Teach Middle East Magazine Jan-Feb 2019 Issue 3 Volume 6 | Page 8

Administrator's Corner CREATING THE RIGHT SETTING FOR SELF-EVALUATION BY: LESLEY HUNTER AND MAGGIE WRIGHT T here is no magic formula to creating an environment in which self-evaluation can flourish, but there are some underlying principles that will help you to gain some personal clarity, establish a conducive setting and keep the school moving in the right direction at the right speed. It is essential to remember that people carry out self- evaluation and this is where you must initially focus your attention if you want the processes to work. Without the people aspect, you will simply have a production line that runs at a pre-set speed and churns out the same thing time after time - this is when self- evaluation becomes a meaningless activity and is essentially a burden on any school. Create an inspiring vision for the school Strategy is about big picture and about taking a long-term view that transcends day-to-day operational issues. It is very easy to get sucked into the detail and bogged down in the minutia of daily life in the school, but you must make sure that you filter what is most important and relevant. You can only do this if you have a clear vision of what you are trying to achieve – a representation of what your strategy will actually deliver. • Establishing a vision takes time but it is time well spent. • Imagine what the school’s future will be like. Your vision should be an aspirational description of what the school will look like in the future. It should allow people to see a picture in their mind and imagine what the school will achieve and accomplish, as well as providing them with a clear direction to plan their future goals and actions. If you represent the vision purely in words, then it is left open to different interpretations of language and things will get lost in translation. As principal, you may understand and appreciate the importance of having a clearly articulated vision, but what about your senior leaders … your middle leaders … your teachers … your governors? Think about bringing these different stakeholders together for a session during which you collectively create a vision board that summarises and represents your school’s vision, which can then be displayed and shared across the school. What makes your school unique and different from the school down the road? Your vision needs to answer this question and should serve as a marketing tool to convince potential parents that this is the school community that their children need to be part of. Yet, producing a vision and engaging in self-evaluation and improvement are not unique to schools, so reading about approaches outside education can help you think in a different way and see things from a different perspective – look to other cultures, education systems and the world of business for inspiration. • The vision should be clear and simple. 08 | Jan - Feb 2019 | | Class Time Create the right environment for people to buy in This may sound a little obvious, but you might be surprised by the number of times school leaders struggle with some of the things they are asked to do in the name of self-evaluation. One of the biggest barriers to successful self-evaluation is when people blindly take part in activities where they have little emotional investment. In other words, they are simply going through the motions. Although this may ensure that the processes run and that some form of evaluation activity actually takes place, it is neither a useful nor profitable approach and wastes precious time and energy. • So how do you create the right environment for people to buy-in to self-evaluation? • Basically, you have to live your values and lead by example. • The buck may stop with you, but you cannot do it alone! Demonstrate integrity by following your own advice, being honest and treating others the way you wish to be treated. In the context of self- evaluation, this means challenging yourself about what you are asking other people to do and being sure that your motives are clear enough and they understand why this action is important. By focusing on the why rather than the what or how, you will increase buy-in and subsequently accelerate the pace and speed of the process. Practice humility by not letting your ego control your thoughts and actions. Instead of comparing yourself and your school to others – and then trying to do everything yourself – focus on how you can help the people around you to achieve their part of the evaluation and improvement process. Share your gratitude. Schools can only realise their strategy by working in teams and it is important to build in opportunities for recognition and acknowledgment of this. The most effective schools distribute their self- evaluation across all parts of their community – remember the Ninja metaphor and the pitfalls it can create!