Introduction to Educational Administration, Self Reflection
Ellis Melton’s “Introduction to Educational Administration” most important assignment, is a self reflection piece. We’ve been advised to follow the ISLLC Standards in this piece. I’m also pushing the boundaries of self transparency and instead of writing this in a word file and emailing it to him, I’ll blog this reflection.
There are some interesting hurdles as the paper requires us to have it double spaced and at least 4 pages long. To compensate this requirement I’ll copy and past this text into a word file and double space it.
Quite incredible, a whole day a writing and I’m unable to complete an introduction. It didn’t help deleting the first draft or creating 10 different ineffective intros or misreading the directions. I’ve never been a fan of standards, always feeling they constrained me more than helped. Even so, they’ll be used here, I’ll be writing a reflective overview of the standards detailing my weakness and summarizing areas of strength.
The art of a conversation is a struggle and I’m an expert at killing them. Even though communicating is the preverbal lynch pin in Leadership, I’ve been getting by, with my tool box of coping skills. For instance I always insure I’m grouped with an animated talker, drama teachers seemed to be the best, as they have the natural talents to draw out interesting conversations. These systems insured this weakness of mine wouldn’t become an obstacle in the work place. I’m taking these admin courses to improve myself hoping my coping tool box can be put to rest. Using the first 2 items from the Admin Tool box I learned the art of conversation. I happy as it was easy. Over the week both tourist and students we’re victim of my conversation practicing sessions. I’m excited as both my victim and I survived. If a week is an indication of a life time, then maybe, just maybe my special conversation killing powers have been extinguished.
Standard 3 or Organizational Leadership relies on effective information systems. While I’ve never seen a perfect system, our school has invested into a comprehensive Student Information systems from inResonance. Their Keystone product is used by all the employees and is instrumental in all aspect of daily business.
We use email, wikis and encourage the use of blogs in regards to Standard 4 or Collaborative Leadership. Even with all this technology, it’s still a personal area of weakness. I used to believe I ran good meetings until I compared it with the meetings checklist. Even though my team rates our meets as good, through the process of Kaizen we’ll make them better. It’s a similar philosophy of using the “Baby Steps” concept seen in the movie What About Bob?. Well slowly introduce different systems into meetings, first experimenting with the warm up activities.
Ethical Leadership or Standard 5 has a relationship with websites like International Schools Review, Wikileaks and ratemyteacher.com Many school heads should study the music industries attempt at fighting the MP3 piracy fight with their costumers. The battle between review sites like ISR and schools is just beginning. Many should be thankful the other two sites haven’t caught on in the International market. While no school can be perfect, without an external independent international policing body, sites like these will remain relevant.
Debate is an element of Standard 6, encouraging different ideas and perspectives helps to foster an environment of excellence. Most recently we’re debating the book “The Dumbest Generation“ Mr. Unno the author of “IZ I DUM?” raised this question:
- Just as education systems haven’t change, the predominant models of examinations and assessment haven’t changed either. If we are to acknowledge that students have changed over from living hard drives to living search engines, does the classic exam culture remain relevant?
and Alan November raise similar questions in this video title “3 Skills Students Need to Succeed” A visit to our IT office and you’ll surely hear us talking about some problem and possible solution. We’re avid readers of Digg, and active users of twitter. All of this simulates big ideas, debate and discussion.
These standards give us a base line leadership frame work. I was unaware of these standards before this class. I do relativity well using my gut and instinct, while standards slow me down and constraint my creative side. Will I use the standards in the future? Maybe as something to touch upon. The standards themselves seem quite wordy and by this design fault they become less useful. A graphic depiction might make it a bit user friendly, especially for us visual types, or could the standards use with essential questions. In conclusion, I’ll continue to use instinct, experience, mentors, and information gleaned from classes in improving my leadership skills.
Blogging | Comment (1)Baby Steps
Ever since attending Alan November’s conference in Boston, I’ve been struggling with his vision. Are International Schools capable of accomplishing his bold blogging goals?
Last week Andrew Torris’s posted a question asking “Can a school leaders be “real” bloggers??” Could they? I wondered, and I emailed his post to our Senior Leadership Team. Very quickly I heard back, they wanted to know: why and what void does blogging fill? Instead of sweating over an answer, I thought let’s use the power of commenting and posted these questions to Andrew’s blog.
Less then a day later Andrew posted a response “Why is it important for school leaders to blog?” Our SLT had their answers and this time we hooked one. Wow! it worked, he really wanted to do this. Pondering wasn’t an option, we kept it simple emailing two free blogging choices wordpress.com or edublogs.org
Two days ago I receive this email from our Deputy Head Master announcing his blog. I’m puzzled, it’s done? and he didn’t need our help? We’re the IT department, we need a reason to exist. Actually I’m happy for him, there is hope this blogging thing could work.
So in a long winded way this is a good week, a few days ago YIS’s first administrator posted this “Two Why’s (but not very wise)“. As some already know I’ve tweeted his post and many have commented. Thank you very much, as we all know it’s this commenting cycle that really makes blogging work.
Alan November’s vision speaks of having everyone blogging students, teachers administrator & even parents. It’s a bold vision and I wonder can schools achieve such a goal. Those questions remain unanswered, but at least we are taking our first baby steps.
Blogging | Comments (6)