Expand Your First-Hand Knowledge To Grow Your Credibility

First-hand, second-hand or third-hand:  how “handy” is your decision making?

When you make a decision based upon information, which of the following do you find most credible?

First-hand – information gathered by what you personally have heard, seen and experienced.

Second-hand – information told to you based upon the personal observations and experiences of others.

Third-hand – information regarding the observations and experiences of people gathered and retold by others.

Elected members of school boards face this question frequently when confronted with a school problem or an issue requiring board action.  This is a dilemma of positional relationships.  How many “hands removed’ can a board member be and still render just decisions that portray a thoughtful consideration of all information sources?  As every information teller has built in biases, how can a board member sift information and bias to reach a credible understanding, and, as distance grows between first-hand involvement and resulting information sharing, how can a board member filter the levels of functionality that can color the information the board hears?

School boards employ school faculty, staff and administrators.  Faculty and staff work directly with students and the parents of students as week as community members who come to school.  Many meaty questions and issues are created at this level of the school district as this is where the greatest number of employees work and personal interactions arise that can result in a conflict of interests.  Whereas, we tend to focus of teacher-student interactions in and around the classroom, adult-child interactions on the school bus, on the playground, in the cafeteria, in the hallways, in the school offices, on the playing fields and in the locker rooms, on the stage, and at night and weekend activities account for a greater number of interactions than teacher-student.  Each and every one of these interactions creates first hand experiences that shape the school experiences of persons involved.  It is difficult to know which interactions will generate an issue that must be resolved, although when a hot issue rises everyone involved knows it for what it is.

One level of functionality away, administrators supervise and evaluate school faculty and staff.  Administrative functions mean that most interactions are with faculty and staff and some are with students, parents, and community members.  Often, student and parent interactions are referred to the administrator by faculty and staff.  Their span of responsibility places administrators at the second-hand of most faculty and staff interactions with students and parents.  Others tell administrators of their first-hand experiences or submit a report about their experience.

Administrators, of course, are first-hand in their interactions with those they supervise.  A majority of administrative first-hand experiences are casual and informed by “walking about” or “being present” around the school.  Administrators who take a holistic approach to their function look at classrooms as representing teachers, children, instruction, learning, curriculum, orderliness, furniture, technology, climate, lighting, air temperature and quality, cleanliness and, at the end, the administrator understands a satisfaction or dissatisfaction with what has been seen and heard and felt.  Extend this holistic approach to the school campus and every room of the school and you approach the first-hand experiences of an administrator.

The board supervises and evaluates administrators and this places the board at a third-hand relationship to faculty and staff interactions with students and parents and second-hand to interactions between administrators and faculty and staff.  Everything that is first-hand to a “holistic experiencing” administrator is second-hand to the board.  Everything that is first-hand to children and teachers and staff and is told or reported to an administrator who reports stories of these experiences to the school board is third-hand to the board.

Confusing?  Perhaps.  Consequential?  You bet.  Board members have an exceptionally small amount of first-hand experiences in the school environment.  School board meeting agendas are chock full of presentations and reports based upon second- and third-hand interactions with information and experiences.  All data is filtered.  All stories are filtered.  And, every second- and third-hand reporting of information and explaining of conclusions drawn from data and school experiences calls credibility and trust into question.  When the data and stories are objective and all persons are in agreement with the reporting, credibility and trust are assumed and not an issue.  And, most board agenda items are in this category.

However, when stories do not jive, when the “handedness” of information gathering, interpretation, and storytelling creates different versions of the same interaction, the board is placed in a “Which version is more credible and who do you trust more?” dilemma.  When disputations arise – on a school bus between driver and children, on the baseball team between coach and players, regarding student achievement on state assessments, between administrators and students and parents regarding a disciplinary issue, and between employee groups on “turf issues” – the board must moderate, arbitrate, or adjudicate a resolution.

Often, this is a “no win” dilemma.  In the immediacy, the board faces an either/or proposition.  There may well be middle ground, but disputing persons view these as win-lose situations.  Overtime, the either/or can become a we/they issue and if the board tends to believe we more than they, they lose confidence in the justness of the board and the system.

Consequential?  Unbelievably.

Arbitrarily, board members have been held or hold themselves in distanced relationships with students, parents, faculty and staff.  Board members have been “schooled” into believing that the handling of issues at the first-hand is the responsibility of their administrators.  Board members are told not to communicate directly with teachers and staff and principals, but with the superintendent who communicates down the chain of command with all employees.  Board members, by design, have been relegated to second- and third-hand information.  Hence, board members are constantly in the chair of “do we support the information filtering and storytelling of our administration or not?”

Balderdash.  There is no statute or rule that precludes school board members from commingling in the life of the schools so as to be first- or second-hand to the information that is the lifeblood of the system.  Being first-hand never places the board member into a faculty or a staff or an administrative function.  When in the first-hand mode, that is, a board member observing in the classrooms, hallways, media centers, cafeterias, auditoriums and athletic areas of the schools, board members are in an oversight function.  They are not supervising children.  They are not evaluating employees.  They are witnessing the manner in which the programs and policies approved by the board are playing out for the education of all children and for the professional work of all employees.

Board members cannot be first-hand to everything in a school.  That is neither possible nor desired.  However, when members have enough first-hand information against which they can weigh the second- and third-hand information they are provided, then board decisions are seen by all stakeholders as being better informed of a complete picture and more just to the realities of all concerned.  Trust is not blindly given, it is earned.  A board member observing employees at their daily work – administrators, teachers and all staff – with frequency and objectivity sees credible work first hand and can trust that credibility.  Employees observing board members observing their work with frequency can credibly know that the board member is creating a base of first-hand knowledge.  Trust flows both ways when people work to establish credibility.

I encourage fellow board members to invest in first-hand experiences in their schools.  Remember your level of function and gain a balance to your informed understanding of the life and times of your school district.  If you keep to your function, that is board oversight, you are in a great position to support every person in your school community by being credible and balanced in your understanding of first-, second-, and third-hand stories.

Board Members: Perch Like A Bird To Learn About Your School

Information is powerful and firsthand gathering of information without bias is essential.  Given this as truth, how can a school board member be informed about his school in ways that do not cross the lines between board and administration and employees?  I recommend perching.

A board member appearing at school too often raises inappropriate hackles.  If drivers on the highway slow down and become circumspect about their speed and safe driving procedures when a highway patrol cruiser appears in their rear view mirror, administrators and teachers too often grow anxious when a school board member walks down the school hallway.  Anxiety is a natural phenomena.  In the presence of law enforcement, I may be more thoughtful about what I am doing, but it does not change the relationship I have with the laws.  We both travel on the highway and I drive on.  So it should be in public schools.  School Board members come to school.

Perching is being a silent and unobtrusive yet acknowledged observer of the daily life of a school.  Perchers watch and listen, smile a lot, and only engage to clarify what they see or hear.  Sounds kind of spooky and weird; it is not.  As a percher, I am just another adult in the school.

A percher should observe the amenities.  Informing the school administration before perching is one of those amenities.  There is nothing in a school to be hidden from board view, but if an administrator has scheduled an evaluative observation at the same time and place a board member wants to perch, perching needs to be rescheduled.  Secondly, as members on the same team, informing the administration about a planned perch is just good practice.

Perchers need built-in filters.  The variety of words and stories and scenes a percher hears and observes is amazing.  Once you are seen and acknowledged by students and staff, your silent presence seems to be forgotten and, as the saying goes, “people say and do the darnedest things.”  Personal stories and observations of persons doing personal things are filed in the “personal” category.  Unless it is the proverbial person yelling “Fire!”, perchers filter out the personal and filter in pertinent.

I perched in the high school media center last week.  After communicating my intention to the superintendent and receiving a “happy perching’ response, I took a seat at a library table on the edge of a group of tables where students often sit.  From my seat, I observed all the comings and goings in the media center.

A media center is a latter day school library.  Our media center looks like and acts like a school library, that is lots of books on shelves and large, traditional library tables that seat six to eight students.  I had learned from our media aide who supervises students in the media center and handles material circulation that very few teachers bring their classes to the “library” as used to happen.  Because our secondary school issues one-to-one laptops and chrome books to all students in grades 6 – 12, students have almost all of the media and reference material once found in the school library at their classroom desks.  And, their personal technology is interactive.  Because classes no longer schedule time in the media center, almost all student use is study hall time or meetings with tutors or reading and math interventionists or college reps looking for a quiet place to meet.

On my perch this day, I learned three things.

The first thing I learned involved five high school students who were seated at a larger table reviewing for an AP Psych test.  Happenstance led their AP Psych teacher to walk through the media center, and seeing them, to ask the usual “How ya doin’ today?”  Without prompting, one young lady said she had questions about the terminology related to brain stimulation – neurons, soma, dendrites, axons – “That stuff.”  Their teacher sat in an available chair and for twenty minutes conducted an outstanding tutorial.  He didn’t tell; he helped each student clarify what they already knew and corrected a few items that were inaccurately related.  Each student was engaged, leaning forward, and profiting from the moment.  It was the type of experience that happens with frequency, I believe, but is not often observed.

With all questions resolved, the teacher went on his way.  What happened next was icing on a percher’s cake.  One after another, the tutored talked about what a “great teacher Mr. X is” and how much they are learning.  Their appreciation was genuine, as Mr. X had departed, and no “brownie points” were to be gained.  As a percher, I had the privilege of observing the kind of teacher/student interaction and the quality of relationship we assume but seldom see first hand.  Later in the day, I found Mr. X and told him about this observation and he was very modestly pleased.

My second learning regarded a school policy, student practices, and student perception of the policy.  Our school has policies related to when and how students can use “personal devices” like cell phones and tablets for personal texting, phone calls and game playing.  In a nutshell, personal devices are not to be used for these purposes during class time; begrudged permission is given during passing periods and lunch time only.  But, children being children, our students push against the margins of rules and policies.

I observed high school students using their study hall time in the media center to game on their school-provided laptops, text and FaceTime on their cell phones, and send and receive texts.  It was not so much a startling observation as it was a confirming observation.  Several students committed all of their media center time to texting and gaming – not studying.  Others allowed the incoming text or silenced phone ringer interrupt their studies – no students appeared to decline a text or call.

High school teachers are concerned that their students believe they are entitled to use their personal devices when and how they choose regardless of school rules.  And, student use of personal devices during study time causes too many students to have incomplete or unattempted class assignments.  From my perch, I observed about half of the students in the media center committed to their study time and about half who either committed their study time to personal device usage or allowed their personal devices to interrupt their study time.

During the next class passing period, I asked a student I recognized about student use of personal devices to texting and gaming in the media center and she gave me a very Cartesian response.  “If no one saw a student texting or gaming, then the rules were not violated.”

My third observation is a cost-benefit understanding.  Schools have not always had libraries.   The commitment of cost to a school library was innovative in the early 1900s and by mid-century a school library was a “must have” in secondary schools and many elementary schools.  The collection of resources for teachers and students in a central location supported the delivery of curriculum and instruction.  Today, this is not the case.  Technology, either streamed into the classroom or accessible through laptops and tablets on student desks, brings everything from the library to the teacher and student wherever they are.  This leaves schools with a large investment in media centers that is not fully utilized in terms of financial resources as well as physical space.

My many perchings in school media centers confirms that the contemporary function of these “centers’ require these –

  • Comfortable places for students to read and study.  Comfort includes individual and group settings with supportive and cushioned seating.  No more rigid chairs that leave marks on your back and cut off circulation to your buttocks and below.
  • Abundant and accessible power stations for school-provided laptops, Chromebooks and tablets.  Most libraries lack electrical outlets and those that are present were placed for the work of librarians.
  • Good lighting and air circulation.  Students are increasingly aware of the amount of time they spend under fluorescent lighting and in internally-circulated air.  Natural light and fresh air are essential.
  • Seating and flooring that accommodates student drinking of water.  Brain research tells us that well-functioning brains need oxygen and water.  Our classroom teachers accommodate water bottles and our media centers should as well.
  • Reconsideration of the secondary collection.  Middle school students circulate contemporary fiction, especially graphic novels, much more than high school students.  In fact, high school circulation is in continual decline.  High school circulation relates to class assignments and most of the reference, research, and supplemental information they seek is on the Internet.  Floor space that is committed to the secondary collection can be reallocated.

This returns me to value of perching.  Those responsible for educating children expand their knowledge bases from professional meetings, organized discussions, and group interactions.  These opportunities assure that there is common breadth and depth in their understanding.  However, due to their scope and function, these informational events lack first hand information.  To get real, personal first hand information, I recommend perching.  Sit quietly.  Observe and listen.  Filter what you see and hear – some things are not your business.  Become informed in the first-hand.  And, even though perchers do not typically engage with others while perching, being seen on your perch gives you a real credibility with faculty, staff and students.

Calculating a School Lockdown: A Thank You

A locked down school in response to a “potential” safety threat no longer makes the news headlines. School lock downs happen too frequently these days. But, that does not make locking down a school a daily routine. It isn’t. Enacting a lock down procedure is a very calculated administrative decision that needs to be understood and appreciated for how as well as why it works.

I start with a thank you to the school administrators who sit in the hot seat of decision making. “Thank you for examining the potentiality of a threat to your school and activating lock down procedures that are designed to keep children and adults safe from harm.” Locking down a school is a calculated decision, because threat credibility is what makes a lock down effective. If students and staff believe that credibility, the lock down will be effective. Children and adults will do exactly what they have been trained to do when their safety is threatened. They will find their safe places and remain safe throughout the lock down. If children and adults do not believe that credibility, locking down begins to look like a recess. “Thank you for weighing the information you are given, often incomplete and in a hurry, and making the right call.”

Hot seat decisions regarding school safety are difficult moments. Regional news often broadcasts that a school is locked down because there has been a neighborhood shooting or a person has escaped police custody or a person has called or posted their intent to harm people at school. These are not everyday broadcasts, but they, especially neighborhood violence, rightfully cause school administrators to invoke school lock downs.

Locking down immediately sparks a variety of community and school reactions. There is a flurry of social media and cell phone communication as children contact parents and parents contact children. Some parents immediately go to school to take their children home. Nearby daycare centers take safety precautions. Law enforcement is drawn to the school. Instruction and daily activities at school are immediately affected, depending upon the level of lockdown. Whatever children and teachers were doing becomes secondary to their need to follow lock down protocols. Visitors coming to the school during a lock down cannot enter the school and visitors in the school cannot leave. If the lock down is at noon, it affects lunch schedules; if at the end of the school day, it affects school bus routes and after school activities. Each and all of these are considered by a school administrator making a hot seat decision.

Gladly, I observe that our regional school leaders place school safety first. In almost lock downs, an initial statement of the threat is given by the news agencies. If necessary, local news and school social media update parents and community about the ongoing situation. Afterward, more information regarding the threat becomes available and the sensibility of a lock down is clarified.

Again, thank you to school administrators sitting in the hot seats of decision making for keeping our schools safe. With well-practiced lock down protocols, real threats are being handled realistically.

The ultimate sad truth, though, is that we never have forewarning when violent school tragedy actually befalls us.