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As a new assistant principal, I worked for a very intelligent, well-read principal. He could devour mountains of research, cite it regularly, and use advanced vocabulary when espousing his vision and directions. Often, when planning for faculty meetings, professional developments, and follow-ups, I was tasked with communicating his direction to the rest of the staff. That meant I had to distill the principal’s often-complex ideas in a way that was approachable for our busy staff.
Hence, I frequently developed a “one-pager”—a way to simplify the message so that others could easily understand and internalize it.
Little did I know that this task was laying the foundation for how I would communicate to my staff once I became principal. Here are the benefits explaining why leaders should “say it in a page.”
Any, and I mean ANY, information you want your staff to remember needs to be short! Few will read through mountains of information, and even fewer will try to dissect complicated material. Thus, all of your communications should be no longer than a page.
How do you keep it to a page? Follow these steps:
Teachers are bombarded with loads of information all day long. With all the multitasking of managing students, lesson plans, student work, assessments, district requirements, schedules, parents, colleagues, etc., teachers are truly short on time. When you hand them pages of information to read or send a lengthy e-mail, chances are, they are going to toss it aside or skim the e-mail and close it, never to be reopened.
As a result, leaders need to be sensitive to teachers’ time. There is never enough of it. When communicating important information, think about when and how you give it to them.
Here are some suggestions:
Once a week, I would e-mail a one-page celebration and information document. It included three sections:
Section 1: Information
The top section had only three or four bullet points of the most important things teachers and staff needed to know for the coming week. This may include reminders of a deadline or forewarning of upcoming events. If I had more than four things, I had to pick the top four and communicate anything else later.
Section 2: Applause
This was the biggest section and took up most of the page. I would highlight staff (teachers and support staff) who had done a good deed or deserved recognition for accomplishments or kindness, or I would simply thank people for their efforts.
I kept a spreadsheet of all of my employees’ names so that I made sure to highlight every person at least once a year. I sometimes applauded a whole team, a grade level, or individuals. My purpose was to show appreciation and hope that others got ideas to emulate. It became a “pay it forward” opportunity that helped build morale and support school culture.
Section 3: Instructional Snapshot
In this section, I highlighted an instructional or behavioral strategy demonstrated by a specific teacher or staff member during one of my formal or informal walkthroughs. I would describe what they did and the benefit of their strategy. I always related it to student outcomes and how it supported student learning and achievement. It was my teachable moment. I wanted everyone to learn from each other, with hope that they would replicate the strategy or seek out the person for additional information.
With these types of communications, it’s important never to use them to correct an undesirable action. Instead, focus on positive communication. As the success of this weekly communication grew, others began sending me applause moments to share as they celebrated their peers’ efforts. Some weeks, I had more than a page worth of applause. So what did I do? I shortened sentences, picked the most important information, and remembered my audience.
As you finish your school year and prepare for the next, consider what you need to communicate, what staff needs to remember, and how to deliver information in a succinct, meaningful way. Choose your words so that they are easily understood and remembered. What you say and how you say it are crucial. Advancement Courses is here to help you do that with PD courses that will help you become a more impactful leader:
In addition to these, Advancement Courses offers more than 280 online, self-paced PD courses covering both foundational topics and emerging trends in K–12 education. Courses are available for both graduate and continuing education credit for your salary advancement or recertification needs.
Lisa Sheehan has an undergraduate degree from Bellarmine University in art education and graduate degrees from the University of Louisville – Master of Education and Specialist in Education. Lisa taught art and in the regular classroom before moving into administration for 17 years. During her time as an administrator, Lisa was an instructional coordinator, gifted and talented coordinator, assistant principal, and building principal at Buckner Elementary School, in Oldham County, Kentucky. Lisa has been an adjunct professor for graduate classes at Bellarmine, undergraduate courses at University of Louisville, and served as a KTIP university resource teacher.
Choose from 280+ online, self-paced continuing education courses for teacher salary advancement and recertification. Available for either CEU/clock hours or in partnership with regionally-accredited universities for graduate credit.
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