by Andrew Mowat
on February 24, 2011
in Events
This event is our online version of the one day Success Zone Classrooms Mastery workshop. It consists of five 1 hour webinars spaced fortnightly. The delivery style is informative and experiential, while the time between sessions allows for the application, discovery and reflection of learning of the skills, concepts and techniques. Included in the workshop [...]
by Andrew Mowat
on February 17, 2011
in Book, Education, Leadership, learning, Teaching
8. Playing favourites It is easy, as a teacher (and as a parent or leader), to socially and emotionally reward those who meet your expectations and conditions. It is also just as easy to be socially and emotionally distant from those who don’t. This is a form of conditional respect (do as you are told [...]
by John Corrigan
on February 15, 2011
in Appraisal, Development, Performance
Sibson Consulting in conjunction with WorldAtWork publish reports on the global state of Performance Management. We have developed our approach based on what works in one of the most complex environments – schools – and the strengths of our approach match exactly what are regarded as the top three challenges in this area, and that [...]
by John Corrigan
on February 8, 2011
in Development, Feedback, Performance
Last week I talked about listening moving to the centre of our understanding about what matters to people for them to develop fully and effectively. The two most superficial levels at which we listen (downloading and attentive listening) limit our ability to learn very severely. In downloading we simply hear what confirms our own views [...]
by Andrew Mowat
on February 7, 2011
in Book, Education, Leadership, learning, Psychology, Teaching
5. Judgement and Assumption Your brain is particularly ‘wired’ to present you with what you are expecting to see. It is wired for assumption: If you are about to buy a brand new red BMW, it is amazing how many red BMWs you see. When you label students, when you give them what you think [...]
by Andrew Mowat
on February 2, 2011
in Education, Leadership
4. Playing the approval game – being best buddies with the students A common pitfall of the young and the new to teaching is to play the approval game. The behaviour that emerges with this need for approval is often over-friendliness to the students, wanting to appear to be ‘one of them’. The mistaken strategy [...]
by John Corrigan
on February 1, 2011
in Development, Feedback, Performance
Image by Getty Images via @daylife As it is the new academic year in Australia I have been busy over the last week setting up two schools for full implementations of our upgrade to their performance management systems over the coming year. Both sets of interventions have been exciting and energising as gradually people have [...]
by Andrew Mowat
on January 31, 2011
in Communication, Education, Leadership, Mentoring, Psychology
Are you a leader of some sort? Perhaps a middle manager, a school principal or even a CEO… Thing is, most of you are leaders: if you are a parent or a teacher you are a leader. The key question for you is do you lead from a position of expertise? Do you think or [...]
by Andrew Mowat
on January 30, 2011
in Coaching, Education, Leadership
This is the third in a series of 10 posts on common behaviour management mistakes. If you can’t wait for all ten, and you want this as a single article, add your email address and name to the box at the right and I’ll shoot you through a full copy. 3. “I am the expert… [...]
by Andrew Mowat
on January 26, 2011
in Education, Leadership, Psychology
Image by kodama (home) via Flickr 2. Investing your emotional budget in misbehaviour Take a moment to reflect on how we tend to respond to behaviour in general. As parents and as teachers, the generality is to respond to unwanted behaviour with significant emotional energy (for example, yelling, strong facial emotions and aggressive body language), [...]