Categories: NewsEducation

Adam Voigt: A school leader’s character is more important than strategy.

<h2>When I was about 12 years old&comma; I got my first job&period;  It was a morning paper round&period;  It required getting up at about 5am six mornings a week and riding the streets delivering newspapers&comma; often in bitter rain and cold&comma; before returning home to get ready for school&period;  My first weekly pay packet was waiting for me on Saturday morning&period;  It was a grand total of &dollar;8&period;79 … and I was delighted&excl;<&sol;h2>&NewLine;<p>These days&comma; things are different&period;  While employee motivation was formerly derived from steady&comma; regular reimbursement&comma; today’s employees&comma; even teachers&comma; are motivated by far more&period;  So what is it that allows you to meet the key leadership mandate of mobilising the people you lead behind a vision for a better school&quest;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>The research tells us that today’s teachers&comma; especially those in the Gen Y demographic&comma; are motivated by three key leadership commitments&colon;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<div>1&rpar;Improvement – they like to be part of a school that is going places&comma; moving forward and meeting stated objectives&period;<&sol;div>&NewLine;<div>2&rpar;Investment – working with leaders who invest time and energy in them&comma; even if this means the school loses them to promotion positions elsewhere&period;<&sol;div>&NewLine;<div>3&rpar;Culture – being part of a positive&comma; productive team whose behaviours consistently match a strong&comma; collegial and moral cause&period;<&sol;div>&NewLine;<div>●<&sol;div>&NewLine;<p>So what are the practical implications of this for school leaders&quest;  Firstly&comma; you’ll notice that none of these three enablers of attraction and retention of quality teachers are about plans – they are about people&period;  Today’s teachers simply don’t follow strategic objectives&comma; good intentions or mission statements&period;  They follow leaders … leaders of character&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>The former US General Norman Schwarzkopf once said &OpenCurlyDoubleQuote;Leadership is a combination of character and strategy&period;  If you must be without one&comma; be without the strategy&period;”  Let’s consider that for a moment&period;  Here is a leader whose decisions meant that people live or die&period;  Yet&comma; he still believes that his battle plan is far less important than who he is&period;  If this principle can apply in war&comma; there might be some credibility for this thinking in our schools&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>For us in schools&comma; the commitment can be as simple as switching between HOW and WHAT&period; When we focus on HOW&comma; we get the big things on your communities agenda&comma; meaning that we deal with a higher level of problem&period;  Your values – whether they be community&comma; safety&comma; innovation&comma; academia&comma; friendliness&comma; bravery&comma; honesty or creativity – are crystal clear and regularly communicated&period; Teachers&comma; parents and students stop complaining about the little things when they the frames through which these decisions are made&period;  HOW is about process&comma; not outcome&period;  HOW is about practice&comma; not intention&period;  HOW is about big picture&comma; not minutia&period;  HOW is about culture&comma; not strategy&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>Almost all School Leaders were formerly great teachers&period;  You were likely promoted because you were skilled&comma; passionate and dedicated to your craft&period;  You were responsible for your own work and it shone in comparison to others&period;  The great challenge for the contemporary school leader is in shifting from responsibility for your own practice to that of being responsible for the practice of others&period; <&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>Many School Leaders struggle in this space because they never really understood that being good at their work isn’t enough&period;  It’s not about you any more&period;  It’s about your team&period;  And character is nothing more than a set of relational behaviours repeatedly demonstrated&period; So this poses the question&comma; which behaviours are your people noticing about you&quest;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p class&equals;"textbox" dir&equals;"ltr"> <&sol;p>&NewLine;<p class&equals;"textbox" dir&equals;"ltr"> <&sol;p>&NewLine;

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Adam Voigt

Adam Voigt is the Founder & Director of Real Schools. Built upon years of experience as a successful Principal, Real Schools helps schools to build and sustain strong, relational School Cultures. A speaker of local and international renown, Adam has delivered a TED Talk and is the schools/education expert for The Project”.

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