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Paddling Upstream in a Public School Canoe . . .

Dr. John Draper

National School Public Relations Association

www.JohnDraper.org

John@JohnDraper.org

“There are a thousand hackingat the branches of evil

to one who is striking at the root.”

Henry David Thoreau

Where are we in Public Schools today?

Good to Great for the Public Sector by Jim Collins

•Political Skill

•Public Support

•Political Skill, no matter how effective, will eventually succumb to Public Will

The North Wind and the Sun had a contest . . .

Fundamental Facts• A strong majority of parents, community members and school

employees give their own schools honor roll ratings, but believe that the nation’s public schools are bad

• Most school employees are reluctant political advocates, dislike controversy, and don’t like to brag on themselves or their schools

• There are 8 million public school employees in the USA—leading them to effective, active support of our schools is the first step to changing public opinion about all public schools

Results from the latest PDK/Gallup Poll showed

little change from recent years

What grade do you give to your

oldest child’s school?

A/B 77%

What grade do you give to your

local schools?

A/B 49%

What grade do yougive to the

nation’s schools?

A/B 18%

So what’s the problem?My community thinksour schools are doing

pretty good!

Why rock the boat!?!

There are alwaysmore people ‘out there’

and they thinkyour schools are bad!

The public myth, the evil root, that undermines support

for all public schools is

Our schools are good, but the rest are lousy!

This public myth undermines support for all public schools. It encourages state

legislatures and Congress to punish or reconstruct our “failing” public schools.

We don’t have to change public opinion

about public schools . . .

. . . we only have to extend the way they feel about their

schools—to all schools!

If you are in a hole the first thing to do is to

stop digging!

7 Habits of Highly Effective

School Leaders

1. Avoid public comparisons of school districts—particularly economically unequal districts!

Independent behavior in an interdependent reality

is foolish!

Stephen Covey

We are locally led but nationally fed!

Three Unfortunate Facts About Public Schools

•Everyone who went to school feels qualified to run a school

•The worst schools define all schools

•Your district’s support is linked to the perception of the worst schools in your state

7 Habits of Highly Effective

School Leaders

1. Avoid comparisons of unequal schools or districts

2.Don’t allow test scores to define your school—fully embrace Every Child a Graduate

The Public doesn’t understand test scores

but they get graduation!

It’s a Destination Postcard

Graduation is a celebration that

resonates with the public!

Let’s start making it a party!

One of the best things about graduation??

7 Habits of Highly Effective

School Leaders

1. Avoid comparisons of unequal school districts

2. Don’t allow test scores alone to define your school—fully embrace Every Child a Graduate

3.Inspire teachers with a “Successory”program—if you don’t feed the teachers . . .

Successory Program is a No-Brainer!

•Give students a Successory Form (self-duplicating) just before the grading period ends

• Invite them to complete form, give one copy to “Successory” and drop the other in office basket

• After one week draw a winner and award $25 Gift Certificate to local restaurant

• Send some of the best forms to Central Office for sharing with Board and Media—and after Public Comments fiasco

7 Habits of Highly Effective

School Leaders

1. Avoid comparisons of unequal schools or districts

2. Don’t allow test scores alone to define your school—fully embrace Every Child a Graduate

3. Inspire your teachers with a “Successory” program

4.Plan celebrations of success—use technology to connect and inspire

You are now Chief Morale Officer!

Waterloo Iowa Celebration Day

Believe!Dr. Gary Norris Superintendent

Waterloo Iowa Celebration Day 2013

Video

Technology has made it easy and affordable to produce quality video that motivates staff

Use it!

Link to Waterloo Schools Celebration Day “Believe” Video at

www.JohnDraper.org

7 Habits of Highly Effective

School Leaders

1. Avoid comparisons of unequal schools or districts

2. Don’t allow test scores to define your school—fully embrace Every Child a Graduate

3. Inspire teachers with a “Successory” program

4. Plan celebrations of success—using technology to connect and inspire

5.Use stories to overcome the Villains of Communication

Three Communication Villains for School Leaders

•Curse of Knowledge

•Information Overload

•Presenter Polish

We are in the dark

and held captive by the

Curse of Knowledge!

The Curse of Knowledge

• You know how essential Public Schools are to this country

• You know that Public Schools are better than they have ever been

• You know the wonderful things that happen in your Public Schools

• You know because you have spent your life in Public Schools

• You DON’T KNOW what it is like not to know what you know!

Three Villains for School Leaders

•Curse of Knowledge

•Information Overload

•Presenter Polish

High School Journalism Class Assignment:Use the information below to write a story

for our student newspaper

• The Superintendent just announced that Dr. Bruce Hunter, Senior Associate of the American Association of School Administrators, will speak to all district administrators and teachers next Friday morning in the high school auditorium.

• Dr. Hunter is the Chief Congressional Lobbyist for AASA, the largest superintendent association in the nation, and is known for his ability to focus on national educational issues and not politics.

• Dr. Hunter has been a junior high school social studies and English teacher, a Head Start teacher, a sociology instructor, a grant administrator, and a policy analyst. He was born and raised in Wyoming and has worked in Colorado, New Mexico and Arizona.

NO SCHOOL NEXT FRIDAY!

Three Villains for School Leaders

•Curse of Knowledge

•Information Overload

•Presenter Polish

Chip Heath’s Speech Study using his Stanford Students

Information shared by composed, charismatic, and motivational presenters was forgotten, but less polished speakers who told stories

were remembered!

They laughed when I told a story, but when we won the bond referendum

with a landslide vote . . .

Great story opening for any meeting!

Think of a teacher who had a positive impact in your life—elementary, middle or high school;

a teacher who really cared about you.

Now imagine an entire school district filled with teachers just like that. That’s our goal!

7 Habits of Highly Effective

School Leaders

1. Avoid comparisons of unequal schools or districts

2. Don’t allow test scores to define your school—fully embrace Every Child a Graduate

3. Inspire teachers with a “Successory” program

4. Plan celebrations of success—using technology to connect and inspire

5. Use stories to overcome the Villains of Communication

6.Put a face on children of poverty—tell the stories of individual students

Fifty years ago, when I was a 3rd grader at Stonewall Jackson Elementary School in Birmingham, Alabama, on a Sunday morning in September, Pastor John Cross was preparing to preach a sermon titled “A Love that Forgives” based on Luke 23:34.

(clockwise from top left)

Addie Mae Collins (14)Cynthia Wesley (14)Carole Robertson (14)Denise McNair (11)

Killed in the 16th Street Baptist Church bombing on September 15, 1963.

7 Habits of Highly Effective

School Leaders

1. Avoid comparisons of unequal schools or districts

2. Don’t allow test scores to define your school—fully embrace Every Child a Graduate

3. Inspire teachers with a “Successory” program

4. Plan celebrations of success—using technology to connect and inspire

5. Use stories to overcome the Villains of Communication

6. Put a face on children of poverty—tell the stories of individual students.

7.Intentionally build connections with faith organizations, first-responders, and veterans to retool our image!

There is a declining trust in government.

Public schools must disassociate with Congress and the state legislatures

and build identification with the faith organizations, first-responders, and veterans

who are held in high esteem by the American People.

Soldier Dad Surprises Son During School AssemblyYoutube.com

Public Schools are the way America delivers on the promise of life, liberty and pursuit of happiness!

• 21 million hungry students are fed daily in our public schools

• 8 million public school employees provide care and support for students

•Over 50 million children are educated in public schools

More of God’s work is accomplished in Public Schools

than any other institution in America.

7 Habits of Highly Effective

School Leaders

1. Avoid comparisons of unequal schools or districts

2. Don’t allow test scores to define your school—fully embrace Every Child a Graduate

3. Inspire teachers with a “Successory” program

4. Plan celebrations of success—using technology to connect and inspire

5. Use stories to overcome the Villains of Communication

6. Put a face on children of poverty—tell the stories of individual students

7. Intentionally build connections with faith organizations, first-responders, and veterans to retool our image

An opportunity . . .

free, simple and NSPRA approved!

Three Fundamental Messages of Public Schools That Work

• Good things are happening in public schools everywhere—even in our most challenged districts

• Public schools must change to better serve today’s students

• Employees are essential to spread the good news and lead the change

PublicSchoolsThatWork.org

Enroll at pstw.org agreeing to:1. Forward one monthly, PSTW email to your

employees (provides a positive fact about all public schools and a link to a PSTW video)

2. Consider a Successory program (or similar design) to encourage and support staff

3. Consider an organized method for celebrating the outstanding service of district employees . . . an annual “Celebration Day” event is encouraged

Listen for the messages in this PSTW video

• Poverty is the greatest common factor among low-achieving children . . .

• We are working to break the grip of poverty . . .

• Dispelling the myth that urban schools don’t succeed . . .

• Urban teachers put students first . . .

• Students are more than a test score . . .

• Every child, every chance, every day . . .

• Miracles happen every day in public schools . . .

• Waterloo Schools Work!

• Go to www.pstw.org to sign up!

Waterloo Iowa Teacherwww.pstw.org

We need you!

To submit a video for Public Schools That Work • Go to pstw.org and get guidelines for the Video

Contest• District videos selected for use will receive one

paid registration to the NSPRA Annual Seminar• Selected videos will be viewed by educators

across the nation• Help “Reverse the Flow” for all public schools

Help staff realize the difference they make!

Inspire them and lead them.Remind them that miracles happen

everyday in all public schools.

Believe!

Believe in ChildrenClovis Unified School DistrictYoutube.com

How do you make paddling upstream easy?

Reverse the Flow!

Paddling Upstream in a Public School Canoe . . .

For copies of this presentation go to

www.JohnDraper.org

Dr. John Draper

National School Public Relations Association

Public Schools that Work!

www.JohnDraper.org

www.pstw.org