Monday, January 18, 2016

I'm a teacher, I can't lead

Have you ever heard this? Maybe not in so many words, but I'm sure the sentiment carries over into other statements as well. I don't think it's laziness, I think there are many reasons and motivations for teachers to pass the buck onto someone that has a leadership "title." 

The fact is that teachers can and should be leaders. I actually could argue that teachers have more impact on initiatives than the leaders that enact them. Here are a few things to think about with teacher leadership.

1. Build Relationships - The best leaders that I have worked with are masters of this. I am still working on this myself, but teachers have the best opportunity to do this. Besides students, who spends more time with teachers than teachers? Make the best of the time with other teachers to build a relationship that can lead to positive change.

2. Conversations - Teachers can lead through one-on-one conversations with other teachers. You don't have to give lengthy speeches at staff meetings to be a leader. Sometimes the most powerful acts of change can start with a small conversation.

3. Stay Positive - I know it's hard. I didn't say you can't ever vent. That's different. Venting every day is not venting, it's just being a Debby Downer. Even in the face of negativity, the best leaders spread positivity. The change that leaders enact should focus on the positive, not the negative.

Teachers can be leaders. We have the opportunity to be leaders and we need to make the most of those oppotunities. 

Saturday, January 2, 2016

#oneword Commit

If you haven't heard about this #oneword movement, now you have. It's simple, pick just one word to focus on for the year. One word is simple and allows you to focus on that for the year.

I had to think for a while on mine. One word just kept popping up. Commit.

I want to commit to a few things this year.

1. Commit to my family. Spend quality time and commit to them.

2. Commit to understanding. Ask why. It's not always what you think.

3. Commit to literacy in my classroom. No more stand and deliver. My students will spend time reading and engaging with text. Everday.

4. Commit to blogging. I will blog more, I even started a new one. It's not ready yet, but it's getting there.

It's public now, so now I am committed.