Teacher As Leader
Touching more lives, affecting the outcome of
so many futures a teacher is the
epitome of a leader. Just as a leader has
his or her own style, their way of
motivating their students, also plays an
important part in a students success.
Spending more time with our
children then most parents do, a teacher is
fundamental in shaping our
children. If they are poor leaders our children
suffer. When they shine as
leaders our children blossom and the universe is wide
open to them. As a
teacher it is of utmost importance that you tune your
leadership skills and
find the best style of teaching for the students you are
teaching. In finding
resources for this paper it was interesting to note that
all the information
fell under the category of leadership and not teacher
qualities. It was also
interesting to note that the principle the US Army
teaches on leadership are
included in an overwhelming number of corporations as
well taught mostly by
retired military themselves. The intrinsic characteristics
of a teacher can
be categorized into a few main teaching styles or leadership
styles.
Directing, Participating, Delegating, and Combined styles are the main
forms
of teaching and leading. The qualities associated with these styles
are
imperative to any teacher. The purpose as teachers is fundamentally the
same as
leaders, to provide purpose, direction and motivation while operating
to
accomplish the mission in this case to educate. All four of these actions
must
be present in order for a student to benefit. A leader or teacher is not
born
but cultivated through his/her upbringing and environment. In my
experience as a
leader, teaching in Educational Psychology, being a parent, I
have learned that
what you as a leader or teacher bring to your students or
audience is imperative
to their development and learning. A teacher's
personal characteristics are also
crucial factor in students' development and
motivation. The first principle is
purpose, which has to be conveyed to the
student. "Why do I need to learn
Math? How will studying History benefit
me?" Without the "why's"
we as students are lost. A teacher must give the
purpose. "It is important
to you because..." If this question is left
unanswered the student will not
consider the value of the topic being
discussed. To move from purely acceptance
to questioning and understanding
denotes a higher level of learning. This is the
main objective of teaching.
Moving the students from regurgitation to higher
realization is the ultimate
goal. Teachers need to take the time to explain the
"why's" and in the long
run it will benefit both the teacher and
student. Direction is tied to
purpose. Direction is the steps we are going to
take to get to that important
purpose. Without steps or direction, we lack the
framework in which to learn.
By prioritizing small tasks (you must teach numbers
before adding them) your
lessons will be more effective. By conveying the
direction or path to your
students you are setting up the checklist for them to
follow on to higher
learning. Purpose and direction are essential aspects to
convey to your
students. Without motivation however these factors will not be
effective. The
motivation will give your students the will and desire to do
things. You can
tell a student the purpose of a task and the direction in which
to go but
without the internal motivation of that student, sparked by your
personality
and learned tactics in dealing with students, these will be
meaningless.
Motivation is the drive and will to do what needs to be done to
accomplish
the mission. To instill motivation a teacher has to know his/her
students and
their capabilities. A teacher must know what the students can
relate to, what
tasks the student are capable of, and what method of teaching
will relate to
the students. If a student can handle not being supervised on a
task, then
the teacher doesn't baby-sit them. Some students need a teacher
looking over
their shoulder at all times; it's important to know which student
you have.
To instill positive motivation when they succeed - praise them; when
they
fail - show them how to succeed next time. If this is done properly it
will
be a teacher's strongest tool! Motivation is not just the words you say
to your
students, it is the actions that you do and the example you set for
them. I have
found that no matter what I tell my subordinates, or my son, the
best way to
teach them is by setting the example for them to follow. We all
have someone
watching and emulating our actions. If you want to convey hard
work,
proficiency, and the desire for learning to your students, then you
must first
emulate those qualities. The best teachers and leaders in my life
have made me
want to take some of their personality traits and copy them. In
front of the
classroom, who is looked at more than a teacher is! All of these
factors combine
to make a somewhat effective teacher or leader, but without
the right
combination of teaching the leadership will be ineffective.
Effective leaders
are flexible enough to adjust their leadership styles and
techniques to the
people they lead. Some students will respond best to
coaxing, suggestions, or
prodding while others may need a "chewing out". If
you treat all
students the same you are probably being unfair because all
students are not the
same. You must use the directive, participating,
delegating, and combined
approaches to teaching. Obviously every situation
dictates common sense and some
adjusting, but you would not want to use a
purely free and laid back approach
with a group in a juvenile prison. The
directive style of teaching is purely
lecture which puts most students and
myself to sleep. This is teacher centered
with detailed instructions and no
input from the class. Now this can be done
effectively with students who have
an innate interest in the subject but for the
majority of those who have "no
choice but to take this class" this
becomes boring. Without the lecture or
instruction part of teaching, however,
most students would not be given the
instruction for proficiency and
understanding that the subjects may require.
When students don't have the
expertise in a subject, a crucial aspect of the
subject is the introduction
itself. In certain subjects like math it is
imperative that formal instruction
takes place. The "do this to get this"
approach must exist. However
too purely drown your students with facts and
tedious instructions will turn off
the students' motivation. On the opposite
extreme of teaching, the delegating
style would be employed. The delegating
style involves giving students the power
to solve problems and make decisions
themselves, without checking with the
teacher in most circumstances. This can
be effective with very mature students
in whom a teacher wants to create
independence and expand their thinking. This
simply stated is the teacher
giving a problem, minimal instructions, and
expecting the student to find the
solution. In some aspects this can be
effective only if the students have a
basic understanding and the fore knowledge
of how to solve the problem. With
too little amount of instruction this will be
a disaster! The participating
style centers on both the students and the
teacher. The teacher gives the
students a problem, gives instruction and
possible solutions, and asks the
students for input. The teacher, although
dependent on recommendations from
the students, makes the final solution
however. This is most effective for
teachers who have time as their advantage,
which many do not. When this style
is used, the students feel as though they are
at least a part of the
discovery process and it gives them a sense of ownership
of the final plan.
Again the factor here is time, so this can be ineffective
when there are
strict time constraints and many lessons to accomplish. The most
effective
teaching style is the combined approach. Just as the name implies it
uses all
of the benefits of the delegating, participating, and directive
approaches.
It is a flexible and transformational tool for any given situation.
To
become an effective teacher you must learn when, to what degree, and how
to
use this approach. This approach is best used when you have students with
a
conglomeration of experiences, knowledge, motivations, and maturity. This
may
sound like common sense, but too often do when have those
"pure
lecture" teachers, or those who are on the other extreme and let
the
students "learn on their own". With all the styles of teaching
and
leading, who the teacher is plays a significant role in what the student
learns.
As I sat in the first day of Educational Psychology I noted how
many times the
teacher looked at the clock. She noted when there was one
minute until the class
was to start and has promptly kept the same attention
to time since that first
day. This shows two of the characteristics -
awareness and perception - that a
teacher needs to bring to the classroom.
Other characteristics include:
listening receptively to what others have to
say, accepting others and having
empathy for them, foresight and intuition,
awareness and perception, highly
developed powers of persuasion, an ability
to conceptualize and to communicate
concepts as well as establish goals,
empowering people, using multiple options
thinking, and being passionate
about what they are teaching. These are forged by
our personal beliefs, and
just as important our life experiences. Having these
combined with the right
approach; purpose, direction, and motivation are the key
to effective
teaching and leading. Leaders can't be "trained, but they can
be developed.
Development needs to be ongoing and highly personalized in its
nature.
Teachers, true leaders, are so strategically important that schools
cannot
afford not to provide them with the support and developmental resources
they
need to grow. But not everybody is capable of being an outstanding
leader.
However, it is going to be the key to better education in a world
of change,
complexity and uncertainty. As I look back on the semester, I
remember how it
started. Never have I been in a class where the classroom
students taught the
instruction. What a weird, bizarre, and radical way of
teaching. I have to
admit, I hate to work in-groups and I didn't like this
idea at all. In light of
my stubbornness and repulsion I see why this had to
happen. To me the process
was not really about learning the material but
bluntly seeing how you can be
inspired put to sleep, or appalled at other
students, or yourself. The
fundamental concept is not really about what you
are teaching, but how. The
"with-it-ness" of the teacher makes the student
learn or care about
the subject. The lack of enthusiasm in an instructors
voice, the laziness as
they slouch on the podium or smack their gum, or the
sheer brilliance of their
presentation is what inspires and motivates a
student to learn. The Army is the
same way with winning wars and making
heroes. Many civilian corporations have
emulated the leadership principles
applied in the Army doctrine and regulations.
This is what I have applied
this course to. As a supervisor in the Army in
charge of those many years
younger than me or twice as old as me this course has
shown me in a less
obvious way to adapt and be flexible to the situation. Also I
feel that
beyond the regular courses that teachers take they should be shown how
to
develop their leadership skills. They need to be shown which style to
teach
which students and how to be flexible. Teachers also need to have and
develop
some personal qualities that will make them successful. Without
the
characteristics mentioned they will not be successful teachers. The
leaders of
the most powerful army of the future need to be shown how to lead.
They need to
know how to give to their students meaning by showing the
purpose, providing the
direction and the motivation while they accomplish
their mission, to educate.
Teachers need to use different approaches to
teaching based on the students and
they need to be flexible in their
approach. Sometimes it is okay to think
(teach) "in the box" and sometimes we
need to think (teach) "out
of the box" but I believe we can think both ways
at the same time.
Bibliography
Blanchard, Kenneth, Patricia
Zigarmi, and Drea Zigarmi. Leadership and the
One Minute Manager:
Increasing Effectiveness Through Situational Leadership.
William Morrow
& Company. 1985. Hesselbein, Frances, Goldsmith, M., &
Beckhard,
R., Eds. The Leader of the Future: New Visions, Strategies, and
Practices
for the Next Era. Jossey-Bass Publication. 1996. Covey, Stephen J.
The
Seven Habits Of Highly Effective People: Powerful Lessons in Personal
Change.
Reprint Edition. Fireside. 1990. Covey Leadership Center US Army
Field Manual FM
22-100 Army Leadership. U.S. Government Printing Office:
1999 Sources Blanchard,
Kenneth, Patricia Zigarmi, and Drea Zigarmi.
Leadership and the One Minute
Manager: Increasing Effectiveness Through
Situational Leadership. William Morrow
& Company. 1985. Hesselbein,
Frances, Goldsmith, M., & Beckhard, R.,
Eds. The Leader of the
Future: New Visions, Strategies, and Practices for the
Next Era.
Jossey-Bass Publication. 1996. Covey, Stephen J. The Seven Habits
Of
Highly Effective People: Powerful Lessons in Personal Change. Reprint
Edition.
Fireside. 1990. Covey Leadership Center US Army Field Manual FM
22-100 Army
Leadership. U.S. Government Printing Office: 1999