • Every Child a Graduate • Educator tendency is to over analyze, discuss, review, research and use education-ese language

  18. I administered three Reading diagnostics: CWT, Assessment of Comprehension, and Monster Test. Using the CWT, I identified my classes’ average as grade level 1.5 in September. My goal is to increase my students’ word identification to a class average of 3.0. Upon analyzing the results of the Assessment of Comprehension, I identified my classes’ average as a 41% in September. My goal is to increase my students’ comprehension to a class average of 80%. Using the Monster Test, I identified my classes’ average scores as Semiphonetic/Phonetic. My goal is to increase my students’ phonics and spelling skills to Transitional. 1st Grade Teach for America Teacher

  19. Crystal Jones, TFA, Atlanta, 2003, 1st Grade Class By the end of this year, you are going to be . . . Third Graders!

  20. Direct the Rider . . .Point to the Destination First instinct is to use data • Data first is a loser! • Strong beginning, strong ending, let the middle work itself out

  21. Direct the RiderMotivate the ElephantClear the Path

  22. Direct the Rider • Find the Bright Spots • Script the Critical Moves • Point to the Destination • Motivate the Elephant • Find the Feeling • Shrink the Change • Grow your People

  23. Some of my people just won’t follow through • What looks like laziness is often exhaustion • Cookies, radishes, and a puzzle

  24. Most change efforts are killed by Elephants! Analyze—Think—Change See—Feel—Change

  25. Find the Feeling!Every Child a Graduate!

  26. Motivate the Elephant . . .Find the Feeling • Emotion motivates the elephant • How we treat the “one” reflects our love for the 99 . . . • Teacher No-Heart goes for a home visit • Not a budget but an Education Plan

  27. Motivate the Elephant . . . Shrink the Change • Door-to-door Aluminum Siding Salesman • Dave Ramsey, pay smallest debt first! • Great Coaches Master this Art of small, early successes

  28. Motivate the Elephant . . . Grow Your People! • Homewood High Football game—behind 2 touchdowns • Crystal Jones, TFA, did not call her 1st graders students—they were Scholars! • Develop an identity—“Don’t Mess with Texas” Campaign

  29. Don’t Mess With Texas!(You Tube video from 1987)

  30. Motivate the Elephant . . .Grow your People • Develop the Growth Mind Set • Set an expectation of failure • Molly Howard, Georgia principal of Jefferson County High, grading system of A, B, C, and NY! (NASSP 2008 Principal of Year)

  31. Direct the RiderMotivate the ElephantClear the Path

  32. Direct the Rider • Find the Bright Spots • Script the Critical Moves • Point to the Destination • Motivate the Elephant • Find the Feeling • Shrink the Change • Grow your People • Clear the Path • Tweak the Environment • Build Habits • Rally the Herd

  33. My people are just stubborn! • What looks like a people problem is often a situation problem • Movie popcorn and bucket size

  34. Clear the Path . . .Tweak the Environment • Big buckets, big plates • Automatic coffee, Clocky, running outfit laid out • Move away from the computer, silence email notification • Design it so the easiest thing is to do what you want them to do

  35. Clear the Path . . .Build Habits • Action triggers—preload • Six parent phone calls per grading period • Six home visits per semester • Principal Natalie Elder, Hardy Elementary School, Chattanooga, TN, Opening Day Routine

  36. Direct the Rider • Find the Bright Spots • Script the Critical Moves • Point to the Destination • Motivate the Elephant • Find the Feeling • Shrink the Change • Grow your People • Clear the Path • Tweak the Environment • Build Habits • Rally the Herd

  37. People don’t see the need to change! • Find the feeling • Show the problem with not changing • Tweak the environment so change occurs without feeling

  38. That’s not the way we do it around here. • Build identity • Find a bright spot • Focus on your Superstars

  39. My people are stuck in the old patterns. • Create habits • Set an action trigger • Preload a decision • Develop a new routine • Ambiguity is the enemy—script the critical moves

  40. People simply aren’t motivated to change! • Elephant problem . . . • Revitalize new identity • Create a destination postcard • Lower the bar • Use peer pressure

  41. I know what to do, I just can’t get it done! • Elephant problem . . . • Set up some easy, small wins • Clear the path • Set up teams!

  42. People were excited, but now we have stalled. • Build habits . . . action without effort • Celebrate victories . . . 6 out of 10 students are graduates! • Teach growth mindset . . . failure is not final, it doesn’t have to be exactly right at first

  43. Somebody Said It Couldn’t Be Done!

  44. Turning Negative HeatInto Positive Energy! Please send comments or suggestions to john@JohnDraper.org For copy of this presentation go to www.JohnDraper.org

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