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Managing%20Yourself

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Title: Managing%20Yourself


1
Managing Yourself
  • Linda Denny

2
Introduction
  • Two topics
  • Managing your time to be more personally
    effective
  • Managing your communication so that you feel
    confident to change things

3
Setting the Scene
  • I never get thanked when it all goes smoothly
    only when something goes wrong. I am not really
    valued.
  • Teachers and Heads use their authoritarian style
    with me and Im an adult not a student! This does
    not make for easy conversations.
  • Each year it seems to get more complex, we are
    expected to do more. Where do I find more time?
  • I dont know if we have any ex-teachers in the
    room? But you may feel Teaching staff do not
    treat you as an equal. You are now support
    staff, even though you may have once been a
    Teacher! It makes you feel like a second class
    citizen.

4
Managing your time to be more personally effective
  • How to set priorities. Is everything important?
  • Overcoming procrastination. How to get started
    and when to ask for help.
  • How to feel resourceful when under pressure when
    theres that sense of I cannot do any more and...
    lastly....
  • Our focus on getting things wrong because that is
    what others at school or college notice. Instead
    we will look at Success tracking

5
1. Setting priorities. How do we know what to
spend our time on?
  • Can we do more? Are there more hours in the day?
    Assuming we dont want to increase our working
    day further then we must work differently. How do
    we do this? Be clear about the absolute
    priorities, what are the must haves, should
    haves and nice to haves
  • Big rocks example
  • Urgent versus Important Handout
  • Know what your distractions are and manage these
    e.g. answering every email as it comes in.
  • Know your best time of day to do important
    thinking and your lowest point of the day to do
    routine tasks.

6
2. Overcoming procrastination. Why do we put
things off repeatedly?
  • Often we put things off because we dont know how
    to do them or they dont play to our strengths.
    Getting started often helps with procrastination.
    Once we have taken the first steps, we can then
    seek feedback to check if we are going along the
    right lines. If there are areas we feel unsure
    about the trick is to ask for help...they will be
    someone elses strengths.
  • Creative silence helps with gaining perspective,
    solving problems and seeing connections.

7
3. Feeling resourceful. What to do when its all
too much?
  • Feeling resourceful is the mindset to have when
    you are feeling overwhelmed..
  • Using the Plumbing system handout to prepare for
    stressful times. Who and what are your radiators
    and drains? Take this away and have a go at
    completing it.
  • Recognise how your own strengths can be upturned
    when you are stressed. E.g. if you are highly
    organised then during stress you can become
    obsessively organised and expect everyone around
    you to be like this which can cause friction and
    affect relationships.
  • Talk to colleagues, friends, a partner if you are
    feeling overwhelmed. A problem shared is a
    problem halved.

8
4. Success tracking. Shouldnt I focus on whats
gone wrong?
  • Success tracking is about keeping a daily diary
    of what has gone well rather than our usual focus
    of what has gone wrong. After a week, then two
    weeks, then a month of seeing progress and good
    things happening, it helps build a positive
    mindset and confidence that you are making
    progress. 
  • Plus start mentioning some of the examples of
    success in your conversation at work. This is not
    about blowing your trumpet but doing yourself
    justice and building your reputation. Move the
    focus from whats gone wrong to whats gone right.

9
Managing your communication to feel confident to
change things
  • We can feel like second class citizens when we
    are talking to more senior and professional
    staff at schools and colleges. Especially if
    they are adopting their authoritarian style with
    you. If this is you, then that can be stressful.
    Instead we want you to feel valued and recognised
    for your contribution. We want you to know that
    others feel like this too! You are not alone.
    However there are things you can do as an
    Examination Officer.
  • Aim is to assist you in adapting your
    communication skills to feel more assertive,
    confident and proactive.

10
Confident Communication
  • Turning your ideas for change into good
    conversations
  • Using gender differences to help you
  • Utilising body language to be assertive
  • Visualising success

11
1. Turning your ideas for change into good
conversations
  • If and when you come up with ideas for change how
    do you convince senior teaching staff to listen?
  • Do your thinking, come up with options with pros
    and cons and arrange a meeting to discuss.
    Present your ideas with options and identify any
    benefits for them. Ask for their opinions and
    listen.

12
2. Using gender differences to help you
  • So do gender differences matter and how do you
    manage them at work? Would it be helpful to know
    how the mind of a male Head-teacher works? Or a
    female one?
  • As you know male and female brains are different.
    We think and process information differently.

13
Females
  • Are more effective at lying to males face to face
    because male brains are less skilled at spotting
    incongruencies between verbal and non verbal
    signals. 
  • Use sensitivity in differentiating tone changes
    enabling them to hear emotional changes and so
    read between the lines.
  •  
  • Pick up the visual, vocal and body language
    signals e.g. who is talking to who and the
    subtleties behind this.

14
Females
  • Have two speech centres in their brain, enabling
    them to be good conversationalists! (Men have
    one) 
  • Their brain is configured for multi-tasking
    because of the larger number of connections
    between the right and left. 
  • Have less function to store and so problems go
    round and round in their head. Hence the need to
    talk about them!

15
Males
  •  Are not so equipped to hear or see details.
  •  
  • Have a specific brain location for sensing
    direction and so find navigation and orientation
    easy. Men have better spatial skills.
  •  
  • Own a more compartmentalised brain and prefer to
    focus on one thing at a time. At the end of a day
    full of problems, they can effectively file and
    store them all away.

16
Tips to Manage differences at work
  • Utilise female strength at an event to sense what
    is going on and what the undercurrents are.
  • Tap into womens intuition and detect subtle mood
    and attitude changes in your team and peers.

17
Tips to Manage differences at work
  • Men have problem-solving minds and often feel
    with their own problems no need to share. With
    big problems not talking can lead to stress.
    Encourage male colleagues to talk about what is
    going on. Interestingly women are happy to share
    their problems but dont necessarily want advice
    but just to be listened to.
  • To encourage male listening and success at
    meetings, use an agenda and advance notice. This
    appeals to their logic, they understand why you
    are meeting and how they can help solve issues.

18
3. Utilising body language to be assertive
  • When you want to have a conversation and
    influence a senior staff member and be listened
    to body language can help you. Which of these 3
    styles is more you?
  • Circles of Energy model
  • Dominant body language . More likely to posture
    with the chest and jut out the chin. Tends to
    shout or speak loudly. Talks more than listens.
    Appears arrogant. Energy flowing out. 

19
Utilising body language to be assertive
  • Passive body language. Stands with a more curved
    head and spine, looking down to the floor.
    Breathing less able to support voice projection.
    Appear to lack confidence. Energy flowing
    inwards 
  • Assertive body language. Stands tall, breathes
    well, projects voice clearly without invading
    someones personal space. Listens as well as
    talks. Has good eye contact, smiles. Appears
    confident. Energy flowing in and out in balance.

20
4. Visualising success for a confident
conversation
  • So how do you prepare for a potentially stressful
    conversation or meeting? Heres how - Remember
    occasions in your past when you felt confident
    and successful. Perhaps when you had a really
    good meeting at work.
  • Use this as your template, your visualisation for
    the future. Make this a big, bright image and
    similarly make memories of difficult
    conversations small, distant and grey.
  • In the time leading up to an important
    conversation or meeting keep remembering the
    template, use the visualisation to help mentally
    prepare you. This really works. Try it!

21
Managing Yourself
  • Linda Denny
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