Head for the Edge, October/November 2009
Management is doing things right; leadership is doing the right things. Peter Drucker
You can’t do the right things unless you know how to do things right. - The Blue Skunk
I’ve been wondering a good deal lately about what seems to be a continuous round of recent political, economic, and educational disasters - the Iraq War, the handling of Hurricane Katrina, the housing bubble, NCLB, the financial sector meltdown - and questioning whether it was a lack of leadership or poor management that either created or exacerbated such messes.
Examples abound:
Quite frankly, I am getting a little tired of the emphasis on “leadership” and “vision” in society, and especially in education. For all the talk, all the theories, all the studies, and all the exhortations, this obsession is getting us nowhere - and good management is suffering as a result. Here are some deadly warning signs I’ve noticed lately…
I will state right up front that I am a better manager than “leader.” The workshops and writings of which I am most proud tend to be pragmatic rather than visionary. Budgeting, technology planning, policy-making, skills integration, effective staff development, and program evaluation are among my favorites. It’s pretty easy to sneer at practitioners sharing those “how-I-done-it-good” stories rather than academic research or high-blown theory. But those looking down their noses certainly aren’t the folks trying to make actual changes in a real library or school.
One of my favorite recipes for change is the simply stated formula: C = V X D X F > R. Richard Beckhard and David Gleicher posit that Change = Vision X Discontent X First steps > Resistance. I find in schools and libraries that some of these qualities are plentiful supply. Visionaries abound; discontent both from inside and outside schools is plentiful; and resistance is bred in the bone of more teachers than we’d like. The only things too often missing are those realistic first steps that move a program from someone’s dream to reality. What are the things that are doable today that actually result in change? And who helps teachers do them? That’s where good management comes in.
It’s pretty easy to say “all students must demonstrate 21st century skills,” but it takes a manager to:
Of course we need to be moving in a positive direction. (As a buddy of mine liked to say, “We may be lost, but we are making good time!”) A vision shared by your students, staff, administration, and parents is essential.
Let’s face it - anybody can create a “vision” and cry loudly about all the things that are wrong and paint a utopian view that sounds pretty good - and it seems like almost everyone does. But what is usually lacking is any practical means of moving from Point A to Point B - especially within the parameters of working with real people, real budgets and a real number of hours in a day.
True genius is in finding ways to make a vision reality - working where the rubber hits the road. Pat a good manager on the back today. Without managers, visionaries are just hot air.