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Distributed Leadership: Share the Wealth Presented by Dr. Lynne Wright, Principal Rebecca Irwin Kennedy, Assistant Principal
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Introduction Objectives Participants will create a working definition of Distributed Leadership. Participants will understand how one school applied distributed leadership tenant and went from a top-down model of leadership to a web of leaders. Participants will identify possible next steps for their school leadership.
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Inclusion Activity Line up alphabetically by the first letter of the state where you live Fold the line and find a partner Introduce yourself to your partner (what state you live in, your position, how long you’ve been at your current school)
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Pair/Share With your same partner discuss the following: How do you define Distributed Leadership?
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Article: Distributed Leadership Article: Dr. Alma Harris Professor of Education Leadership Read article (8 min.) Highlight your favorite sentence. Protocol for discussing the article: Share your favorite sentence with the group. The rest of the group comments about your sentence. After everyone else has commented, then you share your comment about the sentence. Repeat with the next person’s favorite sentence.
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What is Distributed Leadership? Three essential elements: Leadership practice is the central and anchoring concern. Leadership practice is generated in the interactions of leaders, followers, and their situation; each element is essential for leadership practice. The situation both defines leadership practice is defined through leadership practice. Spillane, J.P. (2006). Distributed Leadership. San Francisco, CA: Jossey-Bass.
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Oakridge Elementary School, Arlington, VA A Case Study 2008 – Dr. Lynne Wright became the Assistant Principal at Oakridge top down model under the previous principal 2010 –Dr. Wright became Principal 1 st year, gathered information, what was working what wasn’t working Figured out where there were leadership gaps Initial changes: established team leads for each team with common planning time established committees (School Climate, Technology, etc.)
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Oakridge Elementary School, Arlington, VA A Case Study cont.’d Assessed informal and formal leadership of staff Began hiring/staffing strategically to fill leadership gaps Shifted power from people in formal leadership roles who didn’t put children first
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Oakridge Elementary School, Arlington, VA A Case Study cont.’d Offered staff opportunities to take charge of different initiatives As situations arose, people stepped in to take on leadership responsibilities and ran with them
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Oakridge Elementary School, Arlington, VA A Case Study cont.’d 2015 - Where are we now? Created systems and a web of leaders throughout the school No longer have to worry about leadership systems anymore -- things just get done
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Closing: Turn and Talk with a Partner Discuss with a small group at your table: How does this reflect your school’s situation? What are the next steps for implementation at our school?
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Conclusion Objectives Participants will create a working definition of Distributed Leadership. Participants will understand how one school applied distributed leadership tenant and went from a top-down model of leadership to a web of leaders. Participants will identify possible next steps for their school leadership.
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References Harris, A. (2014). Distributed leadership. Teacher Magazine. Retrieved from https:// www.teachermagazine.com.au/article/ distributed-leadership. www.teachermagazine.com.au/article/ Spillane, J.P & Diamond, J.B. (2007). Distributed leadership in practice. New York, NY: Teachers College. Spillane, J.P. (2006). Distributed leadership. San Francisco, CA: Jossey-Bass.
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