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Building Strong School Teams Title I School Improvement Workshop
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Building Strong School Teams Title I School Improvement Workshop.

Mar 27, 2015

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Ariana Kirby
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Page 1: Building Strong School Teams Title I School Improvement Workshop.

Building Strong School Teams

Title I School Improvement Workshop

Page 2: Building Strong School Teams Title I School Improvement Workshop.

Essential Questions

• What does a well-functioning team look like?

• What does it look like when there is a lack of trust? How do we confront distrust?

• How do we begin to rebuild or strengthen trust?

Page 3: Building Strong School Teams Title I School Improvement Workshop.

Celebrations

• Think about something that is going well that you want to share with the rest of the team.

Page 4: Building Strong School Teams Title I School Improvement Workshop.

Revisiting PLCs

Page 5: Building Strong School Teams Title I School Improvement Workshop.

PLC Audit

• Complete audit individually

• Discuss audit with team

• What items did you rate the same?

• Where did the ratings differ?

• Come to consensus about where you are at this point.

Page 6: Building Strong School Teams Title I School Improvement Workshop.

Study

• What’s working?

• What isn’t working?– What changes need to be made?

– What needs to be abandoned?

Page 7: Building Strong School Teams Title I School Improvement Workshop.

Leading with Trust

How to Build Strong School Teams

Page 8: Building Strong School Teams Title I School Improvement Workshop.

BARRIERS TO TRUST

Page 9: Building Strong School Teams Title I School Improvement Workshop.

Distrust is the confident expectation that another’s motives, intentions, and behaviors are sinister and harmful to one’s own interests. In interdependent relationships, this often entails a sense of fear and anticipation of discomfort or danger. Distrust naturally prompts us to take steps that reduce our vulnerability in an attempt to protect our interests. Accordingly, our distrust of others is likely to evoke a competitive (as opposed to cooperative) orientation that stimulates and exacerbates conflict.

~Lewicki and Tomlinson, 2003

Page 10: Building Strong School Teams Title I School Improvement Workshop.

Barriers to Trust

• Discuss: What barriers to trust exist in your school?

• Fear

• Betrayal

• Carousel of Leadership

• Unions and School Leadership Confrontations

• Inappropriate Staff Development

Page 11: Building Strong School Teams Title I School Improvement Workshop.

Research Study on Trust

• Read “Research and Trust: Facts and Definitions”

• Individually complete section, “You and Your School”

• Compare where each team member rated various groups within the school

• Were your perceptions similar or different?

Page 12: Building Strong School Teams Title I School Improvement Workshop.

Distrust and PLCs

• Trust is necessary to the implementation of a PLC

• Trust cannot be assumed – it must be assessed

Page 13: Building Strong School Teams Title I School Improvement Workshop.

Trust Assessment Surveys• Leader Self-assessment Survey

• Staff Feedback about Leader

• Staff Trust Survey

Page 14: Building Strong School Teams Title I School Improvement Workshop.

BUILDING TRUST

Page 15: Building Strong School Teams Title I School Improvement Workshop.

Rebuilding or Strengthening Trust

• Three levels of trust-building activities– Low, high or medium

• Personal vs Interpersonal

Page 16: Building Strong School Teams Title I School Improvement Workshop.

“Building personal capacity has to do with the active and reflective construction of knowledge. It begins with a confrontation with the values, assumptions, belief systems, and practices that individuals embrace… This knowledge empowers them to begin a search for new knowledge and to reconstruct their personal narrative.”Coral Mitchell and Larry Sackney, as quoted in Leading with Trust

Page 17: Building Strong School Teams Title I School Improvement Workshop.

Personal Capacity

• Face your Fears– Pain to Power Chart– Dialogue with a Trusted Colleague– Identify What You Control

• Ask for Feedback– Self-reflection– Feedback from Staff

Page 18: Building Strong School Teams Title I School Improvement Workshop.

AdditionalPersonal Capacity

• Have a Positive Attitude

• Keep Your Sense of Humor

• Continue to Get Feedback

• Johari Window

• Self-assess

• Trust Yourself

• Walk your Talk

Page 19: Building Strong School Teams Title I School Improvement Workshop.

• "If you can laugh together, you can work together"

~Robert Orben

Link to gratitude dance

Page 20: Building Strong School Teams Title I School Improvement Workshop.

Interpersonal Capacity

• Student Learning

• Build Relationships

• Facilitation Team

• Staff Feedback

• Have Fun

• Acceptable Conduct

• Personal Stories

• Real Issues on the Table

• Issues to Actions

Page 21: Building Strong School Teams Title I School Improvement Workshop.

I’ve Been Framed

Individually reflect on:1. My personal beliefs about student learning

2. Why I became a teacher

3. Why I choose to stay in this career in a school

In pairs and then groups of two pairs, reflect on the answers. This is a simple sharing not a time to comment on anyone’s answers. The principal should share his or her ideas after everyone else.

Page 22: Building Strong School Teams Title I School Improvement Workshop.

Hot Buttons

These things/actions are critical to the success of the team

These things/actions pull our team off-task

When our team…I feel a real sense of accomplishment

These are my “Hot Buttons” on the team

This is my symbol for a well-functioning team

Page 23: Building Strong School Teams Title I School Improvement Workshop.

On the Table or Under the Table?

• Open up about them– Least serious to most serious– Better to deal with before they get worse

• Activity page 68 in Leading with Trust– Use questions to get staff to talk about

why this occurs– Pretend in parking lot and put comments

on sticky notes– Sort as a group

Page 24: Building Strong School Teams Title I School Improvement Workshop.

Action Plan

• Deal with the issues now on the table– Level One Fix

• What need to be fixed immediately

– Level Two Fix• Improve the process the led to the problem

– Level Three Fix• Improve or redesign the system that created the

process that caused the problem

Page 25: Building Strong School Teams Title I School Improvement Workshop.

Build on Success

• Brainstorm specific success

• Divide large group into smaller ones

• Brainstorm actions that led to the success

• Small groups report out

• Large group, list common themes and actions

• Apply these strategies and actions to a new problem

Page 26: Building Strong School Teams Title I School Improvement Workshop.

Graffiti Board

• Useful for getting other perspectives

• Quick, people can do on own time

• The problem proposer can evaluate the suggestions and choose those that will work

• Link

Page 27: Building Strong School Teams Title I School Improvement Workshop.

Open Space Technology

• People who are ready, willing and able will focus on issues they are passionate about.

1.Open space

2.Facilitator introduces theme and staff volunteer to facilitate a topic

3.The rest of the staff determines which group to join

4.Groups move to other areas to work.

Page 28: Building Strong School Teams Title I School Improvement Workshop.

Summary

• PLC development is ongoing

• There will be bumps in the road

• Trust is vital to strong PLCs

• Trust can be strengthened

• High trust = high problem solving ability

Page 29: Building Strong School Teams Title I School Improvement Workshop.

Resources

Gregory, G & Lin Kuzmich (2007). Teacher Teams that Get Results.

Stephenson, S. (2009). Leading with Trust: How to Build Strong School Teams

Page 30: Building Strong School Teams Title I School Improvement Workshop.

Exit Slip

3 Things I Learned Today …

2 Things I Found Interesting …

1 Question I Still Have …