Blog — Greenwich Leadership Partners

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Back to School: Let's Reclaim Some JOY

In our work with K-12 schools, universities, and not-for-profits, GLP emphasizes the need to establish a shared set of core values that serve as essential filters for organizational priorities, practices, and policies. Clearly articulated and purposefully cultivated core values foster a deeply connected community and positive experience – for ALL.  

For ourselves, the GLP team has named the following principles for our work with clients and our collaborations as a team:

Our focus on JOY is not accidental and not merely about “having fun”. It's about enjoying the work and the relationships we make along the way.  It’s about valuing the people we work with.  

JOY is about forging connections and doing purposeful work that matters.  

It’s a cliche to say, but…  “Now more than ever”, JOY is an essential element of learning that our schools, educators, and students desperately need to reclaim.  

Over the past three years, much has been made of the negative impact of COVID-related stresses on student and educator well-being, engagement, and performance.  The phrase “learning loss” has been turned into a mourner's lament as schools grapple with the long term impacts on student learning and glaring inequities revealed by student performance data, including attendance and test scores.  

To be frank, the term “learning loss” gives me the heebie-jeebies.  It’s classic deficit mindset language that communicates to our students and teachers that they are already behind the 8-ball and better “catch up” or get left behind.  

But what are we “catching up” to? 

More often than not the answer is performance on standardized tests and the proposed “fix” is more intensive instruction focused specifically on test prep.  Approaches that we already know quash students’ curiosity and intrinsic motivation and, in the end, result in shallower and less “sticky” learning.  

As so eloquently described by Susan Engel (author of the book The Intellectual Lives of Children) in a February 2021 Harvard EdCast interview and quoted in the excellent Harvard GSE Ed Magazine article “A Space for Joy”:

“I heard a first-grade teacher say to me, back in August, when she was planning her remote teaching, she said, ‘The parents are so worried that their children aren’t going to keep up this year.’ And I said, ‘Keep up with what?’ And she looked surprised, and she said, ‘Well, with the standards.’ But I mean, the standards are completely arbitrary. Who made up those standards? Just a lot of people sitting in rooms. I don’t know. And I’m not sure they were good standards in the first place, but it’s silly to let those constrain you too much as a teacher right now.”       

I couldn’t agree more!  Standards -- when used healthily -- are a deeply valuable tool.  They can help educators develop consensus about essential skills, mindsets, and capacities while also ensuring that all students are given the gift of high expectations combined with deep support.  However, post-COVID we can still have high expectations for the performance of our learners and educators without demanding adherence to arbitrary proclamations of “But, you should already know this!” -- or be able to do that, or have arrived at a specific destination -- “by now!”  We can “meet students where they are” without sacrificing high expectations for all!

What we really need to “catch up” on -- what learners and educators really lost during COVID-related disruptions -- is JOY.  That’s where we need to recommit -- in forging connections between educators and learners, creating the community conditions that will allow for deep, meaningful learning and promote intrinsic motivation and resilience.  

So how do we do that?  How can we intentionally cultivate JOY in the classroom?  Essentially, it’s about fostering spaces of shared ownership and purpose.  

  • Start by building trust with and between students, “slowing down to move fast”.  I like to begin the year with low-stakes collaborative problem solving challenges.  Favorites include the Marshmallow Challenge, Inquiry Cubes, and the Paper Bridge Design Challenge.  These challenges allow students to develop shared purpose and to reflect on conditions that foster collaboration and strong teamwork.  Deliberately involving students in drafting shared classroom norms and establishing a “Team/Classroom Charter” also helps ensure that students develop a sense of ownership and responsibility for both culture and learning.

  • Commit to pedagogies of purpose.  Project-based learning, place-based learning, experiential learning, Socratic seminars and more! What do all of these powerful approaches to learning design (and assessment!) have in common? First, a commitment to student-led learning that centers student interests, choices, and agency while fostering critical thinking, problem-solving, and creativity.  Second, connection to real-world events, issues, and questions that establish a shared sense of purpose and urgency.  Third, intentional instruction, support, and modeling for effective student collaboration to wrestle with and “make meaning” around complex ideas and problems. 

  • Commit to authentic assessment. Student exhibitions, student-led conferences, presentations of learning, collaborative exams and other approaches to assessment can ensure that student work is appreciated by more than “an audience of one” -- turning assessments into powerful learning experiences in and of themselves.  Authentic assessments shift the emphasis away from just earning points and letter grades to producing quality work that matters.         

Let’s reclaim what school can be.  Bring back JOY and the rest will follow.  Attendance, educator retention, student learning, and -- yes -- those darn test scores too.     

For more about the power of JOY and how to cultivate it with your team and in your classroom, see:

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Who Plays, and What to Do When You Don’t Have the Right Players: Part 3 of a Three Part Series

Parts One and Two of this series addressed the principles and practices of high performing teams. This final installment addresses the question of “who” – who you need, how you assess performance (of the team and each member), and what to do when you find you don’t have the right players. 

Who You Need 

Building a team is strategic and disciplined work. Whether you are building a board, an executive team, or a functional team, composition matters.  And composition is the careful curation of mindsets, abilities, and behaviors that empower the team to be greater than any one particular member.  

The first step is to decide what you need in terms of mindsets, abilities, and behaviors. No one person can fulfill all your needs, but there are certain “need to have” attributes for every member that help you build the culture and disposition of the team.  You’ll likely seek evidence of collaboration skills, critical and systems thinking skills, and communication and interpersonal skills that promote productive group work. You’ll seek in each person a particular ethos and values set that mirrors the organizational ethos and honors the contributions of each team member. 

Once you’ve outlined these core needs, you’ll want to seek particular functional or technical skills and expertise that round out the team – most often mapped to the areas of organizational focus and strategic choices that drive the enterprise. Don’t let the functional organization, on paper, drive the composition of your team. You may have a wider collection of senior leaders who represent the core functions and/or business lines, and you will recognize them as such, but your executive team needs to work closely with you to drive enterprise wide priorities. 

For example, you may have multiple programs or divisions in your school or organization. The assumption that these leaders need to be on the executive team can be tested. You may prefer to have one leader who unifies this group and directs them in ways that ensure tight focus on institutional strategy. Similarly, you may lift up a leader, like a director of communications, who also reports to your Chief Operating Officer, to be part of your team because they exhibit both the core capacities and the particular expertise you need.

A note on who’s on the team (or in the room where it happens): as a leader, you walk the challenging line of being clear about roles and responsibilities, while also fostering inclusion, collaboration, transparency, and an authentic sense of agency and purpose in all your leaders and staff. Your executive team shares in this responsibility and together, your actions must attend to these aims.  

A small executive team that works effectively can, at its best, create more space and access for robust vertical and horizontal collaboration within your organization. A CEO or Head of School with strong distributed leadership is naturally in a better position to coach, mentor, and communicate more broadly inside and outside the walls of your organization. So, work with your team to attend to communications that keep everyone in the loop . Ensure transparency and clarity about the decisions that affect your people.  And work hard together to seek involvement and input from the many talented people that make it happen in your organization each day. 

How to Assess  

You’ve done your best work to assemble a great team – or perhaps you are working with what you inherited or have for the time being. In any case, assessment and feedback are essential tools in developing and composing the best team you can build. Too often, effective feedback and assessment are entirely overlooked, or sporadic and informal at best. 

To develop and evaluate a team and its members, you want to ensure frequent reflection and feedback, coupled with more formal assessment.  Talk with your team about how this work is designed – without it, the team can’t improve and you lack sound data to make good people decisions.

Informal and ongoing feedback stimulates correction, learning, and growth. It happens in real time, through observation and dialogue. Formal assessment is best accomplished with a thoughtfully designed tool that, in effect, measures that for which you provide informal feedback.  Your team can help you build the tool, and by involving them you explore together what will drive collective performance and foster ownership for an accountability system (designing together also models how they can engage their own teams to do the same). Most good tools include assessments against the core criteria you value for team members and assessments of progress on strategic goals (see the figure below).

You’ve built criteria for team members, and your charter names areas of responsibility and key strategic goals (ideally with measures of success). Build these into your tool and update the tool annually so it works as a dynamic instrument to capture growth and development over time, and more specific performance on organizational goals. Remember to use clearly stated scaled and open-ended queries that assess both the function of the individual and the function of the team as a whole. 

Engage the right people in the process of assessment:  if you limit formal evaluation to your own perspective, you lose valuable insight and perspective on both individual and team performance. Who might have experiences, observations, and insight that help you assess? Consider peers, direct reports, and collaborators when you administer formal assessment.  We prefer to steer away from terms like “360 degree review” which often implies wide scale feedback - sometimes from the whole organization. What we do encourage is that you solicit thoughtful feedback from people who interact directly with members of the team and witness their leadership.  

When You Don’t Have the Right Talent

Sometimes you inherit a team member who just doesn’t want to play by the values and norms you’ve established, and sometimes these folks are toxic to the team. Or, despite your best efforts, you’ve discovered that the person you are coaching is not likely to master the capabilities you need, and while well-liked, frustration within the team is mounting. Maybe you have an open position or an emerging gap and you need to fill it – and until you do everyone is working harder, but not smarter. Know that the team is never static, and you will likely be dealing with one or more of these realities often, if not all the time, in the course of your leadership.

If you have a player that needs to be moved off the team, but you are not sure how or when to do so, the most important thing to ask is:

How is this individual’s performance 

impacting the people who lead us forward? 

In the effort and time it takes to figure out how and when to move on a poor performer, we often lose sight of how that person is impacting others over time – and we delay the hard decision or construct unsustainable workarounds.  Often, leaders underestimate the cost to the team, so if there’s one thing to remember it’s this: 

Preserve optimism and energy in the people who will lead you forward

by acting humanely and decisively on the people who cannot.

If you have attended to feedback and assessment purposefully, your job is made easier. If not, you’ll need to work quickly, with the right support, to either remove or redirect a player in order to protect the morale and focus of your team.   If this person is harming team culture or breeding real frustration, delay is costly, and too often we see leaders who prioritize their concerns for that individual over the needs of the team.  In the end, no one is better off.

Leaders need partners who can help them address these talent issues. Who helps you? Not-for-profit and school organizations often lack in-house strategic human resource leaders to advise them, and if this is you, make sure you have an external resource to guide you.  But remember, the hard part is taking decisive action – once you decide, the tactics will follow. 

Finally, if you have a gap in your team and need to fill it, you may look both within and without your organization for talent. The key here is twofold:

  1. Do this with your team: develop a shared understanding of what you need and the profile for the role. Involve your team in the interview process, and agree on decision-making criteria.

  2. Be accountable to a timeline: the long, dragged out processes to find the perfect person can really bring your team down.  Find the person most likely to “fit” and “grow” – don’t expect perfect. And have a back up plan (perhaps outsourced or attended to by a junior “interim” team inside your organization).  Know your best alternative to a great hire and implement it early, so that if things don’t pan out in your first efforts, you know what to do in the interim. 

In the end, knowing you have a team and coaching it to success is never-ending work! Teams, like organizations and people, are living organisms that need to continuously learn, evolve and adapt. As a leader, your attention to the health and function of the team is one of your primary responsibilities.  Let us know if we can help!







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