Ideas and practices to make your organization more agile, thriving and responsive.

Building Experts Within a Responsive Team

Written by Chas Coker and Kelly Freiheit | Feb 14, 2019 4:00:00 PM

The impetus for change at a high school with over 200+ staff members came this school year when a group of enthusiastic leaders was determined to see the vision of student-centered learning live inside and outside of the hallways at Wando High School. Like many high schools around the country, members of the 21st Century Learning Team (also known as a School PL Team) of the largest high school in Charleston County School District were struggling to get the message and communication out to their own staff members. Overall, the staff was aware of the vision for the work but unclear on the indicators of the implementation and how the school was measuring success.

The 21st Century Learning Team needed to build a network of experts to support the design and delivery of high-quality professional development. It was critical that the team create structures to transfer knowledge, develop content, and support real-time learning, along with presenting and reflecting on practices and adult learning. Prior to the start of the school year, the team engaged with Rule #3: Define the Work Before You Define the People from Anthony Kim’s book The NEW School Rules: 6 Vital Practices for Thriving and Responsive Schools. The team spent time defining the roles they needed to support the implementation of student-centered learning at their school. They knew they had a group of enthusiastic leaders as part of the 21st Century Learning Team, but they also knew from previous experience that they needed to be more strategic about what each member on the team was doing and how they were building more capacity in others outside of the team. Using the Roles Workout 3A: Build Skills to Rethink Roles, they realized three things:

  • Clarity on ownership was not only important within the team but also outside of the team. The team had defined roles and accountabilities based on needs they saw in their high school. They realized that there was no way they would have known this a year prior, and recognized the importance of coming back to roles and accountabilities throughout the process.

  • Recruiting others was a lever to building more champions around student-centered learning. The team needed to recruit others outside of the original team to support the different accountabilities they needed to make the implementation stronger.

  • The team needed dedicated time to learn to work together efficiently and effectively. The team needed to reset the makeup of their 21st Century Learning Team. Similar to a basketball team, they needed to learn how to work with each other on a more frequent basis.

By working with Rule #3: Define the Work Before You Define the People using the Roles Workout 3A: Build Skills to Rethink Roles, the 21st Century Learning Team was able to come to an agreement on how they were going to continue to build more momentum around student-centered learning at their school. Below, you can see a graphic recording of version 1 of our team’s engagement with the workout.

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Looking for more ways to engage with the principles of The NEW School Rules? Join us at one of our Leadership Institutes for district leaders. Space in is limited - sign up today to save spots for you and your team.