Stop Leading, Start Building!. Robyn R. Jackson

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      Stop Leading, Start Building! Turn Your School into a Success Story with the People and Resources You Already Have

      Robyn R. Jackson

      Table of Contents

       Acknowledgments

       Dedication

       Introduction: Why you haven't made a bigger difference in your school (and why it's not your fault)

       Chapter 1. Purpose: How to get off the "school improvement hamster wheel" once and for all

       Chapter 2. People: How to have an entire staff of master teachers (without having to "get rid" of anyone)

       Chapter 3. Pathway: How to stop tackling every challenge and focus on what matters most

       Chapter 4. Plan: How to knock down your biggest constraint in the next 90 days (even when "life" gets in the way)

       Chapter 5. Putting It All Together: How to start writing your success story right now

       Conclusion: Why shifting from leadership to buildership will make all the difference for you–this year and beyond

       References

       About the Author

       Related ASCD Resources

      Study Guide

       Copyright

      Publisher's note: This e-book has been formatted for viewing on e-reading devices.

      Select "Publisher Defaults," if your device offers that option, for best viewing experience.

      If you find some figures hard to read on your device, try viewing through an application for your desktop or laptop computer, such as Adobe Digital Editions (www.adobe.com/products/digitaleditions).

      © 2021 Robyn R. Jackson

      Acknowledgments

      . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

      Thank you to Charles, Sheri, Saundra, John, Genny, Katie, Jo-Jo, and Nola. We did it again.

      Dedication

      . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

       To builders everywhere.

       Your school success story will come.

       Keep building.

      Introduction

      Why you haven't made a bigger difference in your school (and why it's not your fault)

      . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

      I'm just going to start bluntly, OK?

      "Leadership" is dead.

      There.

      I said it.

      And as much as it pains me to say so, we all know it's true.

      For years, we have tried to use leadership to move our schools forward. We're trying still. We get into classrooms more, we adopt new programs, and we conduct data meeting after data meeting. We create ambitious school improvement plans, we organize teachers into professional learning communities (PLCs), and we bring in outside trainers. We tinker with the master schedule, and we stand in front of our staff, year after year, working hard to create a sense of urgency around the things that matter most.

      And yet, each year, we just grow more frustrated as the outcomes we seek still seem so far away. We progress toward our goals in inches—if we progress at all.

      I want you to know it's not your fault. It's how you were trained.

      If you're like most school administrators, you were trained to be a leader. You were given the tools of leadership, and you were told that they would help you transform your school. What they didn't tell you is that because "leadership" was created by the institution, it's designed to maintain the institution, not transform it.

      In order to transform your school, you need something more.

      This book is about that something more.

      Each year I help thousands of administrators stop wasting time and energy trying to drag their teachers toward their goals. I show them a new and better way. Now I want to show you.

      If you're like most of the administrators and instructional coaches I work with, you want to make a real difference in the lives of your students. You want to grow your school. You want to be able to look back on your work one day and know that you did something meaningful in your job, and that students' lives were changed because of it.

      But most days, you don't feel that way. Those grand goals are obscured by the daily grind of putting out fires; chasing, checking, and correcting people; and digging your way out from under a steady pile of "to-dos." What matters most recedes in the face of what's happening now. You work nights and weekends, sacrificing your personal time just to keep up. You face enormous pressure from both above and around you to perform.

      I get it. I used to feel the same way.

      As an instructional coach and a middle school administrator, I truly wanted to

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