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personalized learning blog

b.y.o.t bring your own thoughts

k-12 education resources

the latest on all student-centered models, leadership development, strategic planning, teacher retention, and all things innovation in k-12 education. we answer questions before you think to ask them.

andy shaw

andy shaw is a senior design principal on the design & implementation team, working with district and school teams to improve student outcomes through inclusive and intentional change processes. andy has worked in education since 2002, first as a high school mathematics teacher and then for seven years as a high school administrator. most recently, he served as the dean of curriculum and innovation at the bay school, a progressive high school in san francisco, where he led a future-focused redesign of the school's curriculum, calendar, and bell schedule. andy's passion is for process: keeping students, teachers and staff, school values, and culture at the heart of major initiatives. he holds a b.a in mathematics from bowdoin college and a master's of arts in education leadership from teachers college at columbia university. andy is originally from maryland and currently lives in berkeley, ca.

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innovative leadership

7 reasons courage is mission-critical to innovative school leadership

every team meeting we have at 瑞士vs喀麦隆亚盘赔率 begins with a check-in question. sometimes it takes me a while to come up with my answer, but on a call recently it was a no-brainer: “what trait do you most value in a leader?” to me, that’s simple – it’s courage, for two key reasons. first, because courage in leadership is rare, or at least more rare than it should be. and second, because courage is a superpower when it comes to leading innovation, building culture, and enabling transformation. my colleagues and i do a lot of work with leaders, and our framework for innovative leadership is built around a set of competencies that directly feed, strengthen, and enrich leaders’ courage, a mission-critical element of their leadership. while the list could go on and on, here are seven leadership superpowers that courage can activate.

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teacher retention

a year on the road: 3 factors for successful educational change

“what’s it like in other schools? in other districts? in other states?” after eight years in the classroom as a math teacher and another seven as a school leader, i transitioned into a role at 瑞士vs喀麦隆亚盘赔率 just over a year ago in part because i wanted answers to those questions. the field of education has that head-down, just-keep-digging quality to it, where we’re so far down in our trenches that it often feels impossible to pause, lift one’s head, and get a sense of the landscape. i wanted to see what factors were supporting successful innovation, reform, outside-the-box thinking, and school change around the country, even if doing so meant leaving a school i loved and had helped build. a year in, i’ve worked directly with teams from close to a hundred schools and visited dozens of their campuses. in just 12 months i’ve collaborated with ten districts in six states. i certainly can’t pretend to have anywhere near a complete picture or complete answer, but as i think about what drives successful future-focused education, some factors are abundantly clear. the districts and teams i’ve seen doing it well seem to have certain approaches in common.

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innovative leadership

avoid the 49 degree rule: 4 ways to put people before policies

sometimes, the really thought-provoking stuff just lands in your lap...or in the seat next to you. on a recent flight, i was lucky enough to sit next to an employee of one of the major airlines, who shared anecdotes about the culture change she experienced after the airline she worked for was acquired by another carrier. the most compelling anecdote she shared: the “49-degree rule”. apparently, the airline she’d originally worked for had been very focused on the notion of employee autonomy and empowerment, but the acquisition came with a host of new rules and policies, including one that said employees were only permitted to wear their jackets at work when the ambient temperature was at or below 49° fahrenheit. what??!!

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school districts

do you need an education consultant?

“working with consultants isn’t cheap - how do we know if it’s what we need?” we hear that one a lot as we talk to districts considering whether they should hire a consultant to help them personalize learning in their schools. there’s no right or wrong answer as to whether you should seek support or go it alone, but there are some questions that are worth thinking about as you consider your path.

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innovative leadership

a new way to think about innovative school and district leadership

what’s the most meaningful thing a district can do to support innovation in its schools? when my colleagues and i at 瑞士vs喀麦隆亚盘赔率 work with schools and districts, our approach to innovation and change involves a framework of 25 key factors, all of which are important. in the past year, though, we’ve been thinking a great deal about one of these – “roles to support teachers” – and the tremendous impact it has on innovation. specifically, we’ve come to believe that there is a certain kind of innovative leadership, a set of skills and a way of thinking about innovation, that can enable district leaders, instructional coaches, school leaders, and teacher-leaders to have a transformative impact on their schools through the way they support teachers. we believe that one of the single most impactful efforts a district can undertake is to help their district leaders, school leaders, instructional coaches, and teacher-leaders learn to practice this kind of innovative leadership.

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