Leading Change During Challenging Times
By: Carla L. Sparks, Ed.D., Faculty Lead and Program Director of Educational Leadership Programs at National Louis University’s Florida Regional Center
In my current
leadership role, I have spent countless hours during the last two years on the
phone and on zoom talking with teacher leaders, assistant principals,
principals, principal coaches, school district leaders, charter school
administrators, and educational leaders of service provider organizations.
These conversations have ranged in emotion from utter despair to gritting teeth
until the terror passes, to joy and enthusiasm about leading change. I have had
conversations with leaders who are exhausted physically and emotionally and
others who are energized and raring to make things happen. Some have cried and they
shook their heads while others thrust their arms in the air and laughed. I have
wondered about the range of thoughts and emotions among the leaders with whom I
work. I have thought to myself: How is this broad range of reactions to the
extreme challenges in educational leadership during the last 27 months even
possible?
Does the
difference in reactions lie in the kind of school or another work environment
these leaders live through daily? Does the difference have to do with
personality? Does it have to do with other influences that have nothing to do
with education? Is there something magical in those educators who are thriving
and leading during a devastating time in education and in the world at large?
Is it related to something called grit?
The National
Association of Secondary School Principals (NASSP)1 released some discouraging
survey results in December 2021. The survey findings indicated that without
some change, there will be a mass exodus of principals from preK-12 schools.
The related data showed that among the 502 school leaders who responded to the
survey, just 35% strongly agreed they were generally satisfied as principal of
their school, down from 63% who strongly agreed in 2019. Only 24% strongly
agreed that they plan to continue as a principal until retirement. Even worse,
13% strongly agreed that they definitely plan to leave the principalship as
soon as possible. Additional data supported the conclusion that the principal
pipeline is impacted directly by the teacher shortage. Data also supported the
obvious notion that COVID has impacted drastically the principal’s role and the
challenges they face in their schools. Another challenge supported by the
survey data was that some school leaders’ decisions to leave the profession are
accelerated because of the tense political environment. Interesting, but not
surprising, is the survey finding that while financial compensation is a
concern, it is not the most critical factor influencing principals’ decisions
to abandon their roles. The top three critical factors are heavy workload,
state accountability measures, and the amount of time and effort spent on
compliance requirements.
Despite these
dismal and frightening survey data, there are educational leaders who continue
to love going to work and are still excited about what they do. What is their
secret?
While I am not
naïve enough to believe there is a simple answer, there are some traits and
skills that resilient, thriving leaders seem to possess. Through my
interactions with educational leaders during the challenging times in which we
now live and work, I have become aware of some of these characteristics. A
growth mindset appears to be near the top of the list. Self-care, including
exercise, relaxation, humor, and meditation, has surfaced as a contributing
aspect of resilience. Flexibility, supportive colleagues, supportive family,
faith, empathy, creativity, focusing on purpose, collaboration, optimism,
diligence, and time management all make the list of traits of survivors and
thrivers. Celebrating small wins2 also serves not only to maintain
momentum when leading change but also to continue to be happy as an educational
leader.
In my formal
training as an educational leader, one of the most influential concepts was
that of adaptive leadership which “is the practice of mobilizing people to tackle
tough challenges and thrive.”3 That is something I have watched effective
educational leaders do during these last two years. This is also something I
try to keep in mind as I work with leaders who are intentionally trying to grow
in their leadership capacity.
Adaptive change is
not easy. Stress and discomfort accompany adaptive change. Adaptation
displaces, reregulates, and rearranges former practices; thus, it can cause a
sense of loss (see Footnote 3). One of the most important things I have had to
remember during the last two years is that leaders must help those they are leading
to tolerate the feelings of loss and disequilibrium.
Similarly,
“leaders manage others’ emotions and build strong, trusting relationships.”4
In order to manage the emotions of others, leaders have to keep their own
emotions in check. Perhaps that is the key, and when combined with the many
fine traits I have observed among leaders who continue to thrive, we might just
stem the tide of educational leaders abandoning their chosen profession.
References
1NASSP. (2021, December). NASSP survey
signals a looming mass exodus of principals from schools. https://www.nassp.org/news/nassp-survey-signals-a-looming-mass-exodus-of-principals-from-schools/
2 Kotter, J. P. (2012). Leading change.
Harvard Business Review Press.
3Heifetz, R., Grashow, A., & Linsky, M. (2009).
The practice of adaptive leadership: Tools and tactics for changing your
organization and the world.
Harvard Business Press.
4Boyatzis, R., & McKee, A. (2005). Resonant
leadership. Harvard Business School Press.
Carla Sparks is an alum of National Louis University (NLU) where she
earned her Master of Education degree in Curriculum and Instruction and her
Doctor of Education degree in Educational Leadership. Carla spent more than 30
years in K-12 public education, the last 10 years of which she served
Hillsborough County Public Schools, Florida as a district leader and administrator
in the seventh-largest school district in America. She currently serves NLU as
the Faculty Lead and Program Director for Educational Leadership Programs at
the Florida Regional Center. Her research interests are in change leadership,
project-based learning, graduation by an exhibition of mastery, and
differentiated instructional practices. Carla lives in Tampa, Florida with her
husband, adult children, and grandchildren.
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