LEAD Public Schools deserves more explicit and unequivocal praise than I have been offering. In the previous 3 posts, I was focusing on the idea of Exalting the Teaching Profession. The failings I was pointing to in that area are not really the failings LEAD. Exalting the Teaching Profession is something that we need to do at the community, societal, really, the species level. It's something that we need to accomplish if we hope to survive as a species. When we fall short, we see the evidence in our schools, but it is not, strictly speaking, the fault of the schools.
PROMOTING the Idea that Great Teaching is Possible -- that really is something that falls fully within our powers. And at every level of their organization, the professionals at LEAD Public Schools were superb PROMOTERS.
Promoting the Idea that Great Teaching is Possible is vital because current social conditions aside, humans are disposed to valuing the teaching profession. We have evolved as clan creatures. We do not, as a species, leave the rearing of our young solely to parents, as evidenced by the fact that typically, even established homeschool programs involve some kind of coordination between families, not simply isolated family units going it alone.
Our task as educators is to change that, so that in those moments where parents look to see if there is any decent teaching going out there, they see something. It's alright if parents see teachers failing from time to time, especially if teachers fail in trying to achieve objectives that perhaps parents had not considered worth pursuing.
I am going to speak in positive terms about LEAD's particular approach to this problem. In my inside experience of LEAD, I saw four things that I admired somewhat covetously (as a manager and promoter of Project GENIUS):
- aggressive recruitment of talent
- a conscious application of best practices into operations
- mechanism for implementing and maintaining those best practices
- a process by which to revise that mechanism.
- There was a class in "positive narration."
- There is a class in a technique called "cold calling."
- There is another class on designing "exit tickets."