News and Trends
Top 3 Leadership Skills
1/1/0001 By:
By Chris Lehmann
Trying to navigate
the many choices
administrators have
to make can be
challenging for even
the most tech-saavy. What follows is three
“soft skills” that can apply
to the way they think about
education technology reform.
1 Filtering. No, not the kind where
you decide whether to let Facebook
on the school network, although that
is important too. Learning how to
quickly decide what information is
mission critical, what you need to be
familiar with, and what can be filed
away is one of the most important
skills an administrator can have.
Setting up email filters, reading sites
like www.43folders.com, and creating
smart ways to end your day with your
desk in some semblance of order can
make the difference between reactive
management and proactive leadership.
2 Fearlessness. It can be very difficult
to help students and teachers
integrate new tools into their learning.
But innovation is rarely
easy, and the perfect tool
hasn’t been invented
yet. So don’t be afraid
to take the plunge and
start using Google Docs
to keep faculty meeting
notes or to let the
science classes develop
wikis to collaborate on
their experiments. You don’t
have to be the expert in the tool,
but you do have to be willing to let the
risk-takers in your building make bold
leaps forward.
3 Foresight. That being said, leaps
of faith aren’t always the best way
to keep your job. The most important
question you can ask of new technology
initiatives is “What is the worst
consequence of your best idea?” The
answer shouldn’t keep you from moving
forward, but it should allow you to
plan for the problems that inevitably
arise. There are some other important
questions that should help you plan:
¦ What is the end goal and how
does this use of technology move us
closer to it?
¦ Is this an additive change or
a transformative change? (In other
words, does this allow us to do things
we’ve always done slightly differently,
or does this fundamentally change the
way we have done something?)
¦ Is this sustainable? (Is this a currently
free tool that may not stay free?
Do we own what we create? Does this
have a fee?)
In the end, a smart, thoughtful
approach to technological innovation
will help students become ready for
the world they will inherit.
Chris Lehmann is the founding
principal of the Science Leadership
Academy in Philadelphia. He will be the
keynote speaker at Tech Forum Texas,
November 5, 2010.