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POSITION PERSUADE PERFORM

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Title: POSITION PERSUADE PERFORM


1
POSITION PERSUADE PERFORM A Practical
Leadership Process for Principals Peter
Evans General Manager, Education Technology Ph
0400 842 484 peter.evans_at_editure.com
2
Topics
  • Context
  • What is Management?
  • What is Leadership? Good leadership?
  • The Developmental Learning Framework for School
    Leaders
  • Two Managerial Models for Leadership
  • How Hewlett-Packard defined leadership
  • How ISR defines leadership
  • Case Study
  • The challenge of moving to the digital school
  • Conclusions

3
Topics
  • Context
  • What is Management?
  • What is Leadership? Good leadership?
  • The Developmental Learning Framework for School
    Leaders
  • Two Managerial Models for Leadership
  • How Hewlett-Packard defined leadership
  • How ISR defines leadership
  • Case Study
  • The challenge of moving to the digital school
  • Conclusions

4
Classical definitions management leadership
  • Management is achieving results through others
  • Managers rely on the efforts of other people and
    must induce them to expend effort
  • Scientific management theories of the 20th
    century focused on control, order and hierarchy
  • 21st century management theories are emphasising
    empowerment, values and flexibility
  • Leadership is the process of influencing others
    to achieve organisational goals.
  • Leadership power can come from
  • Position (i.e., formal power as manager)
  • Expertise / knowledge
  • Respect or affection
  • The ability to influence pay, promotion or
    recognition
  • The ability to punish


5
Some Classical Leadership Models
  • Blake and Moutons Managerial Grid
  • Fiedlers contingency model
  • Hershey Blanchards situational leadership
    theory
  • Path-goal theory
  • Spreier, Fontaine Malloys model

6
Successful Leaders
  • Clarify what is important to them, especially
    their own values and beliefs
  • Adopt the right leadership style for the
    situation, organisation staff
  • Get their right balance between focus on task and
    on people
  • Have functional expertise, change management
    skills local knowledge
  • Demonstrate the courage to do what is right
    despite personal risk or discomfort
  • Are assertive with respect
  • Say no when necessary but predictably and
    consistently
  • Take well-reasoned stands to resolve important
    issues
  • Lead others to follow through on difficult
    actions or initiatives
  • Generate breakthroughs by championing new ideas
    and initiatives
  • Are willing to make bold yet well-reasoned moves
  • Demonstrate inspiring leadership and courage such
    that others want and choose to follow

Source Successful Managers Handbook, 7th
Edition - Personnel Decisions International
ePredix, Minneapolis 2004, pages 516-517,
558-568 (Chapter 25), 603-604
7
Leaders and Followers
  • Leaders cannot lead unless others are willing to
    follow or be involved. In most organisations
    people will not follow someone just because he or
    she has the title of leader or manager. People
    will follow when they share the vision, it makes
    sense, and they trust a leader who is passionate
    about the vision.

Source Successful Managers Handbook, 7th
Edition - Personnel Decisions International
ePredix, Minneapolis 2004, page 619
8
Topics
  • Context
  • What is Management?
  • What is Leadership? Good leadership?
  • The Developmental Learning Framework for School
    Leaders
  • Two Managerial Models for Leadership
  • How Hewlett-Packard defined leadership
  • How ISR defines leadership
  • Case Study
  • The challenge of moving to the digital school
  • Conclusions

9
Context
  • The Framework is a critical part of the
    Victorian Office of School Educations Learning
    to Lead Effective Schools strategy
  • This strategy, launched in 2006, comprises
  • Principal Class Performance and Development
  • Principal Selection
  • Learning to Lead Effective Schools Professional
    Learning for Aspirant and Current School Leaders
  • The Developmental Learning Framework for School
    Leaders
  • The Framework
  • recognises that leadership must be distributed
    and shared widely
  • aims to build the leadership capability of
    teachers and school leaders in the Victorian
    government school system
  • assumes leadership is learnable body of
    knowledge, skills and dispositions
  • assists teachers and school leaders to reflect on
    their leadership practice, identify strengths and
    areas for improvement and choose appropriate
    professional learning activities ? developmental
    pathways
  • supports self-evaluation using a 360 degree
    feedback survey and reflection
  • provides a focus for coaching and mentoring
    partnerships

10
Organisation of the Framework
  • Three main components Domains, Capabilities and
    Profiles
  • Leadership Domains
  • Technical, Human, Educational, Symbolic and
    Cultural
  • Leadership Capabilities
  • Three Capabilities in each Domain
  • Represent the expected knowledge, skills and
    dispositions for effective leadership performance
  • Each Capability is supported by a set of critical
    indicative tasks that need to be performed to
    provide evidence of the capability
  • Each of the tasks can be performed at varying
    levels of quality the level of performance
    quality defines the overall level of capability
    shown
  • Leadership Profiles
  • Within each Leadership Domain, there is a set of
    proficiency level statements(5 levels for all
    domains, except Symbolic Leadership, which has 4
    levels)
  • These statements describe how a leader performs
    across the range of Leadership Capabilities
    relevant to that domain
  • They also allow a school leader to match their
    own performance to a proficiency level with the
    Domain Profiles

11
The Framework
TECHNICAL LEADERSHIP
HUMAN LEADERSHIP
CULTURAL LEADERSHIP
EDUCATIONAL LEADERSHIP
SYMBOLIC LEADERSHIP
Original Source Sergiovanni, T.J. (1984),
Handbook for effective department leadership
concepts and practices in
todays secondary schools, Boston Allyn and
Bacon. Sergiovanni,
T.J. (2005), The Principalship A Reflective
Practice Perspective,
5th Edition, Boston Allyn and Bacon
12
The Frameworks Domains
  • TECHNICAL LEADERSHIP
  • An effective leader demonstrates the capacityto
    optimise the schools financial, human and
    physicalresources through sound management
    practicesand organisational systems that
    contribute to theachievement of the schools
    vision and goals
  • CAPABILITIES
  • Thinks and plans strategically
  • Aligns resources with the desired outcomes
  • Holds self and others to account

13
The Frameworks Domains
  • HUMAN LEADERSHIP
  • An effective leader demonstrates the abilityto
    foster a safe, purposeful and inclusive
    learningenvironment, and a capacity to develop
    constructiveand respectful relationships with
    staff, students,parents and other
    stakeholders
  • CAPABILITIES
  • Advocates for all students
  • Develops relationships
  • Develops individual and collective capacity

14
The Frameworks Domains
  • EDUCATIONAL LEADERSHIP
  • An effective leader demonstrates the capacityto
    lead, manage and monitor the school
    improvementprocess through a current and
    critical understandingof the learning process
    and its implications forenhancing high quality
    teaching and learningin every classroom in the
    school
  • CAPABILITIES
  • Shapes pedagogy
  • Focuses on achievement
  • Promotes inquiry and reflection

15
The Frameworks Domains
  • SYMBOLIC LEADERSHIP
  • An effective leader demonstrates the capacityto
    model important values and behaviours to
    theschool and community, including a
    commitmentto creating and sustaining effective
    professionallearning communities within the
    school, and across all levels of the system
  • CAPABILITIES
  • Develops and manages self
  • Aligns actions with shared values
  • Creates and shares knowledge

16
The Frameworks Domains
  • CULTURAL LEADERSHIP
  • An effective leader demonstrates an
    understandingof the characteristics of effective
    schools and acapacity to lead the school
    community in promotinga vision of the future,
    underpinned by commonpurposes and values that
    will secure the commitmentand alignment of
    stakeholders to realise thepotential of all
    students
  • CAPABILITIES
  • Shapes the future
  • Develops a unique school culture
  • Sustains partnerships and networks

17
Topics
  • Context
  • What is Management?
  • What is Leadership? Good leadership?
  • The Developmental Learning Framework for School
    Leaders
  • Two Managerial Models for Leadership
  • How Hewlett-Packard defined leadership
  • How ISR defines leadership
  • Case Study
  • The challenge of moving to the digital school
  • Conclusions

18
HPs Leadership Framework
  • An interdependent system

19
ISRs Organisational Leadership Effectiveness
Framework
Effective leaders demonstrate certain behaviours
in a particular sequence
Source ISR Seminar May 2004, The Key Elements
that Differentiate Financially High Performing
Organisations
20
ISRs Framework of Organisational Leadership
Effectiveness The focus of different levels and
the need for cascaded leadership
A companys leadership reaches well beyond a few
good men and women at the top. It typically
includes the 3 to 5 of employees throughout the
organisation who can deliver breakthroughs in
performance. (Tsun-yan Hsieh and Sara Yik,
Leadership as the starting point of strategy,
The McKinsey Quarterly, 2005 No. 1, p67)
21
ISR As Leadership is Critical, What Do Effective
Leaders Do?
  • Demonstrate certain behaviours (what) at the
    right time (when) and in a specific sequence
    (how).
  • Bring their followers along with them. Leaders
    behaviour encourages employees to adopt a view of
    the world similar to their leaders.
  • Ensure alignment with one another on the
    strategy.
  • Understand and act on the cultural drivers that
    best impact the execution of the strategic
    priorities.
  • Leaders pull the cultural drivers to create
    the appropriate operating environment that
    engenders employee engagement.

Leadership
EmployeeEngagement
Organisation Culture
Strategy
Performance Results
22
Topics
  • Context
  • What is Management?
  • What is Leadership? Good leadership?
  • The Developmental Learning Framework for School
    Leaders
  • Two Managerial Models for Leadership
  • How Hewlett-Packard defined leadership
  • How ISR defines leadership
  • Case Study
  • The challenge of moving to the digital school
  • Conclusions

23
Blockers to moving to the digital school
  • Teachers lack of comfort with using technology
    for teaching and learning (Price, Cates,
    Bodzin, 2002)
  • When teachers use technology in the classroom, it
    tends to be teacher- centered, used in fairly
    rigid ways information gathering and word
    processing (Price et al., 2002)
  • Teachers believe that new technologies are
    unproven in the classroom (Royer, 2002)
  • Schools find themselves stuck in a series of
    initial implementation efforts, trying one thing
    after another, and not achieving full
    implementation of a program (Wallace, Blase,
    Fixsen, Naoom, 2007)
  • Focus is often on introducing new technologies
    without a plan for implementing and scaling up
    new technologies.
  • Lack of strong, senior leadership (Wagner, 2008)

24
Enablers to moving to the digital school
Leadership
  • Use of new technologies is prioritised
  • Role models
  • Motivators/Cheerleaders
  • Resource Provider
  • Facilitator

Organisation and school structure
Professional Development
  • Culture supports change
  • Encourages teacher autonomy as well as
    collaboration
  • Shared vision with whole school community
  • Celebration of success
  • Basic technical knowledge
  • Integration strategies
  • Ongoing, just-in-time
  • Planned and intentional PD
  • Systemic PD

Resources and support
  • Technology support
  • Support for participation
  • Administrative support
  • Community support
  • External support
  • Room and time for serious play

From Factors that Facilitate Technology
Implementation CITEd Research Center
http//www.cited.org/index.aspx?page_id187
25
Educational Technology Implementation
Effective Leadership Framework
26
Topics
  • Context
  • What is Management?
  • What is Leadership? Good leadership?
  • The Developmental Learning Framework for School
    Leaders
  • Two Managerial Models for Leadership
  • How Hewlett-Packard defined leadership
  • How ISR defines leadership
  • Case Study
  • The challenge of moving to the digital school
  • Conclusions

27
  • Great things can happen when you dont care who
    gets the credit. 
  • Mark Twain

28
  • It is wonderful when the people believe in the
    leader
  • It is more wonderful when the leader believes in
    the people

29
  • Good leaders
  • lead themselves
  • lead others
  • lead context
  • lead change
  • Tsun-yan Hsieh and Sara Yik(McKinsey Quarterly)

30
  • Good leaders are one the people fear and hate.
  • Great leaders, the people honour and praise.
  • Greatest leaders, the people do not notice their
    existence.
  • Lead people by walking beside them..
  • And when the best leader's work is done, the
    people say, We did it ourselves.
  • Old Chinese philosophy

31
Education...the new way
32
Blake and Moutons Managerial Grid
  • The best leaders are intensely task-focused and
    intensely people-focused
  • Their model is based on the assumption that there
    are ten major emerging principles of human
    behaviour critical to effective leadership
  • Fulfilment through participation is the
    motivation that gives character to human activity
    and supports productivity
  • Open communication is essential for the exercise
    of self shared responsibility
  • Accepting others as capable of reaching standards
    of excellence promotes trust and respect
  • Shared participation in problem solving and
    decision making stimulates active involvement and
    commitment, productivity and creative thinking
  • Conflicts are solved by direct confrontation of
    their causes, with understanding and agreement as
    the basis of cooperative effort
  • Mutual agreement is the strongest basis for
    supervision
  • Effective integration between boss and
    subordinate enhances synergy
  • Management is by objectives
  • Organisation members who cooperate are
    interdependent in giving mutual support
  • Learning from work experience is through critique
    and feedback

33
Blake and Moutons Managerial Grid
High
9,9Team ManagementWork accomplishment is
fromcommitted people, interdependencethrough a
common stake in organisation purpose leads
torelationships of trust and respect.
1,9Country Club ManagementThoughtful attention
to needs of peoplefor satisfying relationships
leads to acomfortable, friendly
organisationatmosphere and work tempo.
9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1
Concern for People
5,5Middle-of-the-road ManagementAdequate
organisation performance ispossible, through
balancing the necessityto get out work with
maintainingmorale of people at a satisfactory
level
9,1Authority-ComplianceEfficiency in operations
results fromarranging conditions of work insuch
a way that human elementsinterfere to a minimum
degree.
1,1Impoverished ManagementExertion of minimum
effort to getrequired work done is
appropriateto sustain organisation membership.
Low
1 2 3 4 5
6 7 8 9
Low Concern for Production
High
Source R.R. Blake J.S. Mouton, The Managerial
Grid III The Key to Leadership
Excellence,Houston Gulf Publishing Company,
1985, page 12
34
Fiedlers Contingency Theory
  • Leaders least preferred co-worker orientation
    measured
  • Either task-oriented or relationship-oriented
  • Situational factor assessed
  • Leader-member relations ? support leader has from
    group members
  • Task structure ? clarity of a tasks goals,
    methods performance standards
  • Position power ? amount of power organisation
    gives leader to get tasks done

Decreasing situational favourability/control
good
poor
Elementsofsituation
high
low
low
high
Octant
Leadercharac-teristics
Source F.E. Fiedler, A Theory of Leadership
Effectiveness,New York McGraw-Hill, 1967
35
Hershey and Blanchards Situational Leadership
Theory
  • Situational leadership model states leader
    behaviours must change based on follower
    readiness
  • Follower readiness
  • Ability (job readiness)? ability, skill,
    knowledge, experience needed for a task or way of
    working
  • Willingness (psychological readiness)?
    confidence, commitment and motivation to complete
    a task

MODERATE
Source P. Hersey K.H. Blanchard, Management of
Organizational Behavior Utilizing Human
Resources,Englewood Cliffs Prentice Hall, 1988
36
Hershey and Blanchards Situational Leadership
Theory
  • Situational leadership model states leader
    behaviours must change based on follower
    readiness
  • Leader behaviour
  • Task behaviour ? how much leader tells people
    what to do how, when where to do it and who
    is to do it
  • Relationship behaviour ? how much leader uses
    two-way or multiway communication
    listen/facilitate

(high)
2Explaindecisionsand provideopportunity
forclarification
3Share ideasand facilitatein
decisionmaking
High taskhigh rel.
High rel.low task
(Supportive Behaviour) RELATIONSHIP BEHAVIOUR
High tasklow. rel
Low rel.low task
4Turn overresponsibilityfor
decisionsandimplementation
1Providespecificinstructionsand
closelysuperviseperformance
(low)
(high)
TASK BEHAVIOUR(Guidance)
37
Hershey and Blanchards Situational Leadership
Theory
  • Leader behaviour
  • Telling
  • Used for low-readiness (R1)
  • Give people directions on what to do how to do
    it
  • Selling
  • Used for low-moderate readiness (R2)
  • Give specific directions, but support enthusiasm
  • Participating
  • Used for moderate-high readiness (R3)
  • Supportive, participating style emphasising
    communication and collaboration
  • Delegating
  • Used for high readiness (R4)
  • Little support or direction needed

(high)
2Explaindecisionsand provideopportunity
forclarification
3Share ideasand facilitatein
decisionmaking
High taskhigh rel.
High rel.low task
(Supportive Behaviour) RELATIONSHIP BEHAVIOUR
High tasklow. rel
Low rel.low task
4Turn overresponsibilityfor
decisionsandimplementation
1Providespecificinstructionsand
closelysuperviseperformance
(low)
(high)
TASK BEHAVIOUR(Guidance)
38
Path-goal theory
  • Explains how leader behaviour influences
    subordinates motivation and job satisfaction
  • Leaders seek to influence subordinates
    perception of work goals and paths to achieve
    both work and personal goals
  • Based on expectancy motivation theory
  • Effort-performance expectancy
  • Probability that effort will lead to performance
    level required
  • Performance-outcome expectancy
  • Probability successful performance will lead to
    outcomes / rewards
  • Valence
  • Anticipated value of outcomes / rewards

Source R.H. House T.R. Mitchell, Path-Goal
Theory of Leadership, Journal of Contemporary
Business,Autumn 1974, pp 81-97
39
Path-goal theory
  • Considers two dimensions which can affect
    path-goal
  • Leader behaviours (all assumed to be usable by
    same leader )
  • Directive ? task-oriented
  • Supportive ? relationship-oriented
  • Participative ? consultative
  • Achievement-oriented ? challenging
  • Situational factors
  • Subordinate characteristics? traits, skills,
    abilities, needs
  • Context characteristics ? task, work group,
    organisations formal authority system
  • The leader must consider the situational factors
    to assess which leader behaviours will best
    enhance subordinates path-goal motivation and
    job satisfaction. Practical approach
  • Anticipated end result ?
  • Expectancy theory element ?
  • Situational factor to be changed ?
  • Leader behaviour to be selected

40
Six Styles of Leadership
  • Directive
  • Entails strong, sometimes coercive behaviour
  • Visionary
  • Focuses on clarity and communication
  • Affiliative
  • Emphasises harmony and relationships
  • Participative
  • Collaborative and democratic
  • Pacesetting
  • Characterised by personal heroics
  • Coaching
  • Focuses on long-term development and mentoring

Source S.W. Spreier, M.H. Fontaine, R.L. Malloy,
Leadership Run Amok The Destructive Potential of
Overachievers,Harvard Business Review, June
2006, pages 77, 80
41
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42
References
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43
Education...the new way
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