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SEAL Social, Emotional, Aspects of Leadership

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Title: SEAL Social, Emotional, Aspects of Leadership


1
SEALSocial, Emotional, Aspects of Leadership
department for education and skills Creating
opportunity, releasing potential, achieving
excellence
2
The Context in which we work
Workforce remodelling Career structures Training,
developing a professional workforce
Every child matters Joint childrens services
Inclusion,Supporting vulnerable youngsters
3
EiC Outcomes
4
(No Transcript)
5
(No Transcript)
6
Prochaska DiClementes 6 stages of change
6
1
Relapse We need help to feel we can make a new
plan work
  • Precontemplation
  • We need
  • Clear understanding of problem
  • Concern about impact of problem

5
2
Maintenance We need help to continue any
programme of change
Contemplation We need to weigh up pros and cons
of change
  • Determination
  • We need help
  • Making a plan
  • Setting targets
  • Feeling confident
  • Action
  • We need help
  • Implementing plan
  • Staying motivated
  • persisting

3
4
7
In the same way that crash diets dont work, we
must abandon the search for a quick fix.
Emotion and Hope Constructive Concepts for
Complex Times, Micheal Fullan Rethinking
Educational Change With Heart and Mind
8
Organisations
Things are the way they are because they got that
way. Unless things change, they are likely to
remain the same.
9
Systems
Seeing the forest not just the trees.
10
People
  • Achieving a Common Understanding
  • Reculturing not Restructuring

Change would be easy if it werent for all the
people.
11
Ourselves
  • Self regard
  • Resilience
  • Regard for others
  • Goal directness
  • Flexibility
  • Intrapersonal intelligence
  • Interpersonal intelligence

12
The Terrain
13
January 2007 onwards LA Collaborative
Partnerships
14
Emotional Intelligence
  • Emotional intelligence refers to the ability to
    recognise the meanings of emotions and their
    relationships, and to reason and problem solve on
    the basis of them.
  • Emotional intelligence is involved in the
    capacity to perceive emotions, assimilate
    emotion-related feelings, understand the
    information of those emotions and manage them.
  • (Mayer, Caruso and Salovey, 1999)

15
Emotional Intelligence
  • Goleman identifies five key areas of emotional
    intelligence
  • Self-awareness - a capacity to recognize your
    feelings as they occur (the cornerstone of
    emotional intelligence)
  • Self-regulation - an ability to manage your
    emotional reactions, control impulse, and to
    recover from life's upsets (Resilience)

16
Emotional Intelligence
  • Self-motivation - skill at using your emotions in
    the service of a goal, staying hopeful despite
    setbacks
  • Social awareness - empathy, emotional sensitivity
    to others a talent for tuning into others'
    feelings, and reading their unspoken messages
  • Social skills - handling relationships, grace in
    dealing with others - strong social skills that
    are the key to popularity, leadership, and
    interpersonal effectiveness

17
Emotionally Intelligent Leadership Competencies
  • Self-Awareness
  • Emotional Self-Awareness - The ability to read
    your own emotions and to appreciate their impact
    on your actions, reactions, and decisions
  • Accurate Self-Assessment - The ability to know
    your own strengths and weaknesses
  • Self-Confidence - Having a reasonable sense of
    self-worth and abilities

18
Emotionally Intelligent Leadership Competencies
  • Self-Management
  • Emotional Self-Control - The ability to control
    emotions that are inappropriate
  • Transparency - Being honest and trustworthy, and
    having integrity
  • Adaptability - The ability to be flexible in
    changing situations
  • Achievement - The drive to meet inner standards
    of excellence
  • Initiative - Being ready to act and seize
    opportunities
  • Optimism - The ability to see the positive in
    events

19
Emotionally Intelligent Leadership Competencies
  • Social Awareness
  • Empathy - The ability to sense others' emotions
    and to understand their perspective
  • Organizational Awareness - The ability to sense
    the politics and networks of the organization
  • Service Orientation- The ability to understand
    and fulfil the needs of clients and followers

20
Emotionally Intelligent Leadership Competencies
  • Relationship Management
  • Developing Others - Building others' abilities
  • Inspirational Leadership - Having a compelling
    vision to lead with
  • Change Catalyst - The ability to initiate,
    manage, and lead in a new direction
  • Influence - The ability to utilise persuasion
  • Conflict Management - The ability to resolve
    disagreements
  • Teamwork and Collaboration - The ability to build
    and guide teams

21
The Training Model
department for education and skills Creating
opportunity, releasing potential, achieving
excellence
22
Five stage model
  • The training process is based on a model of
    effective training that follows five stages
  • Acquisition of knowledge
  • Modelling of good practice
  • Practice application
  • Feedback and reflection
  • Embedding the experience

23
Five stage model
Learners who learn a theory How many () will
transfer a new skill into their practice?
Answer 5
24
Five stage model
Learners who learn a theory see a
demonstration How many () will transfer a new
skill into their practice?
Answer 10
25
Five stage model
Learners who learn a theory see a demonstration
practise during training How many () will
transfer a new skill into their practice?
Answer 20
26
Five stage model
Learners who learn a theory see a demonstration
practise corrective feedback during
training How many () will transfer a new skill
into their practice?
Answer 25
27
Five stage model
Learners who learn a theory see a demonstration
in-situation coaching How many () will transfer
a new skill into their practice?
Answer 90
28
Five stage model
  • The training process is based on a model of
    effective training that follows five stages
  • Acquisition of knowledge
  • Modelling of good practice
  • Practice application
  • Feedback and reflection
  • Embedding the experience

29
The Programme
department for education and skills Creating
opportunity, releasing potential, achieving
excellence
30
Current workforce
  • There has been a dramatic increase in the number
    of staff involved with behaviour and attendance
    management
  • Currently about 30,000 nationally and growing
  • Inclusion managers, Lead Behaviour
    Professionals,LSU staff, Behaviour Support staff,
    EBD staff, Learning Mentors, Teaching Assistants,
    Connexions staff, KS3 BA Consultants, Primary
    Consultants, Primary Leading teachers, BIP
    co-ordinators, BEST members,Educational
    Psychologists,CAMHS staff, Health workers,EWOs,
    Police Liaison Officers, Home school liaison
    workers

31
Every member of staff matters
  • What do we want for the ECM workforce?
  • Be healthy
  • Stay safe
  • Enjoy and achieve
  • Make a positive contribution
  • Achieve economic well being
  • Supported by the common core curriculum for
    training
  • Staff training and development to promote the
    culture change required for effective multi
    disciplinary working is essential
  • Change for Children

32
NPSL-BA Programme Aims
  • Deepen knowledge and understanding of leadership
    for all staff working in the field of behaviour
    and attendance
  • Enhance self confidence and competence
  • Increase ability to lead innovation and change in
    the workplace supporting national strategies
  • Enable staff to undertake personal and
    professional development through a variety of
    approaches

33
Programme ethos
  • Developing leadership skills
  • Reflective learning
  • Group support
  • Work based evidence
  • Impact on young people

34
The elements
The NPSL-BA Programme
Qualification
Units of assessment
Study Day 1
Intersessional Activities of varying lengths
Study Materials Sessions 1-3
Learning Outcomes
Study Day 2
Study Materials Sessions 4-10
Reflective log
Producing evidence for portfolio
Study Day 3
ACTIVITY
ACCREDITATION
STIMULUS
35
Pathways to qualification
Certificate
SD1
SD3
SD2
DfES certificate
36
Future Opportunities
  • Make a positive contribution in the development
    of the integrated Childrens Services (i.e.
    Lessons Learnt).
  • Expand and broaden multi-agency work, to
    embrace five outcomes of ECM agenda.
  • Opportunity to be creative, unique and
    developing new working practices.
  • Develop a vibrant and motivated work force who
    share a common understanding, common working
    practices and common goals

37
Social, Emotional, Aspects of Leadership
  • Emotional Intelligent leadership demands the
    capacity to listen
  • EI leaders create managers curate
  • EI leaders seek opportunities for feedback
  • EI leaders reflect upon their experiences to draw
    out predictive patterns for success
  • EI leaders are learners

38
and finally
  • Focus on the journey,
  • not the destination.
  • Joy is found not in finishing an activity
  • but in doing it.
  • Greg Anderson 1964

39
West Midlands Regional Coordinator
  • Dennis Carty
  • d.carty_at_dfes.npslba.reading.ac.uk
  • 0786 128 9336 (Mobile)
  • 0121 772 8176 (Work)
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