Friday, 22 June 2012

WAPPA Conference Day 2 concurrent session

images I went along to Ben Levin’s presentation on ‘Finding the time to do what is important’

Many of the ideas he presented could be applied to any job. Notes I took which I thought were useful included:

  • Identify the distracters in your day and week
  • Identify the tasks that are vital to success and that only you can do – schedule these first
  • ask – what do I spend my time on? what do I want to spend my time on?
  • Time is a resource that we need to budget, plan for and allocate
  • Need to overcome perfectionist tendencies because you can’t do your best at everything – there isn’t enough time to do everything perfectly
  • Save your best for the times where it really matters
  • Look at your week, try dividing it up and doing the important stuff first (30% of the time)
  • Routines are important as they help to reduce the need for you to work on certain tasks e.g. a child with an injury – have a set routine which anyone can follow
  • Delegate things to others and let them do it without standing over them
  • accept that surprises will happen. If you have too many surprises than it may mean that your routines aren’t working or that you need one.
  • Routines and procedures empower others to feel comfortable to act without you being involved
  • Keep priorities ‘in your face’ e.g. posters
  • Bind yourself to to act by scheduling and making public commitments
  • Be accessible without an open door. An open door communicates that ‘anything someone else wants to talk about is more important than what I have to do'. Have an appointment schedule for things that people need to meet with you about.
  • Reduce the number and length of meetings
  • Don’t use important meetings times to communicate things that they could read in a memo or email. Meetings should be about discussing important things like how to improve teaching and learning.
  • Choose what gets your attention and how much attention you will give to it.
  • make things shorter and quicker – handle paper once, deal immediately with things and get them out of the way
  • Remember that people have their own interests which are often politically motivated
  • learn how to manage conflict
  • learn how your team works
  • Don’t always be in the middle. Let others argue with each other
  • Create vehicles for dialogue – good communication solves many problems
  • Remember that no days go according to plan
  • Good leaders have:
    • VISION – knowing what we want to achieve
    • OPTIMISM – knowing the possibilities
    • REALISM – flexible, knowing human nature

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