by Jason T. Green, LINC Co-founder
For better or worse, another school year is winding down. For school leaders who have been hoping to kick off a new, student-centered approach to teaching, that means you have to act fast. The whole idea of student-centered, personalized learning may seem like a long and daunting task—and perhaps it is—but there is one small step that can lay the groundwork for a culture of generativity.
Pulling from our research with Dr. Arnetha Ball at Stanford University’s Graduate School of Education, we define “generativity” as the ability to continuously generate growth through self and shared reflection and iteration. This is what allows a community, and all of its parts, to see themselves as self-driven, self-resourced learners. Building awareness of generativity is one of the first tiny, almost unnoticeable, incremental steps into true 21st century learning.
The good news is: Every school leader still has it in them to do one simple thing that builds this awareness—and here’s how.
Before school’s out, make it known that you will learn one specific, new thing. This could be anything you’ve been interested in but afraid to attempt. For example, using a new digital app, playing a digital game with your students, running a virtual meeting via your learning management system or other digital platform, or any skill that feels uncomfortable or intimidating.
Letting your staff know what you plan to do allows you to be seen as vulnerable. This may be the most important thing any leader does to earn teacher buy-in on trying progressive teaching methods. Teachers want to see you doing what you will ask them to do. They want you to be the lead learner who allows them to feel safe and supported as they stretch themselves and their practice. Watching you model this behavior will show them—not tell them—that it is okay, it is encouraged, and it is worth the risk.
High School Principal Joan Mosley in Brooklyn recently accepted this challenge. She publicly committed to learning Google Classroom. This free platform had been in her school for more than three years as one of her teachers believed it was the key to creating a student-centered learning environment. However, Mosley was starting from scratch on all the features from paperless assignment workflows to mark-ups, materials, folders and class discussions. “Teachers were surprised that I was completely okay with sharing what I didn't know and learning from others,” said Mosley, who was open with teachers about where she was in her experience.
Follow up on your public commitment with public updates on the status of your learning. This step demonstrates that it’s common to encounter moments of triumph and trial along the way.
Mosley’s journey reflected this when she hit initial stumbling blocks. She remembers that talking about where she was brought the team together to help her. “Teachers were lining up to show me ways to effortlessly become proficient in the tools that we were exploring,” she remembers.
Whether or not you were entirely successful (it’s almost better if you weren’t successful), publicly recognize the investment of time, energy and considered focus you gave to this project. Consider a “Golden Plunger” award given out at staff meetings. This reframes failure as an opportunity to learn and builds a culture of being willing to try and fail. Most of all, it builds awareness of the benefits of trying-and-succeeding or trying-and-failing. Above all, it begins to instill trust. You trust that someone who aims to walk and instead crawls or wobbles is not disappointing but learning.
As science entrepreneur Astro Teller said in his 2015 TedTalk, “The only way to get people to work on big, risky things—audacious ideas—and have them run at all the hardest parts of the problem first, is if you make that the path of least resistance for them. We work hard at [Google] X to make it safe to fail.”
After the attempt is over, you might commit to trying again. You might commit to trying another application of something new entirely. The key is to build on the learnings, stay active and not abandon the idea or accept the assumption that if it didn’t work once, it will never work.
Extend an invite to all teachers to realize the benefits of trying something, anything, new themselves. Instill the importance of not overthinking it. The journey will be similar whether they choose to attempt a station rotation classroom or to learn how to use a new digital tool, like Flipgrid or Screencastify. The idea is to just take action, be in motion and actively extend into uncharted territory.
Mosley says doing this established “a culture of trust in our community.”
She elaborates that, “This enabled our team to feel comfortable moving through multiple iterations of the plan, opening doors to share practices and created new leaders in our community who previously sat on the sidelines unaware of their untapped talent to lead others towards exciting changes for students and our school.”
This is the baseline for a culture of generativity and what will propel schools into more adaptive, more personalized teaching practices. And it all starts with one simple step.
This article originally appeared on EdSurge.