EdWorld Internet Topics



Fundraisers & Fundraising Ideas:
Earn 90% Profit!

Leading Trade and
Vocational Career
savings.


Online Degree Directory

Walden University
M.S. in Education
Degrees Online


Online Schools
University Degrees
College Programs


Seeking leadership within education

College-Review
Reviews of Top US Colleges


Paper jams vanish at fellowes.com/jamproof.

Search Colleges
Online Schools
University Degrees


EducationInc.com
University of Phoenix
& Accredited Colleges

NEC Star Student
Cashback Rewards 

Enroll Today! 






Our Top 10
Admin Desk Features

Admin Columnists
Article Archive
Instant Meetings
Leadership Archive
Newsletters 'R Us
Partners for Success
PR for Principals
Principal Files
Principal Ideas
Take Five

More Admin Desk
Features

Conventions & Conf
Exceptional Events
Grants Center
Great Meetings
How I Handled…
Morning Math
Principal Pointers
Principal Profiles

More Admin Archives
Fundraising/Funding
Goal Setting
Parent Involvement
Programs of Interest
Special Themes
Staffing & Training
Technology/Internet
Wire Side Chats

More Admin Resources
Free Admin Newsletter
Message Boards
Tools and Templates

Visit Our
Other Channels


- Article Archive
- Free LP Newsletter
- Holiday Lessons
- Lesson of the Day
- Work Sheet Library
- See more...


- Article Archive
- Meet Our Columnists
- Reading Room
- Strategies That Work
- Teacher Features
- See more...


- Article Archive
- Sites to See
- Tech Lesson of Week
- Tech Team Articles
- Techtorial How-To's
- See more...


- Article Archive
- EW Goes to School
- Regina Barecca Humor
- School Issues Glossary
- Wire Side Chats
- See more...





- A+ Site Reviews
- Advertising Info
- Contact Us
- EDmin Planning Center
- Education Standards
- Financial Tips
- Free Newsletters
- Message Boards
- Subjects/Specialties
- Tips Library
- Tools & Templates
- See more...
Featured Programs
   E-Learning

Home > Administrator's Desk Channel > Administrator's Desk Archives > Admin Desk Columnists, Leadership Archive > Paul Young Archive > Paul Young Column

PAUL YOUNG ARTICLE

Paul Young’s Young @ Heart

Preventing Gridlock: The “Principal” Traffic Cop’s Job

The job of a principal is not all that different from the job of a traffic cop. When gridlock forms in our schools, it is the principal -- the school’s traffic controller -- who must make the quick decisions that “drive” achievement and remove barriers to improvement.

Have you ever driven through a city where the traffic lights seem to be out of sync? Your car inches along, barely moving with each signal change from green to yellow to red. Soon cars are stuck in the middle of intersections, and gridlock ensues. You swear you can see the needle on your gas gauge moving down, down, down. Maybe tempers flare. And you wonder who the heck is in charge and why traffic flow seems to be so poorly managed.



Meet Paul Young

Dr. Paul Young is a retired elementary school principal and a past president of the National Association of Elementary School Principals (NAESP). He was trained with other national leaders in the first class of the NAESP PALS (Peer Assisted Leadership Services) Program and is a Nationally Certified Principal Mentor. He is the author of You Have to Go to School, You’re the Principal: 101 Tips to Make It Better for Your Students (Corwin Press, 2004) and Promoting Positive Behaviors: An Elementary Principal’s Guide to Structuring the Learning Environment (2007, Corwin Press). With his principal mentees Dustin Knight and Jeromey Sheets, he authored Mentoring Principals: Frameworks, Agendas, Tips, and Case Stories (Corwin Press, 2005). Young is currently the executive director of the West After School Center in Lancaster, Ohio.

Read more articles by Paul Young.

In an ideal world, the gridlock is short-lived. An alert traffic cop arrives on the scene, evaluates the situation, makes some quick decisions -- and soon the congestion has eased, drivers’ nerves have been calmed, and traffic flows smoothly again.

GRIDLOCK IN SCHOOLS

The business of public schools can be as susceptible to gridlock as traffic on city streets. And, as principal, you can often find yourself stuck in the middle of that gridlock. Because you’re a “middle manager” in your district’s bureaucracy, you don’t have control over every problem -- or opportunity -- that arises. Yet, as often as not, you can make things happen. You can fall victim to the gridlock, or you can respond like a traffic cop who is able to maintain an even flow of traffic at a busy intersection. You can positively affect customer service at the school level just as that traffic cop does on the street. You can make quick decisions and keep things moving. You can provide clear direction that is responsive to your constituencies. And, if things are not working, you can re-evaluate a situation, adjust, and quickly redirect. You can even enlist capable individuals to assist, then delegate and empower them to follow through with assigned tasks.

Or you can procrastinate, bringing movement and productivity to a standstill.

When you are unresponsive and unable to make decisions, your staff stops knowing what to do or even how to do their jobs. As they wait for direction, answers to their questions, and fixes for their problems, frustration builds. Tempers might even flare. Time gets wasted. Student learning suffers. You have school-wide gridlock.

KEEPING TRAFFIC FLOWING IN THE RIGHT DIRECTION

Away from the busy intersection of the principal’s office, a feeling of gridlock can also develop when staff members ineffectively perform their jobs. Just as a traffic cop must deal with stalled cars, principals need to seize and tow their deadbeat staffers. Doing so creates opportunities and frees the flow for those who are able to get the job done.

As the chief traffic cop in your school, you have to make quick decisions about what to do with “broken down” teachers who can impact the flow of student learning and achievement, the smooth workings of a teaching team, and even the morale of the entire school. You have the power to impound those teachers who have given up and deserted their students. You have the power to get traffic and morale back on track. But you must possess the desire to do that.

At the same time, you can provide fuel for those in need and recharge those whose batteries might be faltering.

Or you can pass the blame along to someone up the district chain of command.

A SCHOOL IN SYNC

It’s not easy to make things happen in a busy school. There is always stress. There is always the fear and the possibility that there will be a breakdown. But the teachers and others in your school who are driving achievement shouldn’t have to tolerate problem build-up. When you establish positive structures, provide clear signals, and clear the way for unobstructed movement, you have created a school environment where good drivers are free to do their jobs.

Busy schools can work when you -- the chief of traffic control in your school -- make sure the traffic lights are synchronized. When you constantly monitor progress, remain ever alert to potential problems, and remove barriers that might impede progress, you are paving the road to student achievement and teacher commitment and contentment.

Article by Paul Young
Copyright © 2007 Education World®

08/01/2007





Copyright 1996-2008 by Education World, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
Home | About Us | Reprint Rights | Help | Site Guide | Fellows | Contact Us | Privacy Policy