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The 4 Pillars of a Positive Staff Culture

Part of my professional growth plan is focused on building a positive school staff culture. I am no expert in this area but I have been honoured to learn from many others to help with my growth. It is my belief that one of our main roles as principals is to create the conditions for a positive culture. I will be using my blog to share and reflect on my learning journey. 

I have been privileged to work at two different schools in the past 10 years each having their own organizational culture.  Culture is something that is hard to see but we can always feel; it is the vibe of a school – the beliefs, attitudes, and behaviours that exist within a school staff. In order to create change in a school, we need to work as a staff to create a positive school culture. As Peter Drucker says, “Culture eats strategy for breakfast” so before we can talk about driving real change and having deep reflective conversations, we need to change the behaviours to change the culture. So how do we do this?

At James Hill, our staff has focused on building positive staff culture for the past few years. Our goal was to build school culture, not by isolated team-building activities but through the important work we do together.

To ensure we were acknowledging the importance of behaviours, we started with creating some norms or commitments for our staff meetings and collaborative time (Hat tip to Cale Birk for the idea). The staff came up with the list below and I am sure you can see some themes that arise from the list.

This set of commitments guides our behaviours and has helped create an environment where the staff meetings are a place safe enough to have those conversations that often take place in the parking lots and staff rooms. Prior to a discussion that may have some opposing views, we remind ourselves of these commitments.

More recently, we have talked about the attributes of an effective staff culture.  Staff shared their experiences both in a positive culture as well as a negative culture. They then captured words to describe a positive culture and the words were put into a wordle (Hat tip to Suzanne Hoffman for the idea).

Through the work we have done as a staff and through my journey with them, as well as my learning with the staff of Kent Elementary (my former school), I have come up with what I believe are the Four Pillars of a Positive School Staff Culture. I am sure there are many more areas that could be used as pillars but these four have been most effective for our schools. The pillars include cultures that are:

  • Strengths-based
  • Collaborative
  • Innovative
  • Focused

As you can see, these four pillars are also based on the values of trust, happiness, curiosity, and care. These values weave their way through all four pillars and without them, the pillars can crumble.

In future posts, I will go through the pillars and values in more detail but here is a summary of the 4 pillars.

  • A strength-based culture is one that believes that EVERY staff member has strengths that can be tapped into to benefit the school as a whole. Feedback with staff always starts with strengths (characters and skills), staff memebrs are given the opportunity to determine their strengths, and each staff member is encouraged to use these strengths in the important work with students.
  • A collaborative culture is one that believes the “smartest person in the room is the room itself” (David Weinberger). Staff tap into the strengths of each other and engage in reflective dialogue to drive professional learning forward and create positive change. Trust is a huge part of a collaborative culture and a big change we wanted to make was to move the “parking lot conversations” into the staff meetings. Truly listening to others is such an important way to build trust and a collaborative culture.
  • An innovative culture is one in which educators feel safe to take risks, think critically and creatively, and implement new ideas with support. An important shift we have tried to make is moving from the question, “Can we….” to the question, “HOW can we…”  An important role for principals is to work to provide the resources (time, materials, etc) to build an innovative culture and help good educators become great educators.
  • A focused culture is one that knows the key areas of growth that the school is working on as well as the strategies that can have the most impact in the classroom. With so many ideas, policies, and procedures being sent our way, it is important to be a good filter and keep the staff focused on they vision and mission.  This continues to be my highest area of needed growth.  

The aforementioned pillars are based on important values of trust, happiness, curiosity, and care that not only guide our behaviours but also guide our journey toward a positive school culture.

At James Hill, we have had our challenges but have made huge strides in moving toward a positive staff culture. This year has provided so many examples of a staff that sees the strengths in each other (and taps into this), collaborates in scheduled meetings as well as on their own time, and is willing to take more risks to bring new ideas to the classrooms. With a revised curriculum in BC, focus has been a challenge for us but we will continue to grow in this area as we use the other three pillars to help create more focus on our mission and goals as a school.

I look forward to reflecting and sharing not only my learning but also our growth as a school organization to continually become a more positive school culture.

 

 

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Chris Wejr

Proud father of twin girls and a son. Currently working as the Principal of Shortreed Elementary School (K-5) in Aldergove, BC, Canada. Passionate about instruction, strengths-based education and leadership, reconciliation, assessment, and human motivation.

9 Comments

  1. Thanks for this post, Chris. U referenced Cale Birk when u mentioned establishing norms for your staff meetings. I would love to know how u did that with your staff. I wasn’t able to find it when I connected to the link

    • Hey Jenn – here is a brief summary of what Cale helped us do. We first had some table talk on some questions – a brainstorming session – and one person per group recorded it into a google doc (you can view the questions and the responses here). We then created a draft of ALL the commitments (you can see it on the same doc). The following meeting, I had all the commitments on the wall around the room, each staff member was given 10 dots and they had to put dots by their favourite statements. I then totalled and ranked the statements and then used this to create our commitments. We looked at them the following staff meeting and reworded a few of them and the finalized it. Although it took 3 meetings, it didn’t take much time within each meeting. Definitely a worthwhile process. Let me know if this makes sense or if you have any further questions. Would love to help!

  2. Thank you for inspiring us in different ways to create a staff culture that includes everyone. Not only do you talk about the four pillars, but you also “live” them, which gives more examples for me to see and understand. Thank you for being a good leader.

  3. I think it is not an accident that the large font values in the Wordle are Support, Caring, and Trust. These are not dissimilar to what students share in their own observations of a school’s culture. Could you consider a greater emphasis on the value of relationships and relationship building as a primary task for a school leader?

  4. Thank you for sharing great ideas and resources! Very much appreciated! Helpful to confirm some of my thinking:)

    • We first had a discussion about what made a good staff meeting and what made a bad staff meeting. These were collected in small groups through Google Form and I took the phrases and put them into a commitment sentence. The next meeting we did a gallery walk with all the possible commitments on the walls. Staff each had 10 stickers and they had to place a sticker on their favourite 10. I then took the top commitments and put them in a draft form and presented to staff – we reworded a few and then all approved the final version. It took a few staff meetings but was well worth!

  5. The approach to building a positive staff culture seems to be unique from company to company. Transparency, positivity, measurement, acknowledgment, uniqueness, listening, mistakes- are the seven pillars of a positive staff culture. Building a positive staff culture is a proven strategy for performance enhancement. It can stoke morale and make the staffs feel satisfied. Thus, it is good for the organization to change its culture, and make it positive and affirmative- https://www.reginafasold.com/blog/how-to-change-your-company-culture/ .

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