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Change Leadership: A Practical Guide to Transforming Our Schools
Change Leadership: A Practical Guide to Transforming Our Schools
Tony Wagner
Robert Kegan, Harvard Graduate School of Education, Cambridge, Massachusetts
Lisa Laskow Lahey, Lexington, Massachusetts
Richard W. Lemons
Jude Garnier
Deborah Helsing
Annie Howell
Harriette Thurber Rasmussen
Tom Vander Ark
ISBN: 978-0-7879-7755-9
©2006
296 pages
INSTRUCTORS
STUDENTS
TITLE INFORMATION
Description  |  Table of Contents  |  Hallmark Features  |  Sample Chapters
Table of Contents
Foreword.

Preface.

Acknowledgments.

About the Authors.

ONE: Introduction: Reframing the Problem.

A Knowledge Economy Requires New Skills for All Students.

Greater Supports for Learning in a Changing Society.

Reform or Reinvention? Technical Challenges Versus Adaptive Challenges.

Organizational Beliefs and Behaviors.

Individual Beliefs and Behaviors.

Accepting the Challenge and the Risks:Moving Toward Communities of Practice via Collaborative Learning.

PART ONE: Improving Instruction.

TWO: Creating a Vision of Success.

Challenges to Improving Instruction.

Seven Disciplines for Strengthening Instruction.

Using the Seven Disciplines.

Launching an Instructional Improvement System: The Critical First Conversations.

Developing a Shared Vision.

Defining a New Framework for Effective Instruction.

Linking the New 3 R’s of Instruction.

THREE: Committing Ourselves to the Challenge.

Identifying Your Commitment.

Spotting Your Obstacles Through Self-Reflection.

Reflections.

PART TWO: Why Is This So Hard?

FOUR: Generating Momentum for Change.

Obstacles to Improvement Versus Momentum for Improvement.

Generating the Momentum for Systemic Change.

Communities of Practice as a Strategy.

FIVE: Exploring Individual Immunities to Change.

Attending to Countering Behaviors.

A Deeper Look.

Finding the Competing Commitment.

Taking the Next Step.

Reflections.

PART THREE: Thinking Systemically.

SIX Relating the Parts to the Whole.

Arenas of Change.

Toward Transformation: Using the 4 C’s.

Another Use for the 4 C’s.

SEVEN: The Individual as a Complex System.

Hidden Commitments and Personal Immunities.

Big Assumptions and Immunities.

Reflections.

PART FOUR: Working Strategically.

EIGHT: The Ecology of Change.

Phases of Whole-System Change.

Change Levers: Data, Accountability, and Relationships.

Strategic Change in Action.

Putting the Pieces Together: The Ecology of Educational Transformation.

Measuring Success and the Challenge of High-Stakes Test Scores.

NINE: Overturning Your Immunities to Change.

Steps Toward Individual Change.

Considering Steps for the Most Powerful Learning.

Phases in Overturning Your Immunities.

Becoming Fully Released from Immunities to Change.

Reflections.

TEN: Conclusion: Bringing the Outward and Inward Focus Together.

Hold High Expectations for All Our Students.

Involve Building and Central Office Administrators in Instruction.

Choose a Priority and Stay Relentlessly Focused on It.

Foster a Widespread Feeling of Urgency for Change.

Encourage a New Kind of Leader.

Develop a New Kind of Administrative Team.

Shining a Broader Light on Change.

Implications for the Change Leader: Toward Adaptive Work.

Concluding . . . or Commencing?

APPENDIXES.

A. Team Exercises.

B. Recommended Reading.

Index.  


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