Have you watched this recent TEDTalks by Adam Grant which defined Givers and Takers (and Matchers)? As an educational technology coach, I watched this with great interest and reflected upon Grant's model as applied to my work as a coach. If you haven't watched it yet, then here it is . . . definitely worth the 18 minutes of your time!
Here are the key moments that I picked out from his talk . . .
Here are the key moments that I picked out from his talk . . .
- 3:40 - Givers make organisations better . . . Schools need to recognise and acknowledge this. My previous principal always said that I was a problem finder and would immediately start working on a solution without being asked - something that was greatly appreciated. But the work of Givers is not always appreciated - please see a previous post about what I call "guilty by competence".
- 5:30 - Protect Givers from burnout . . . As a self-identified Giver, the environment and school culture that I work in has a profound effect on me. The act of changing schools has forced me to reflect upon this a lot this year. How school leadership values our role as coaches and change-agents within the school, makes all of the difference with how our day-to-day work progresses and how quickly (or slowly) we "feel the burn".
- 6:30 - Encourage help-seeking behaviours . . . Get more people to act as Givers by creating/building a culture of giving, providing help, and sharing. Again, this is all about changing the culture of the school, which comes from top through leadership and from the grassroots movements which encourage collaboration, professional sharing and growth. Without the support for such bottom-up shifts in culture, the Takers dominate the culture of the school and the Givers get burned out.
- 7:50 - Get the right people on the bus . . . To me, this speaks about hiring practices and considering people's Mindset (in my case, mindset towards educational technology). One way school leadership can address and build a positive school culture is through effective management of hiring practices for faculty and staff.
- 8:50 - Weed out the Takers . . . This is an inherently difficult thing to do in schools, but entirely necessary and vital for school development. As a teacher for almost 3 decades, I have seen the ineffective/disgruntled/unmotivated/coasting/bully teacher at every school that I have worked in across 3 continents. Admit it, this is a problem at every school in the world no matter how big or small, how affluent or inner-city, how well resourced or under-funded. School leadership needs to be able to move someone on who is detrimental to the organisation as a whole. More easily said then done, I know . . . but just because it is difficult doesn't mean that it isn't necessary.
- 9:10 - Characteristic of Agreeableness . . . I only bring this part up because I am Canadian, eh?! ;-) Sorry about that . . .
My takeaways from this? Coaches are generally Givers by nature (there are a few that I have met who I would classify more as a Matcher though) and they are not the only ones in the building. As such, schools need to protect them and cultivate a culture of giving/helping which will benefit school growth and development through building a positive school culture. Would you classify yourself as a Giver? Have you ever worked in a school where the Takers stand out and dominate the school culture? If so, how did you survive in that kind of environment? Or did you hit burnout and move on, as changing the school culture is just too hard or too long of a process?