Second section…
This is the start of my thinking about school development – or school improvement. I am sharing eight principles that I have come to work from. I find it helpful to share these with colleagues, regularly- they underpin why I might do and say things and how I come to suggestions and decisions. They are my ground rules for working in what is often difficult and challenging circumstances. I have written about the first four principles in the first part of this blog. In this section, I present the final four principles in no particular order.
5. Unkindness is not my style. Blame does not really help. We are looking for ways forward, but it is important to understand what might have happened, so we can avoid it. I ask questions, a lot of them.
I will never understand why some leaders feel being unkind is a sign of strength. I have seen leaders shout, demean and belittle staff. I’ve been asked to write unfavourable lesson observation notes because a leader wants to put a teacher on an action plan. I have seen leaders resort to incredibly Machiavellian ways, scheming and plotting to save their own skins and discredit someone they feel is a threat. Of course, I am not talking about momentary lapses of control under stress. I am talking about a style of working with people that is intended to be a show of power and control. I have written about this in detail in Part 2 of this blog. It seems to be a disease infecting swathes of the education sector, including those who sit at policy tables and many who work in school improvement.
To me, this way of working is counterproductive. Principle 3 mentions that I feel trust between colleagues is incredibly important, and that extends to trust in behaviour. All staff who work in schools should be treated with kind respect and should expect to be treated well. Ofsted – take note – the behaviour of your inspectors is simply not OK.
So, I make it clear to anyone I work with that I do not believe in being unkind and I am not getting involved in any games. I believe in working together. But I do ask lots of questions – that is just my way.
6. Using research helps us make decisions. Using research is extremely important. It is not an easy way out – we need to be careful about the studies we look at and be professionally sceptical, but having a research paper to refer to can help take away the personal heat and opinions from difficult situations. We can use the research to justify our decisions and actions (or even lack of action), to give us ideas for the way forward, and even to decide to stop doing something. But research is only ever there to suggest what might help. It describes the past, not the possible future and we must always be tentative.
7. Using a research-ly process can help us make everything clear and transparent for everyone.
In most of the schools I have worked in, they have already tried everything there is. Because they are in a pickle, everyone has come along and told them to do something different, because it worked at *fill in name of school/trust/country*. The school leaders have dutifully adopted every new strategy suggested and watched them fail. Because a school in a pickle is a unique place and unique places usually need a unique, idiosyncratic approach – or a mix of approaches. Using a researcherly process helps with this. It is a cycle of action that can move quickly or slowly. You could use the cycle across a day, or a term. The process helps structure the thinking and the action around school improvement, allowing everyone to take back some control and be measured and strategic about what is happening. It stops the panic and in many cases, saves a fragile budget from panic spending. The process also helps involve everyone in the school and ensures all voices are valued.
The process starts with finding out what is happening. We might walk around the school, do some assessments, analyse some data (could be assessment data, attendance, behavioural reports, examples of children’s work, or interviews with children, staff and parents or more), talk to some children and staff. We might watch what happens in lessons, or in the playground. We spend time observing and thinking. We are not making judgements. We are trying to understand. Exploring all this data helps us ask questions about what is happening. Sometimes, these questions will be uncomfortable – but that’s OK. We ask questions about helping the children to thrive, for example “What helps all children in KS2 learn to read?” Or “Which pedagogies support children in KS1 to be able to use number bonds comfortably?” or “How can we improve spelling in Year 5 and 6?” These are not perfect questions – they are not meant to be. They are there to ensure we are targeted and focused on the things that matter the most at the time.
Next we try and find answers to the questions. We think about the research we have, what we have done in previous schools and what might help us answer our questions. Once we have some ideas that we want to try, we start to think about how to introduce this into the school. We do a lot of thinking and a lot of dreaming. We think about what will happen when implement the new idea; we dream about what we will see if it works and how we will know it is working. We also dream about what might go wrong. We think through how we will know it is not working and what we will need to do if we do not see the green shoots of change we dream about. We make sure we understand what the signs of failure could be. Then we think through all the practical logistics -who, what, when, where, for how long, what will be needed. Once all of this is done, then we can start piloting the new idea.
To pilot the idea, we ask a couple of people to work with us and trial the new idea. We work closely with them, making sure they can ask all the questions they want. We share everything with them and we watch carefully. Once we know it is working and having an impact, we share the ideas more widely across the school. The teachers who have piloted the ideas become the experts in the new idea. They work with their colleagues to implement the new idea in their classrooms. If it doesn’t work, or there is a big hitch, we stop, thankful that we discovered the problem at this early stage. We share the failure with everyone, because we do not want that to happen again. We go back again and identify another direction and begin the process again. Pilot, refine, share, pilot, refine, share. We are never over-confident it will work, but we are confident that it may have an impact (because we have read the research). We are always tentative and open to failure. We know we are swimming in uncharted waters and are alert to possible difficulties, ready to intervene swiftly, if needed. We keep going because the children deserve the best and we do not know what the best looks like, yet.
- The aim is to build capacity and capability in everyone – we are not finished until everyone can do it by themselves.
My last final principle was told to me by a very wise, and kind colleague I worked with at the beginning of my career in school improvement. Never, she said, leave a school in a worse place than you found it. She believed in planning an exit strategy as soon as you walked through the door and ensuring we left behind colleagues who were ready and prepared to carry on what you we started.
Much of the school improvement work happens once you have been and gone and you must leave the school ready to carry on getting better and stronger. This means working strategically to build skills and knowledge in all – not just fixing things. You are not a hero. Although you may have helped to quench the flames of a full-scale school emergency, the teachers on the ground are the ones who will be rebuilding.
That’s it with the principles… more soon


