Wednesday 5 November 2014

In praise of head teachers

In praise of head teachers

The difficulty in appointing head teachers in schools is easy to understand. The role involves the balancing of complex pressures in a constantly changing educational setting. It demands resilience and a range of skills that few of us possess. They are a group of people who, in my long experience, are courageous, committed and are likely to be motivated much more by faith than by ambition. In common with many bishops they stand at the meeting point between the Gospel and the local secular world, between religion and a practical atheism. They also bridge the gap between home and school, between the almost industrial mentality of some educational policy and the self sacrifice of staff. They hold together different generations of teachers by maintaining an ethos and tradition that reaches back to former pupils and out into the wider community. They are people that can be stretched at times beyond their limits.

Yet the figure of the head teacher is often portrayed as a manager of target-based learning and someone who is only as good as the latest set of exam results. This mechanistic and almost industrial model of the role as arranging inputs (learning) and outputs (exam results) is a narrow and demeaning view of the head teachers role as the spiritual leader of a catholic learning community. The head teacher is undoubtedly responsible for learning and results but the quality of the learning will depend not just on what happens with the curriculum but also upon the relationships that make up the community. The exam results will only catch part of the learning that happens in the classroom and school community. Much of the richness bequeathed to pupils in a catholic school will only emerge in later life, in family living, parenting, commitment to citizenship and to church. The narrow culture of measurement and the repressive, almost medieval, practice of “blame and shame” leave our head teachers at risk of going over to the “dark side” and adopting narrow mechanical and superficial ways of working and thinking or simply burning themselves out with the loneliness and responsibility involved in holding so many pressures in balance.

As a catholic community we need to recognise and value the amazing men and women who lead our catholic schools in this country. They lead a church community within diocesan structures that are more difficult to maintain. Few people in our church community appreciate all the pressures under which they labour and we need to be aware of some of the issues with which they manage each day:

·       They need to continually improve results in order to avoid slipping down the written and unwritten competitive league tables that might lead to bad publicity, falling roles, amalgamations and even closure.

·       Head teachers have to respond clearly and quickly to new educational initiatives that can seem to come from outside the local community.

·       The head teacher has to provide ongoing and relevant training for all staff and be skilled in advertising, selecting and recruiting suitable staff as well as dealing with grievances and terminating employment in a just and Gospel-based way.

·       The demands of the local deanery for more effective religious education that will bring older pupils back to practice are a further complex and legitimate challenge to which a head teacher must respond.

·       Issues of health and safety, relationship education, budgeting and policy management are a regular and time-consuming focus for every head teacher.

·       In addition the head teacher is asked to maintain the spirit and ethos of the school so that each pupil and member of staff has the experience, whatever their faith background, of a gospel-based community where spirit and activity are integrated in each person.

These are just some of the roles that I know keep many head teachers late at work and at times distant from their own families. They take work home and live and breathe a role that begins to need the constant support of their whole family. They see themselves as setting the tone for the whole school, modelling a work ethic for colleagues and absorbing responsibility for tasks that are often difficult to delegate. Many head teachers with whom I have worked know that they are doing a good job and are very close to the limits of their energy for long periods as they balance the secular and spiritual dimensions of their role. What they sometimes lack is the recognition that bonds them supportively with the community in which they serve. The encouragement head teachers need will come only rarely from the inspectorate structure and more often from the local authority. The most important sustained support a head teacher needs must always come from within the school community; from parents, governors, pupils and staff.

Parents need to see beyond performance to the person of the head teacher as a spiritual leader in their community and not simply a service provider for the local authority.  Perhaps parents more than most others will recognise in the head a shared commitment and care for the young especially in the confusion of adolescent lives. Governors need to find time to read between the lines of the meetings they attend and support the head at times of celebration as well as during times of trouble or change. Teachers need to take good news into the head’s office and try to use the middle leaders in school to resolve problems before going to the head teacher. Pupils simply need to say thank you to the head teacher when they can, admit their mistakes honestly and enjoy the spirit of the school.


Saint John Bosco recognised the importance of leadership and offered the image of the Good Shepherd as a model for leaders of church based communities. It is a challenging model for the leader; to seek out the lost, establish safe places, and lay down ones own life at times for what really matters. Head teachers feel that responsibility to live the Good shepherd model at the heart of the school community. However, the Good Shepherd model is for the whole school community not just the leader. We are all called to shepherd the spirit of love, of truth, of justice and compassion in the school community. Therefore the head teacher also needs to feel shepherded through concern for them as a person. The head needs to hear good news as well as difficulties from staff. They need to hear praise and recognition for their role and their informal presence in school and the work they do beyond the school site.
Don Bosco’s believed that praise, recognition and encouragement gave strength to the inner spirit and helped people to remain humble and strong in the service of others. May we find time in our conversations to recognise, praise and encourage those men and women who lead our catholic schools. If they experience the warmth and understanding of their community they can then find even more strength to face the daily challenge to build, on our behalf, a new spiritual community in a secular age

Tuesday 4 November 2014

Caught in the froth of measured learning

Many teachers face an impossible set of expectations from society in their educational role. Most teachers are motivated by concern for young people and feel that the focus only on measurable assessed outcomes diminishes their role and does not meet the needs of young people. On the other hand families and society now expect education to instill values especially moral responsibility in young people. But those expectations are not taken it into account when making judgements about schools.
OFSTED the schools inspectorate in England and Wales, have a wonderful evaluation document on spiritual and moral aspects of education. It is inspiring, useful and recognises the broader reach of an holistic education. But it lies on the shelf, gathering dust and is rarely used to evaluate and recognise the softer skills of teachers. In practice it doesn't count.

 Our politicians want teachers to produce measurable results within the term of office of  a government. They seem to be satisfied with a narrow view of education that will use exam progress as a sign of success when many young people  are falling apart inside. Faced with a spectrum of social needs that inhibit learning in some young people in every class a teacher has to assume some of the responsibility of a social worker in order to motivate young people to learn. This work is done individually, vocationally and at great personal cost to teachers. Because it is not recognised and approved it may wither on the vine of the teaching career- yet it is probably the most valuable work that they do.

In dealing consistently, patiently and personally with dis-functional elements in each class at teacher models respect and moral strength not only to the challenging young people but to the whole of the class.They teach young people how to be adults in society. The assessment based curriculum has almost squeezed out this vital aspect of learning to the impoverishment of the whole school community. There is no time for deeper learning and the development of wisdom has been replaced with the froth of information and measured learning.



Monday 3 November 2014

Teaching: a matter of the heart

Today, all across the world, teachers are performing minor miracles. In every classroom they are engaging with young people in a way that brings them to life and fills out the school curriculum with the hidden curriculum needed to be a balanced human being. They achieve this miracle by dealing with each class and every student with respect, understanding affection and humour. These four aspects of relationships make teachers strong in laying down clear boundaries, warm hearted, empathetic and cheerful.



The students learn lessons modelled by the behaviour of the teacher.  The teacher, dealing patiently with outrageous adolescent behavior teaches a powerful lesson in relationship building. The teacher who is passionate about her subject transmits the energy for learning before content is considered. The teacher who can laugh and remain cheerful under pressure teaches resilience and the teacher who notices pain in the students can teach compassion. Such things are not on the curriculum but without them lives would fall apart and community would be impossible. We are teachers, not instructors because education is a matter of the heart.

respect, understanding affection and humour- the initial letters spell out ruah- the word for spirit in arabic and hebrew scripture- the energy that creates community.

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