Showing posts with label character. Show all posts
Showing posts with label character. Show all posts

Sunday, November 29, 2020

Lessons in Ethical Leadership

 I just finished reading a book about ethics and leadership.  I am intentionally not naming the book or the author here because of our tendency to accept or reject a person's words, not based on their merit, but on whose side we are one.  (That said, it wouldn't be hard for you to Google quotes if you are really motivated to find out).  It is a well-told story of how a person's character is built from decisions made at a very young age and how that character then informs leadership decisions in adulthood.  There were a few things that stood out to me, and I wanted to mention them here and connect them to our role as teachers.

Ethical leaders are both tough and kind.  It is unethical to allow people to get away with whatever they want rather than hold them accountable for their actions.  It doesn't make you the nice boss or the easy teacher.  It means you have abdicated your moral authority, which is not okay.  What I have learned in 22 years of teaching, though, is that toughness doesn't exclude kindness.  In my younger days, I pulled kids into the hall and read them the riot act.  That hasn't happened in a long time.  In recent years, if I have had to pull a kid into the hall, I have started with, "What's going on?"  The conversation that follows can be kind and focused on problem-solving while still holding students to appropriate boundaries.  Often, in fact, that conversation ends with, "You know I have to write this up now, right?  You know I still love you, right?"  

Humility and confidence are not antonyms.   I knew that a person could be both confident and humble at the same time, but I don't think I had ever considered before reading this book that showing humility actually requires confidence.  Showing humility means putting yourself in a bit of a vulnerable position, and you cannot do that if you are insecure.  A good leader knows their strengths, but they know their weakness better and, as a result, they take steps to hear from people who are strong in those areas.  

Honesty matters more than loyalty.  The way we understand loyalty is deeply flawed.  We think a loyal friend will always tell us what we want to hear and take our side, no matter what.  That's wrong.  A loyal friend is one who tells you the truth.  They tell you what you need to hear.  If you are wrong, they love you enough to tell you, and they don't worry that you will stop being friends with them for doing so.  "Ethical leaders speak the truth and know that making wise decisions requires people to tell them the truth."

Ethical leaders care deeply about those they lead.  Because they care, a leader will be honest and share his heart with those he leads.  He will treat them with respect.  He will often sacrifice his time to listen, to care, and to help solve problems.  "They create an environment of high standards and deep consideration - love is not too strong a word - that builds lasting bonds and makes extraordinary achievement possible."  This cannot be done sitting behind a desk.  It is done by talking and listening to your people.

It is a weak leader who never laughs.  Laughter, real laughter, the kind that comes from enjoyment requires humility and vulnerability.  It requires listening to another person.  It requires enough of a bond to understand the intent of the speaker.  It requires acknowledgment of the other person's wit or cleverness.  You cannot laugh and be defensive at the same time.  Many leaders are serious, and they should obviously take their job seriously, but a joyless leader is hard to follow.  If a leader never laughs, you should be suspect of that person's character.

Small sins, left unaddressed, become your character.   The author of this book is very tall, and he got tired of answering the question about whether he played basketball (which I can relate to) and explaining why he did not.  So, he just starting saying, "Yes" because it was easier.  At some point, he realized that he was easily telling this lie and that the longer he did, the easier telling lies would become.  He wrote to the people he had told this lie (which most of us would consider a benign lie) and apologized to them.  He knew he did not want to continue moving the line of which lines were acceptable.  He also relates a story of a time when he acted as a bully in college and how haunted he was by that experience, even as a middle-aged man.  I think we have a tendency not to see individual actions as important, but these decisions are formative.  They make us who we are.  Your character is like a brick wall, and each action is like a brick in that wall.  One wonky brick might not impact the overall strength of a wall, but not addressing whatever caused that on the next level and the one after that will lead to a poorly built structure.  

As I read this book I was struck by how blessed I have been in those I have served.  With a small number of exceptions, I have worked for excellent leaders, who led well.  From the boss I had when I was an arena janitor to my current school administration, I have had the good fortune to be led well by men and women of character, who cared deeply about those under them and led with honesty, laughter, confidence, and humility.  For that, I am grateful.

Sunday, May 24, 2020

Personal Graduation Ceremonies

Some of you may get tired of how much I brag about my school. but you are just going to have to indulge me today because, while I loved GRACE Christian from the moment I started working there, I've never been more proud to work there than I am right now.  I'm not going to do justice to this day because there aren't enough words to do so, but I have to try.

When I left the school on March 19 to begin teaching from home, there were three women in our office making contingency plans for the possibility of a non-traditonal graduation.  Whether that would be virtual or socially distanced or in the parking lot, we did not yet know.  (At that time, we still dreamed it was possible we would be able to return to a regular ceremony.)  As the stay at home orders were extended, the work of these ladies became plans, and the plans were expanded and changed into realities.

In normal years, one of our senior traditions is a senior dinner, in which every student is spoken about by a teacher who has signed up to share about their character.  I've written about this event before, and it is my favorite night of the year (more so, even, than graduation).  While our graduation is lovely, the dinner is so personal that it represents our school mission and vision statements in a tangible way.  

As we prepared ourselves for an end to the year, there were three events we still hoped to have.  Yearbook distribution, the senior dinner, and graduation.  In teacher meetings and parent surveys, there was one thing that was evident; no one wanted these to be virtual.  Our virtual awards night was great, but it isn't the way you want to graduate or have a senior dinner.  (The yearbook distribution couldn't be virtual of course and happened in the way I described in last week's closure post.)  

Our school gave each of our fifty-seven seniors a personal graduation.  Students signed up for a time slot and came to the school with their parents and siblings.  Because there are fifty-seven of them and a few small breaks were planned, this event took from nine in the morning until almost seven in the evening.

Students arrived in their cap and gown. Their parents were given a box that held their diploma, any awards they had won, gifts or notes some of the teachers had given, a jump drive with the graduation slideshow, a plaque with three character traits the teachers suggested printed on it, and a Bible with their name engraved and messages from their teachers (another tradition we did online and printed for their Bibles).  They were led to the front.  The graduate then walked down the aisle to Pomp and Circumstance (for about four seconds because it doesn't take long for one person to get down the aisle of our chapel) and stood at the front.  

Our principal opened each ceremony in prayer and announced awards.  The parents presented the student with their awards from the box.  She also read the character traits, and the teacher who signed up to speak about them came to the stage to give the same speech they would have given at the dinner.  The parents then gave their senior their diploma, and they walked across the stage, turning their tassel at the center.  This was all streamed on Facebook Live so friends and family could watch even though they couldn't attend.  Since I was only allowed to be in the room for the three I was speaking for, I stayed glued to that feed for most of the day.



After their ceremony, they stepped into the hall, where the teacher who had spoken about them and our Christian Life Director prayed for them.  They proceeded to the cafeteria for photographs.  It took half the building to have everything properly distanced, but it worked.  It just worked.  

GRACE has a three-word mantra that has arisen in addition to our mission and vision statements.  We talk often about how much we want our students to feel that they are known, valued, and loved.  When we went into the virtual environment, we talked often about ways we could still make students feel known, valued, and loved.  At the end of the day on Friday, I believe there were fifty-seven seniors (and their families) who felt known by the teachers who spoke and submitted character traits and "wrote" in their Bibles.  I believe there were fifty-seven seniors who felt valued by the people who spent eleven hours filming, photographing, praying, and speaking for their personal graduation ceremonies.  I believe there were fifty-seven seniors who knew they were loved by everyone in their school, but more importantly by their Creator.

Use Techniques Thoughtfully

I know it has been a while since it was on TV, but recently, I decided to re-watch Project Runway on Amazon Prime.  I have one general takea...