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Slide Notes


Step 1 - Design the metrics to identify costs and progress: How can you determine what negative impact your Big Assumption is having on the district. How can you gauge the progress the district might make if you removed your Big Assumption?

"....assumed that if others recognized that he was not exactly clear about every step or see that he is uncertain, they will lose confidence in him as a leader, see him as an ineffective leader, and he will be a failure..."


Step 2 - Observe the Big Assumption: During this step, you do not attempt to change your Big Assumption. You actively observe. By observing your Big Assumption in action, you keep track of those situations where you can see your Big Assumption at work - for example, influencing how you look at things, feel about things, take action (or don't take action), make choices, or spend your energies.

Step 3 - Stay alert to challenge to the Big Assumption: look for any experiences that might lead you to question the truthfulness of your Big Assumption. Our Big Assumptions lead us to attend systematically to certain data and to systematically avoid or ignore other data.

Step 4 - Write the biography of your Big Assumption: when was it born? How long has it been around? What were some of its critical turning points?

Step 5 - Design a test of your Big Assumption:
test should be safe and modest; allow you to collect data related to your Big Assumption; be actionable within a week or two.

Step 6 - Run the test: the overall purpose of the test is to see what happens when you alter your usual conduct and then reflect on the results in light of your Big Assumption.

Step 7 - Develop new designs and new tests: with the new information you get from your first test, form hypotheses about different ways you could be operating in your leadership work. In subsequent tests, explore these hypotheses further, experiment with new behaviors, and generate additional hypotheses to guide your work.
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Change Leadership

Published on Nov 20, 2015

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PRESENTATION OUTLINE

STEPS TOWARD INDIVIDUAL CHANGE

What's your Big Assumption?

Step 1 - Design the metrics to identify costs and progress: How can you determine what negative impact your Big Assumption is having on the district. How can you gauge the progress the district might make if you removed your Big Assumption?

"....assumed that if others recognized that he was not exactly clear about every step or see that he is uncertain, they will lose confidence in him as a leader, see him as an ineffective leader, and he will be a failure..."


Step 2 - Observe the Big Assumption: During this step, you do not attempt to change your Big Assumption. You actively observe. By observing your Big Assumption in action, you keep track of those situations where you can see your Big Assumption at work - for example, influencing how you look at things, feel about things, take action (or don't take action), make choices, or spend your energies.

Step 3 - Stay alert to challenge to the Big Assumption: look for any experiences that might lead you to question the truthfulness of your Big Assumption. Our Big Assumptions lead us to attend systematically to certain data and to systematically avoid or ignore other data.

Step 4 - Write the biography of your Big Assumption: when was it born? How long has it been around? What were some of its critical turning points?

Step 5 - Design a test of your Big Assumption:
test should be safe and modest; allow you to collect data related to your Big Assumption; be actionable within a week or two.

Step 6 - Run the test: the overall purpose of the test is to see what happens when you alter your usual conduct and then reflect on the results in light of your Big Assumption.

Step 7 - Develop new designs and new tests: with the new information you get from your first test, form hypotheses about different ways you could be operating in your leadership work. In subsequent tests, explore these hypotheses further, experiment with new behaviors, and generate additional hypotheses to guide your work.

CONSIDERING STEPS FOR THE MOST POWERFUL LEARNING

  • Maintain your focus on your Big Assumption.
  • Think of all steps as iterative (not just last ones)
  • Solicit input from others
focus on how your actions, thinking, and learning affect your Big Assumption. Realize new ways of leading by challenging and changing the ideas that created your Big Assumption.

realize that each step will generate new ideas and may alter your process along the way.

ask others how they perceive your effectiveness before, during, and after engaging in this work.
Photo by kdinuraj

PHASES IN OVERTURNING YOUR IMMUNITIES

  • Unconsciously "immune"
  • Consciously "immune"
  • Consciously "released"
  • Unconsciously "released"
UI: we don't know what we don't know

CI: we alter our unconsciousness and become conscious of our immunity.

CR: when you act on your newly discovered knowledge to interpret the Big Assumption from operating in those situations where it is not valid.

UR: when you no longer need to stop, think, and plan in order to interrupt your Big Assumption.
Photo by Roger Lynn

BEING FULLY RELEASED...

FROM IMMUNITIES TO CHANGE
Create an immunities map to be released from your immunities to change.

REFLECTIONS

Two Journeys

Organizational - seeks to improve all students' learning and requires new approaches to working more strategically

Personal Journey - helps us as leaders recognize our contributions to the goals of the district and overcome our beliefs and behaviors that get in the way of progress.

When we undertake both journeys concurrently, our chances for success for students are greater.