Leading Change in Your School: How To Conquer Myths, Build Commitment, and Get Results
Leading Change in Your School: How To Conquer Myths, Build Commitment, and Get Results
Leading Change in Your School: How To Conquer Myths, Build Commitment, and Get Results
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The Book Consists of Four Parts
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We will only focus on:
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Chapter 1: Pull the Weeds Before You Plant the Flowers (1)
Pull the weeds. Then, and only then, plant the flowers.
Every education system has weeds, no matter how small they are. As
the growing academic growing season continues, we should not be
surprised when some of the new flowers are choked by the
omnipresent weeds.
Some school principals have a simple rule - they will introduce no
new program until they remove at least one or two existing activities,
plans, units, or other time-consumers. Don’t let the weeds rob the
students and teachers’ most precious resources - TIME.
Many schools steadfastly refuse to discard anything. Find your
current school practices which you find difficult to give up ...
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Chapter 1: Pull the Weeds Before You Plant the Flowers (2)
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Chapter 2: The Personal Change Readiness Assessment (1)
Consider several personal changes that you have made in the past
five years. These changes could represent a strategic or behavioral
change at work, or a change in your personal life, such as
improvement in your diet, exercise routine, or personal relationships.
You will be asked to evaluate each change on various criteria, using
a scale of 1 to 10.
Scale 1 represents no evidence of the characteristics described, and
Scale 10 represents an exceptional reflection of those characteristics
(planning, sense of urgency, personal support, personal focus, effect
on results).
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Chapter 2: The Personal Change Readiness Assessment (2)
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Chapter 2: The Personal Change Readiness Assessment (3)
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Chapter 2: The Personal Change Readiness Assessment (4)
Think the change for which you had the greatest sense
of urgency. Describe why the price of failure was high
- much higher than the price of change.
Change: ..................................................................
• If I failed to make this change, then ...
____________________________________
• If I succeeded in making this change, then ...
____________________________________
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Chapter 2: The Personal Change Readiness Assessment (5)
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Chapter 2: The Personal Change Readiness Assessment (6)
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Chapter 2: The Personal Change Readiness Assessment (7)
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Personal Change Readiness Assessment
Score 1 - 10 in each column, with 1 represents no evidence of the characteristic describes, and 10
representing an exceptional reflection of that characteristic.
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Finally, complete your personal change score
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Figure 2.1 Personal Change Readiness Assessment
Directions: For each change, enter a score of 1 to 10 in each column, with 1 representing no evidence of the characteristic described, and 10 representing an exceptional
reflection of that characteristic.
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3.
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Chapter 3: The Organizational Change Readiness Assessment
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Organizational Change Readiness Assessment
Score 1 - 10 in each column, with 1 represents no evidence of the characteristic describes, and 10
representing an exceptional reflection of that characteristic.
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Finally, complete your organizational change score
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Figure 3.1 Organizational Change Readiness Assessment
Directions: For each change, enter a score of 1 to 10 in each column, with 1 representing no evidence of the characteristic described, and 10 representing an exceptional
reflection of that characteristic.
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0 Personal Change Capacity 100
Change Readiness Matrix
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Chapter 4 Cultural Change
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Four imperatives of cultural change
1.Leaders must define what will not change. They must articulate
the values, practices, traditions, and relationships that will not be
lost.
2.Organizational culture will change with leadership actions,
speeches and announcements are not enough.
3.Use the right change tools for your system. Culture tools: rituals &
traditions, Power tools: threats & coercion; Management tools: training,
procedures, measurement systems; Leadership tools: role modeling, vision.
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Chapter 5: Confronting the Myths of Change Leadership
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