Personal productivity
Monday, July 2, 2007 at 05:39PM
Doug Johnson in School Administrator column

Personal Productivity in Your Own Hands
TECH LEADERSHIP, School Administrator, December 2003.

It seems a contradiction. While the amount of information we deal with in our jobs grows daily, the number of secretaries, who answer phones, send letters, type reports, keep our schedules, and file and retrieve information, has shrunk a whopping 30%. Who is doing the work the missing secretaries did?

Efficient administrators directly handle more communication through voice and email; compose, file and retrieve letters and reports using word processors; track budgets through spreadsheets and online accounting systems; and access specific school data using student information systems.

School administrators are increasingly assuming responsibility for their own calendars, address books, and to-do-lists. Electronic organizers such as Microsoft Outlook have four main functions:

  1. Calendar. An electronic calendar can schedule single appointments and day-long events, schedule repeating appointments, and give a visual or auditory alert prior to scheduled meetings. A shared calendaring system eases scheduling meetings since an open block of time for all attendees can be located quickly.
  2. Address book. Like its paper cousin, the electronic address book keeps names, addresses, phone numbers, birthdays, email address and other helpful information, but is easily updated and can be used in conjunction with an email program to automate the addressing of messages.
  3. To-do list. The electronic to-do list can prioritize tasks, store completed tasks for later reference, and tracks additional information such as due dates.
  4. Means of making this information available portable. Electronic organizers contain information that is needed when one is away from the computer. Good organizers:

Administrators increasingly use technology to become more effective communicators, improving the flow of information both to and from staff, students, parents and community.


Article originally appeared on Doug Johnson Website (http://www.doug-johnson.com/).
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