Leadership magazine May/June 2018 V47 No. 5 | Page 28

The 4-Rs of teacher leadership during school transition Building a strong adult culture and climate includes intentionally engaging with teacher- leaders on a shared leadership model that fosters strong communication, clear understanding of roles and responsibilities, and decreases teacher burnout over time. 28 Leadership Let’s face it, schools are always in some sort of transition. Sometimes it’s due to expansion, full scale redesign, or even reimagining roles and responsibilities due to teacher or administrative turnover. What’s important to note is that the one constant pillar through all types of school transition is the necessity of teacher-leadership. When referring to teacher-leaders I in- clude all teachers at a site. Many teachers may not be engaged in a formal leadership role, such as grade level lead, instructional coach, department chair, restorative justice coordinator, athletic director. However, they are still teacher-leaders because teach- ers do more than “just teach.” The purpose of this article is to remind site leaders how to lean on, and intentionally engage with, their teacher-leaders as equal partners as they seek to lead their schools through transition. The 4-Rs of teacher-leadership through school transition – ref lection, resilience, relational trust and revisioning sustain- able systems and structures – is a practi- cal guide for how to meaningfully include teacher-leaders in decision making, increase their capacity to lead their colleagues, and actively participate in the shared vision be- hind how schools will ride the ebb and flow of school transition. Due to the unique context of each school, a one-time-fix does not exist. However, ad- ministrators can use the 4-Rs as building blocks to help them most effectivity utilize teacher leaders at their site. Reflection Current administrators in California were probably teacher-leaders at some point while they were classroom teachers. I want you to think about your role as a teacher-leader, be- By Whitneé L. Garrett-Walker