Saturday, October 26, 2013

I think it’s time to concentrate on what we are doing that is correct andbuild and expand upon that rather than looking so hard to find anything that might be wrong ... Submitted by a member

Teaching is also my second career, my first being a member of a very successful industrial team. We were all educated in continuous improvement, following Dr. Deming's philosophy, and I have to say, overwhelmingly, this company had 100's of very happy employees. Why?

1. Management, from the Vice Presidents to the supervisors all believed that those people performing the manufacturing jobs were the experts at their jobs. When an opportunity to improve the job, either in quality or performance, was acknowledged, the associates performing the job created a team, collected data, tested their theory and made proposals to management, who unquestionably accepted and implemented the changes being suggested. The teams were not made up of management, they were made up of the people performing the job and engineers. Why? Because management was educated and knew that those performing the job knew it best which made the employees feel appreciated and important. Empowerment, a very important word that is lacking for teachers in NBPS.

2. It was acknowledged that no one is perfect, and that mistakes were just an opportunity to identify an area that could be improved. Employees were not afraid of performance reviews, they were not afraid to try doing something a little differently because the element of fear had been removed. Was every employee perfect? No, but unlike NBPS, this company valued their workers so much that they preferred working with them to improve instead of harsh punishment for errors. This gave employees a feeling that they were very valuable to the company, which resulted in pride in their job, their company, and helped maintain a very healthy employee morale. The result of all this; a high quality product that is known and respected worldwide. Why won’t NBPS give teachers a chance to work in this way?

3. Walk - throughs. Employees where is previously worked welcomed observations and walk - throughs because they wanted the feedback from the supervisors on how they were performing and it was a chance to interact with management members they might not often see. They were done in a non-threatening manner, interaction was not discouraged during the observation and everyone knew that this was a tool to improve not an opportunity to punish or demean. The walk throughs that teachers have been subjected to are quite different. A team of people, often unfamiliar people, walk into the classroom with clipboards, do not acknowledge the teacher in any way, stay for approximately ten minutes, talk to a couple students, leave, and repeat this process for a couple hours, seeing a fraction of the teachers in the school. Then the doomsday report follows, a report that sums up the walk through without using any teacher names but has been invariably negative, so any feedback is not helpful. But, what it does is advertise to the community? That classrooms are not functioning properly when in fact that is not the case. And imagine what it does to the morale of the teacher who, has everything done correctly, whose classroom was operating efficiently when the team came through, but who knows that s/he was one who was part of the walkthrough that scored so low. I think it’s time to concentrate on what we are doing that is correct and build and expand upon that rather than looking so hard to find anything that might be wrong. If the environment was turned to a positive one within the school system, if the Administration and teachers could all be on the same team instead of divided as we are now, maybe the community would follow and become more positive about NBPS and NBHS in particular. I say it’s worth a try, obviously the negative, punitive environment we have now hasn’t made any positive changes.

6 comments:

Anonymous said...

The more the mayor praises Pia, the more obvious it is that he's hired a dud. I guess he figures that the more he says it the more we'll believe it. That ain't going happen. She's a loser. Get the payout ready, Jon. Pia's going to take you for a ride.

Anonymous said...

Agree 100% with this member's comments. I now hear wonderful, dedicated, passionate teachers saying things like "I hate my job...I can't take this anymore." Very sad situation at the high school.

Anonymous said...

Yes we are! Caring compassionate teachers in our district are still caring and compassionate. The problem now is we terrified! Terrified to do anything. The clientele has been enabled. They choose to do nothing. Rigor? How do you initiate a rigorous lesson when the clientele refuse to prepare? As employees in any industry we prepared to do our jobs. Our employers held us to the highest standards. We care! We want our students not only to succeed as our consumers but as human beings, vibrant members of society!

Anonymous said...

Impossible! The path to hell has already been carved out. Jerkin has a job to do and it does not include encouragement, fostering, and support! This is our reality.

Anonymous said...

Well said. Most administrators in education do not even come close to the level of knowledge of management experienced by those in industry. Thus, they 'guess' at trying to manage people and systems, and the results are always disastrous. NISL training does not qualify as personnel management, quality assurance, or capital resource training. The school systems who succeed lean on their experienced management-trained, non-educational administrators for guidance, or they use consultants. Maybe it is time for New Bedford to have a clean out from City Hall to the Pile at PRAB.

Anonymous said...

That love fest between Durkin and the mayor and school committee will end shortly. A leopard doesn't change its spots. She'll be battling with them like she is with us. If any of them had taken the time to google her before she was hired they would have read how nasty she gets with the school committee members. Guess they didn't think homework was important.