
Resiliency
and
Sustainability
Eight
elements for superintendents who want to make a difference and have
the resolve to do so
The
Oxford Thesaurus describes "resiliency with these words: elasticity,
flexibility, life, spring, stretch, tenacity, rigor. Why would anyone
want to be all of these things? And what does it take to do so?
Enter the superintendent who
wants to make a lasting difference.
Today's superintendency calls
on deep reserves from leaders who understand and seek to practice fundamental
tenets of what I call "system thinkers in action.” Such leaders
simultaneously understand the short term and the long term. They think
systemically and they act with practicality with the big picture in
mind.
As the bedrock of their existence,
leaders need to place their actions in the context of promoting greater
sustainability. Sustainability has eight core elements, each carrying
implications for those in the superintendency.
Eight Elements
The eight elements of sustainability
constitute the agenda for the superintendent who wants to make a difference
and has the resolve and energy to keep going.
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Public serve with moral
purpose.
Moral purpose always has been part of the teaching profession,
but it has remained at the level of the individual teacher and principal
who against all odds makes a difference in the lives of some students.
It has remained, in other words, on a small scale.
The superintendent is in a position to make moral purpose a system
quality. This means publicly fostering a commitment throughout the
school district on
(1)raising the bar and closing the gap ofstudent learning;
(2) treating people with demanding respect (caring within a framework
of high expectations); and; (3)altering the social environment(making
schools aware that all schools in the district must improve).
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Commitment to changing
context at all levels.
Changing whole systems means changing the entire context within
which people work. Researchers are fond of observing that "context
is everything.” If context is everything, we must directly focus
on how it can be changed for the better.
The sustaining superintendent is aware that he or she is engaged in
what I call "trilevel development”—what has to happen
at the school and community level, the districtwide level and the
system or state/federal policy level. Thus, superintendents must commit
to pursuing public value through changing context. The idea is to
give people new experiences, new capacities and new insights into
what should and can be accomplished. The eight elements in combination
give people a taste of the power of new context.
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Lateral capacity building
through networks
Centralization/decentralization is a perennial dilemma for those
interested in largescale reform. The two previous elements involve
recalibrating the relationship between the central office and the
schools. In the course of doing this, a powerful new strategy has
been discovered.
One of the most powerful means of fostering system or district identity
is to strengthen peer relations across schools.
Networked learning communities, clusters of schools working together,
walkthroughs and a host of other deliberate strategies are being established
throughout districts that are on the move.
Such purposeful interaction accomplishes two things: Quality knowledge
is shared and sorted; and mutual commitment is generated. Mobilizing
the minds and hearts of peers across the district is the key to deeper,
lasting reform.
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Intelligent accountability
and vertical relationships.
Sustainable school districts must constantly address (or hold
in dynamic tension) the problem of how to ensure both local ownership
on a large scale and external accountability. This complex problem
is best addressed by strengthening the capacity of schools to engage
in selfreview, but to do so transparently in relation to district
and state accountability frameworks.
Currently No Child Left Behind gets this wrong as it stresses only
the accountability side of the equation and ignores almost all of
the other elements of sustainability discussed here. By working on
building up the capacity of all schools in the district in relation
to the eight elements of sustainability, superintendents can become
politically as well as educationally effective.
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Deep learning.
Sustainability in my definition requires continuous improvement,
adaptation and collective problem solving in the face of complex challenges
that continually arise. Deep learning is essentially a matter of ambitious
and important goals: Raise the bar and close the gap for all with
respect to literacy and numeracy, emotional intelligence, thinking
and problem solving, teamwork and collaboration.
In these respects, assessment for learning has become a powerful tool.
This means new capacities need to be developed throughout the system.
Accessing student learning data on an ongoing basis, extracting meaning
through disaggregated analysis, forming action plans, monitoring implementation
and making further improvements are all part of this new constellation
of capacities that constitute a commitment to inquiry and deep learning.
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"The
superintendent is in a position to make moral purpose a system
quality" |
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Dual commitment to short-term
and long-term results.
Like most aspects of sustainability, things that look as if
they are mutually exclusive have to be brought together. On the
one hand, the new reality is that systems have to show progress,
let us say,within one election period, typically four years. Our
knowledge base is such that no excuse exists for failing to design,
implement and get short-term results.
On the other hand, a focus only on short-term results can be at
the expense of mid or long-term development. Put most directly,
systems should focus on tangible short-term results such as improved
literacy scores, but they must simultaneously work on establishing
the eight elements of sustainability because this is where longterm
payoff resides. Over time the system gets stronger, and fewer severe
problems occur as they are preempted by corrective action.
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Cyclical energizing.
"Sustain" comes from the Latin word "sustineo," which
means "to keep up,"” but this is misleading. Sustainability
paradoxically is not linear. It is cyclical for two fundamental
reasons. One has to do with energy, and the other wide, periodic
plateaus, where additional time and ingenuity are required for the
next breakthrough.
In their book The Power of Full Engagement, Jim Loehr and
Tony Schwartz presents four principles:
Principle 1: Full engagement requires four separate but
related sources of energy: physical, emotional, mental and spiritual.
Principle 2: Because energy capacity diminishes both with
overuse and underuse, we must balance energy expenditure with intermittent
energy renewal.
Principle 3: To build capacity we must push beyond our
normal limits, training in the same systematic way that elite athletes
do.
Principle 4: Positive energy rituals – highly specific
routines for managing energy – are key to managing full engagement
and sustained high performance.
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The long lever of leadership.
Archimedes said, "Give me a lever long enough and I can change
the world." For sustainability, that lever is leadership. The
main mark of a school superintendent at the end of his or her tenure
is not just the impact on the bottom line of student achievement,
but equally how many good leaders he or she leaves behind who can
go even further.
The superintendent's longer-term impact is literally through other
people. Developing other leaders in the district is absolutely critical.
Positive Bases
Leadership from superintendents
must focus on the eight components of sustainability or else progress
will not be made. How does a committed superintendent hold it all together,
stay the course and maintain resiliency?
In some political situations
with divided and dysfunctional school boards, it will not be possible.
One way of putting it is you might as well get fired for doing the right
thing.
More practically, doing the right thing by building system capacity is
both morally justifiable and in most cases politically effective. Superintendents
for sustainability create new positive power bases.
Many individual cases could
be cited to illustrate the implication, but let's take one further afield.
Knowsley Local Education Authority
in England, a metropolitan authority just east of Liverpool, is defined
as one of the most deprived areas in the country. It has considerably
higher levels of social and economic disadvantage than the national average.
In 1999, Knowsley was assessed
as being a seriously underperforming school district. A new superintendent,
Steve Munby, was appointed in 1999 and the question facing him was: Can
a lowperforming, complex and difficult urban district improve significantly
within four short years?
A 2003 external assessment
provides confirmation of substantial progress. Elementary school results
rose at a faster rate than the national average, retention rates increased
by 12 percentage points. Recently the superintendent led a complex and
successful community involvement process across the whole district that
resulted in an overwhelming endorsement of a plan to reduce the 11 secondary
schools to eight with a renewed focus on districtwid secondary school
innovation and reform.
Munby and his colleagues accomplished
all of this essentially by following many of the principles of outlined
above. The drivers for change were low student performance, new leadership,
external funding and narrowing the gap between the highest and lowest
performing schools.
The superintendent pointed
to "common moral purpose and shared principles" and "a teaching and
learning strategy establishing and sustaining the optimum mind state for
learning and meeting the human mind's need for novelty, challenge, meaning-making
and feedback in learning"” (read, deep learning).
Munby's priorities for sustainability
include: moral purpose; leadership in the big picture; training and support
of lead learners; clusterbased networks of action learning; describing
and sharing best practice; and support of further development embedding
a culture of co-planning, co-teaching, coreview where everyone is a leader
of learning.
Key Combination
Knowsley, of course, is not
yet an example of sustainability, but one can see clearly that it is on
the right track. The obvious question is what happens when a new superintendent
comes in. The track record on leadership succession in the superintendency
is abysmal. However, when it comes to sustainability it is not turnover
per se that is the problem but rather discontinuity of good direction.
When superintendents work on the eight elements of sustainability, they
greatly enhance (but do not guarantee) the conditions for future leadership
selection that could provide not only continuity but also the deepening
of good direction.
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Resilience is perseverance
plus flexibility, but you need a plan and a modus operandi. The big plan
is sustainability, and what keeps sustainable superintendents going is
the combination of moral purpose along with building leadership in others.
That combination increases the capacity of the whole system to show progress
as it establishes the conditions for going further.
Two simultaneous agendas are
at work. One is how individual superintendents can maintain resolve, energy
and effectiveness over time. We need more finegrained examples of what
strategies and habits enhance this possibility.
The second and companion agenda
is how we can improve systems so that structures and cultures are more
supportive of superintendents more possible to advance.
No matter how you cut it we
need superintendents who are system thinkers in action. That is, they
go about their work by simultaneously taking into account system forces
while attempting to alter these very forces in order to transform the
system itself. This is not only the route to greater accomplishments,
but also may be the key to superintendent resiliency.
Michael Fullan
is dean of the Ontario Institute for Studies in Education, University
of Toronto, 252 Bloor St. W., Toronto, Ontario M5S 1V6. Email: mfullan@oise.utoronto.ca.
His latest book is Leadership and Sustainability: System Thinkers in
Action (Corwin Press).
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