What Micheal Fullan can teach instructional coaches
No author has had a bigger impact on my thinking about change and leadership than Michael Fullan . In his new book, The Six Secrets of Change he provides a great deal of food for thought for coaches and other leaders of change in education.
Below, I'll provide a few quotations from Michael's book on each of the six secrets, and then offer a few of my thoughts about their implications for coaches.
Secret One: Love Your Employees
Michael references many authors in the book, but in this section he includes several insights he gathered from a very interesting book, which I'll comment on in the future, Firms of Endearment. Here are a few quotations:
"One of the ways you love your employees is by creating the conditions for them to suceed" (p. 25)
"Carl Cohn (2007) says 'empowering those at the bottom beats punishing them from top" (p.25)
"… lead with credibility and caring, invest in frontline leadership, hire and retain for relational competence, use conflicts to build relationships, bridge the work-family divide, create boundary spanners, measure performance broadly, keep jobs flexible at the boundaries, make unions your partners, and build relationships with suppliers" ( pg. 32)
My comments
Coaching it seems to me, has a major role in "loving your employees." First, providing coaching that significantly supports professional learning clearly is one way that administrators can love their employees. Second, coaches, by engaging in respectful, compassionate conversation one person at a time, can lead culture change that creates more humane, respectful conversations. Third, punishing employees, as opposed to loving them, is likely the kiss of death for a coaching program.
Secret Two: Connect Peers With Purpose
"Purposeful peer interaction, or perhaps I should say positive purposeful peer interaction, works effectively under three conditions: (1) when the larger values of the organization and those of the individuals and groups mesh; (2) when information and knowledge about effective practices are widely and openly shared; and (3) when monitoring mechanisms are in place to detect and address ineffective actions while also identifying and consolidating effective practices." ( pg. 45)
"… identifying with an entity larger than oneself expands the self, with powerful consequences." ( pg. 49)
"When teachers within a school collaborate, they begin to think not just about “my classroom” but also about “our school.” ( pg. 49)
My comments
Reading this chapter, and listening to Michael at the recent SIM Conference, have got me thinking about ways in which coaches can expand their role to include supporting, facilitating, and operationalizing (that is taking ideas and helping them be translated into action) peer interaction in formal structures such as Professional Learning Communities and informal structures such as social settings. Coaches, I think, can do a lot to accelerate and amplify meaningful peer interaction.
But I also think that Web 2.0 can provide a mechanism for educators to share ideas, gain and provide support, and interact in other meaningful ways. It may be that the web will be an incredibly powerful tool for fostering purposeful, peer interaction.
Secret Three: Capacity Building Prevails
"Another way to love your employees is to select them well and then invest in their continuous development" (p. 57)
"One of the ways not to develop capacity is though criticism, punitive consequences, or what I more comprehensively call judgementalism. Judgmentalism is not just seeing something as unacceptable or ineffective. It is that, but it is particularly harmful when it is accompanied by pejorative stigma, if you will excuse the redundancy. The advice here, especially for a new leader, is don’t roll your eyes on day one when you see practice that is less than effective by your standards. Instead, invest in capacity building while suspending short-term judgment" ( p. 58)
My comments:
Well first, of course, instructional coaching is a great way to build capacity in schools. Also, the approach Michael refers to as non-judgmentalism, parallel's my own belief in the importance of what I call the partnership approach. Finally, one of the things that I am occasionally troubled by is the failure of school leaders to see the short-sitedness of focussing on quick fixes rather than long-term capacity building like coaching.
Secret Four: Learning is the Work
In this chapter Michael includes many ideas from Liker and Meyer's book Toyota Talent, another book I'll be discussing on this blog in the near future.
"the most important job of any manager is to teach workers to become more effective; “the biggest success of any manager is the success of the people they have taught (L & M, p. 313)” (p. 87)
…”real learning comes from repeated practice with additional coaching from the trainer (L & M, p. 246)” (p. 87)
“The objective is not to identify whom to blame for a problem, it is to find out where the system failed (L &M, p. 289)” (p.88)
“ 'If you want great people to do their best work, the logic goes, then you’ve got to create the right working conditions the moment they walk through the door' [from Taylor and LaBarre, p.261). And then you have to keep creating cultures of learning every day that they are on the job . pg. 89
My comments
My first reaction, is right on!, that is exactly the way we see it, but I as I think further about this, I want to add that we need to consider how Michael's comments apply to coaches themselves, that is, how can coaches ensure that they are doing excellent work, that they are continually improving. Since coaches are central to any organizational learning effort, I think it is essential that they are continuously learning and focussing on best practices. To put it another way, if the coaches aren't learning, ain't nobody learning.
Secret Five: Transparency Rules
"Transparency concerns assessing, communicating, and acting on data pertaining to the what, how, and outcomes of change efforts" (p. 93)
"Transparency is not causing teachers to become what my colleagues Dennis Shirley and Andy Hargreaves (2006) characterized as “data-driving to distraction.” It is insufficient to have strictly a results orientation; you also have to learn the processes and practices to achieve those desired results" (p. 93)
"Transparency involves being open about results and practices and is essentially an exercise in pursuing and nailing down problems that recur and identifying evidence-informed responses to them" (p.99)
"To move beyond mere transparency, we have to work on the conditions under which transparency can be used simultaneously for both improvement and accountability. We know that people will cover up and not report problems if the culture punishes them So one thing we need to work on is developing cultures in which it is normal to experience problems and solve them as they occur – exactly what the organizations we have been discussing do. In other words, effective cultures embrace transparency and the use of data as a core part of their work" (p.101)
"in all cases of successful change transparent data are used as tools for improvement" (p.102)
My comments
Authors such as Joellen Killion and Nancy Love have much to teach us about how coaches can support the meaningful analysis of data as well as support instructional improvements that are derived from that data. Also, again, coaches should also use data to honestly look at and improve their effectiveness. By analyzing and acting on data such as implementation rates, number of teachers worked with, quality of implementation, student achievement improvements, and uses of time can all help coaches improve their practices.
Secret Six: Systems Learn
Michael includes a quotation from Hargreaves and Fink: "Discontinuity that is reversing a bad situation needs to be pushed with steadfastness over a long period of time, until it becomes the new continuity. While planned discontinuity can yield rapid results, its leadership needs time to consolidate the new culture, to embed it in the hearts and minds of everyone. Repeatedly, planned discontinuity was effective in shaking up the schools in our study but not at making changes stick… Leaders of planned discontinuity in schools were transferred to struggling schools elsewhere long before their existing work had been completed. The result was a constant cycle of change throughout schools in the system but little lasting improvement in any one of them [2006, p. 69]" (p. 108)
"The first task of Secret Six is to enact the first five secrets. By so doing, organizational members will feel valued and be valued (Secret One), be engaged in purposeful peer interaction that generates knowledge and commitment (Secret Two), build their individual and collective capacity (Secret Three), learn every day on the job (Secret Four) and experience the value of transparency in practice linked to marking progress (Secret Five). The net effect is a critical mass of organizational colleagues who are indeed learners. Because their worlds have in fact become enlarged through wider engagement inside and outside the organization, they have a broader system perspective and are more likely to act with the larger context in mind" (p.111)
"Leaders who operate from a position of certitude are bound to miss something, are likely to be wrong more than their share of times, and almost certainly will not learn from their experiences" (p. 117)
My comments:
Of course, coaching stands at the heart of secret six in that coaches empower others to be learners, and by facilitating individual positive learning experiences. By ensuring that individuals are successful, and by letting others know about that success, and by facilitating networking and sharing of ideas, coaches can be important creators of learning cultures.
Andy Hargreaves' idea about discontinuous change also has implications for coaches. If schools are in a merry-go-round of change, what I call, the Atttempt, Attack, Abandon cycle, they make it difficult for coaches to be effective simply because teachers in such situations are often suspicious of any new initiatives.
All in all, taking the time to think this through a little, I am impressed by how valuable Six Secrets of Change could be for a coach. THe more coaches know about change, the more successful they can be, and the more they will indeed be able to lead positive improvements in their schools.
Next week I will write about Slide:ology, a new book about preparing presentations by Susan Duarte, president of the consulting firm that helped Al Gore create his Inconvenient Truth presentation. If you liked Presentation Zen, you'll find this book very interesting.
You can see an edited version of Michael Fullan's presentation on the Six Secrets at the CRL Learns website