Showing posts with label Leadership. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Leadership. Show all posts

Thursday, April 1, 2010

Lessons in leadership

This short clip is how leadership works. I hope you enjoy viewing how you can get the desired results in unusual ways.

Monday, October 26, 2009

National Standards

National Standards were introduced last week. Sadly the teaching profession was absent from the celebrations, not because they weren't invited, but more to do with their frustration at the process and based on the empirical evidence that they won't improve student achievement. While the process around the excellent new curriculum has seen it richly embedded into schools, through a lengthy consultation and implementation process, National Standards are being introduced on a much quicker scale. For us at Muritai, I feel very calm about things. We are self-managing, have good processes, our kids achieve well, they are well resourced, and we report to parents in writing about student achievement in regards to below, at or above twice a year. Any change? Well yes - and it is all to do with creating a them and us atmosphere between government and parents and the teachers. It will be a test of leadership to keep a handle on this potentially difficult situation which has changed the education landscape that was progressing so nicely under Labour on the back of John Hattie's and Helen Timperley, BES and others excellent research. The focus on developing quality teaching environments, on the back of assessment for learning, has now shifted to accountability processes based on assessment of learning. While we are currently highly regarded internationally for our education processes we seem to have adopted systems that most mid-ranked countries employ which only serve to achieve longevity of politicians careers.

I particularly enjoyed reading this article from the New Zealand Herald; one of the very few media articles to reflect on the school's side of the fence.

New Zealand Herald editorial

Sunday, October 18, 2009

Enviroschool Interview with Radio New Zealand

I enjoyed listening to Ned and Samantha being interviewed by Jim Rose on Chris Laidlaw's sunday morning radio show. The whole article is 45 minutes long but Ned and Samantha are first up. they did really well - sounded so articulate and confident. We have become a leading school through our Gold award. Overall it is also an interesting discussion about education and action learning.

Listen here

Friday, October 16, 2009

I'm back - Rory Sutherland

Hi all. I have been enjoying my study break and with 4 weeks to go before I head back to school I thought I'd get back into the blogging cycle again. I decided to quit for a bit and focus just on reading and researching. Anyway - just to get back on the bike I thought I'd post this excellent talk from Rory Sutherland. He is an advertising man and talks about real v perceived value/change. Although it is really about advertising it is transferable across a whole swag of concepts. There is a short segment about education around the 3 minute mark but worth watching for the whole 16 minutes as has a great ending and is pretty funny all the way through. From leadership view it is challenging about real change v perceived change - and challenges the notion of ... ‘if we say we’ve done it then we must have done it’.