Archive for March, 2009

Mar 31 2009

Great Blogs for Busy Admin…. a lot to learn here!

www.schooltechleadership.org

Scott McLeod has pulled together a nice list of some of the more innovative blogs written as a resource for busy admin. He has provided you with a recommended list of blogs for busy administrators (and educational leadership faculty). You can subscribe to them individually by clicking on the relevant link or you can read/subscribe to all of them at once by using one of these links:

It is worth a look!

Andy

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Mar 20 2009

The Art of Self Promotion in a School Community!

http://www.flickr.com/photos/17056146@N00/2685739539

Author’s note: I wrote this post about a year ago and updated a little here for Leadertalk. I stumbled upon it the other day while cleaning out my hard drive. It hit home with me as we all are facing some tough community issues right now and I decided we really need to get our PR machine running at 110% capacity. Thanks for reading. This post is also is cross posted on LeaderTalk. Thanks for reading this post! Andy

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We need to do a much better job of self promotion or we will be run over by our own failures and lack of progress.

In act one, scene two of Julius Caesar, Caesar asks a soothsayer what the future holds.

Caesar: Who is it in the press that calls on me?
I hear a tongue, shriller than all the music
Cry “Caesar!” Speak. Caesar is turn’d to hear.
Soothsayer: Beware the ides of March.

Let’s face it. Common sense would tell anyone that no school is perfect. In fact, by nature of the school improvement process, we honed our knives of self improvement by becoming very, very good at self criticism, and ultimately it is also deemed cathartic to announce our own weak points out loud and with robust vigor and valor. Alas, this time of year people get cranky and irritable. The ides of March saying often comes to my mind.

Such announcements like,

“Our school has progressed just 10 percentage points on the nationally normed test in the past three years, missing our target by 2 percentage points. We are disappointed in missing our target despite the tremendous progress we have made.”

The newspapers and online networks out there are all over this stuff, and the fuel for the school critics’ fire is among the worst in journalism falling just short of the criticisms and interrogations meted out on Meet the Press and Jerry Springer combined!

Sigh… why do schools insist on focusing on the negatives? Must we be so self critical? Is it a deeply held community expectation that we be negative about ourselves?

Would be appear to be a cover up if we instead said,

“The progress that our school has made in the past three years equates to 10 percentage points, and has moved our school to within 2 percentage points of our target. The school will reevaluate their academic targets and continue with our aggressive school improvement progress to ensure our students continued success.”

Much nicer if you ask me.

Alas… things do go bad in schools sometimes and black and white honesty is the best policy for sure. We seemed to have our share of them lately, and sadly some are really out of our control, although that is NOT the message a school administrator wants to send. To take responsibility and not being able to truly implement mitigating steps is certainly frustrating. I won’t make the laundry list of things that go awry, as I suspect you have two or three on your mind right now.

Instead let’s turn this coin over and I propose some positive communications that will rebuild the interest and confidence in the school.

Taking the old motto “Ten to glow on, one to grow on”, I figure that we must provide 10 or more quality examples of positive results in our schools to counter balance the single quality result.

Guiding factors for these include:
• Always tell the truth. (This should be easy)
• Do not exaggerate. (This is harder than you think)
• Make the message understandable. (This is the hardest thing to do!)
• Recognize your experts. Show them off to your community. Quote them frequently.
• Any school event or school personnel recognized by an independent source (i.e. newspaper, professional organization) should be published and republished. Theses events and people should be your poster children.
• Focus on direct implementation steps taken by the school, and not just mere happenstance occurrences.
• Student learning data must be targeted and not over generalized
• Over reliance regarding co-curricular (sports, after school, clubs, etc) for positives should be avoided.
• Concrete, real life celebrations of school events connected to learning are most efficient.
• Be visible with your positives and the positives will make your visibility less negative even when bad things happen.

My other suggestion is to think ahead of the curve. One area that I need to do a better job of addressing. Perhaps a weekly “devils advocate” session with some trusted colleagues will squeeze out those negative thoughts to address, change and squash in the public setting. My favorite recently has focused on a proposed program change in our school. The critics have come out in vocal fashion, spreading rumor by email and by voice to anyone on a mailing list.

What are we to do? My suggestion is the truth should be spread. Accurate, factual, research-based information and “on-the-ground” examples that share the positives. The mere thought that your veracity and honesty are being questioned hit hard with emotional impact. One must step forward professionally and let those attacks roll off your shoulders to the floor where they belong. The fact is, we may not always win the battles that we fight on these issues, but if we stay true to our beliefs about putting children first and focusing on what is best for our schools, we will most likely always triumph in the long run.

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Mar 11 2009

Facebook Privacy?? Are You a Facebook User?

Published by Andrew under Blogging,communications,twitter

It’s my wife’s fault really. So much is when it comes to the technology in my life. Let me extrapolate.

Tool ———->Blame

Twitter ——>Amanda
Blogging—–>Amanda
Netvibes—–>Amanda
Intl. Ed——>Amanda

You get my point.  I’m not complaining mind you.  She’s usually..er… ALWAYS right and then she got me using Facebook and I have taken some time to get up and running with my own Facebook page.  I would link it here but it is pretty lame for sure.  Yesterday when I received my daily email from my Diigo education list with the title “10 Privacy Setting Every Facebook User Should Know” it really caught my eye!  Wow… you mean we have privacy issues on Facebook??

Let me be clear here. I really didn’t start using Facebook to connect anyone. I was just exploring and continue to do so.  I don’t use many apps… at least I don’t think so. I did nail the 80′s music quiz and showed my old high school buddy I haven’t slipped into dementia quite yet.  I have found a few old friends from High School and college and lots and lots of former students.  That is about it.  Nothing more.

After reading the “10 Privacy Setting Every Facebook User Should Know” posting, I have a new found respect for this VERY transparent medium.  My favorite setting:  Number 8. Make Your Contact Information Private. The author Nick O’Neill notes in this tip:

I personally use Facebook for professional and personal use and it can frequently become overwhelming. That’s why I’ve taken the time to outline these ten privacy protection steps. One of the first things I did when I started approving friend requests from people that I hadn’t built a strong relationship with, was make my contact information visible only to close contacts.

The contact information is my personal email and phone number. It’s a simple thing to set but many people forget to do it. Frequently people we don’t know end up contacting us and we have no idea how they got our contact information. Your contact privacy can be edited right from your profile. If you have chosen to enter this information, you should see a “Contact Information” area under the “Info” tab in your profile

Like most things on the web, Facebook can be misused and abused.  I would encourage you to be educated and informed if you use Facebook for professional reasons. In fact I URGE you to read this posting.

Flickr storm “surprise” photo creative commons http://www.flickr.com/photos/7169437@N03/2081945161

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Mar 08 2009

Are you a team player?

Published by Andrew under Thought Leadership

My “soon-to-be-once-again” colleague Alicia writes about the 17 qualities of a Team Player by John Maxwell in her post 17 is an Odd Number.

So are you….

  1. Adaptabile
  2. Collaborative
  3. Committed
  4. Communicative
  5. Competent
  6. Dependable
  7. Disciplined
  8. Enlarging
  9. Enthusiastic
  10. Intentional
  11. Mission Conscious
  12. Prepared
  13. Relational
  14. Self-Improving
  15. Selfless
  16. Solution Oriented
  17. Tenacious

Alicia notes it is a “long laundry list of desirable characteristics”, and her favorite number 11 “Mission Conscious” is also mine, which is why we will work so well together.

I guess I will have to get the book and add it to my list of readings! I am one of those people who have 5 books started simultaneously. I just read the one that happens to be next to the chair I am sitting. I have one problem since moving to China though (don’t hit me if you see me!)… I have a housekeeper who keeps moving them to one location.  To my right on the desk is 3 of them!  Argh!!

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Mar 01 2009

Back Channel Thoughts…. How to Present while people are twittering??

Published by Andrew under twitter

We see a lot more of this back channel stuff in our education conferences.

I was thinking of doing this a few weeks ago in a meeting in our organization and chickened out.

After reading this post on “How to Present While People are Twittering”, I feel a little bit braver.

I think it is worth a look!

According to author, Olivia Mitchell there are a few things to keep in mind.

My favorite:

“What this means is that when you’re presenting with the back channel – you need to monitor that channel and be prepared to change course and adapt.”


Good advice. But… isn’t that true without a back channel??  Replace the word “channel” with “participants”, “students” or “audience”!

Image from Flickrstorm http://www.flickr.com/photos/92721510@N00/2611832229

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