Managing Instructional Leadership Action Ideas

Set big-picture goals and stay focused

Decide on the “Big Rocks” for each year

- Focus on 2-3 well-chosen priorities – major project that will produce high achievement.

- Break the “big rocks” down into manageable tasks for your schedule, to-do list.

- Set measurable goals in each one and backwards-design.

- Just say no to activities that aren’t adding value to the mission.

Plan for the year, month, week, and day

- Once a week, review of all your priorities and get big-picture goals onto daily lists.

- Use a calendar system that works for you (Outlook, BusyCal, etc.).

- Build a perennial calendar to keep track of recurring items.

- Block out time for major priorities (e.g., classroom visits, team meetings).

- Come to school with a prioritized to-list for the day.

- Use a tickler/alarm system to alert you to important meetings and priorities.

Monitor progress

- Decide on criteria for a “good day” and check in on whether you’re meeting them.

- Keep a journal or diary; score yourself on the time management rubric quarterly.

- Reflect in the summer on the 20 most salient features of the year.

Continuously improve teaching and learning

Clarify curriculum and discipline expectations

- Put in place clear grade-level learning expectations and year-end assessments.

- Implement a schoolwide discipline system.

- Clarify what issues teachers should handle themselves and what the office must handle.

Orchestrate and support team meetings and PD

- Get important weekly and monthly meetings in everyone’s calendar.

- Give clear direction to teams, visit regularly, and get reports from them.

Frequently visit classrooms and give teachers feedback

- Set a target number of classrooms to visit each day and push yourself to hit the target.

- Give teachers honest, face-to-face feedback soon after each visit.

- Keep all the components short and effective: visits, conversations, documentation

Hone priority management skills

Write it down, prioritize, and follow up

- Decide on the system that works best for you, remember, and don’t drop the ball.

- Mentally put things into bins: staff memo, parent letter, staff meetings, PD sessions, etc.

- Write a regular staff memo that can take care of routine business, key messages, research.

- Be self-aware about the tasks you tend to avoid or procrastinate and do them.

- Use the two-minute rule for dealing with paperwork during the day.

- Develop a filing system so you can put your hands on important papers.

- Do e-mail a day and try hard to clear your desktop by the end of the day.

- Block out time at school or at home when you can do paperwork most efficiently.

Delegate to competent people

- Make a key priority of hiring the best teachers and staff; train and delegate well.

- Empower teacher teams to deal with curriculum, assessment, data analysis, etc.

- Urge people around you to tell you the truth, even if it’s bad news.

Minimize time-wasting time-wasting crises and activities

- Don’t be a sitting duck! Be out and about preventing problems before they occur.

- Develop a crisp style of running meetings: structure, agendas, outcomes, closure.

- Say no to activities that are not on mission, but know when to drop everything and act.

Take care of yourself

- Make it a priority to get enough sleep, eat well, exercise, and nurture relationships.

- Schedule movies and other fun activities into your week.

Revised April 2016