Real Talk for Teachers: Is this School Right for Me?

Presenter: Sean Larry Stevens, NYC School Leader

Download one-page summary

What is School Culture?

It IS

  • One vision systematically implemented ("one vision, many systems")
  • Consistency of systems and language
  • Virtue building
  • Details
  • Staff culture

It is NOT

  • Motivational speeches
  • Statement of values
  • Mission and vision statements

'Hacks' to Analyze School Culture

Data (ask for it from the main office or operations manager!)

  • Attendance and uniforms
  • Homework (completion and accuracy)
  • Teacher retention
  • Academic achievement
  • Family and community engagement events

Aesthetics

  • Walls and outside showcases
  • Floors, hallways, and bathrooms
  • Bulletin boards (inside classroom)
  • Teacher workspaces and offices

Strategic Tactics to Analyze School Culture

Conversations with:

Scholars

Q: "If you could change one thing about your school, what would it be?"

Red flag: statements regarding systemic functions that are broken as opposed to issues the school has little control over, such as 'school starts too early')

Teachers

Q: "What makes you want to come here everyday?"

Red flag: teachers talk mostly about the kids.

Good: teachers talk about the community, other teachers, leadership -- something more than just the kids (who will always be there and is likely the reason you're teaching in the first place)

School leaders

Q: "Describe your leadership."

Good: people & teacher-centric; authentic & honest

Q: "What are your top, foundational priorities?"

Good: teacher quality/retention, continual improvement

Observations of:

Student-teacher 'talk ratio'

Are students taking ownership of learning? Are they controlling and leading the conversation?

Student-teacher interactions

Sit back in the hallway and watch interactions. Is the tone positive/understanding? If it's discipline-related, is it warm and strict?

Five star customer service

Is there an atmosphere of hospitality and courtesy? How stressed are teachers and how do they treat colleagues?

Walkthrough with school leader

What does a typical day look like? (red flag: no mention of in-classroom feedback, being present for arrival-lunch-dismissal, or ignores real-time issues that arise during walk)

Top 5 Drivers of Teacher Satisfaction

Based on survey of 150 K-12 teachers in June 2016:

  1. School Leadership
  2. School Culture
  3. Academic Excellence
  4. Teacher Autonomy
  5. Development and Feedback

School leadership and culture are at the top of the list of teacher satisfaction and retention.

Recommended Reading List

School Culture Rewired: How to Define, Assess, and Transform It by Steve Gruenert and Todd Whitaker

Practice Perfect: 42 Rules for Getting Better at Getting Better by Doug Lemov

Leverage Leadership: A Practical Guide to Building Exceptional Schools by Paul Bambrick-Santoyo

Driven by Data: A Practical Guide to Improve Instruction by Paul Bambrick-Santoyo

Real Talk for Real Teachers: Advice for Teachers from Rookies to Veterans by Rafe Esquith

The ONE Thing: The Surprisingly Simple Truth Behind Extraordinary Results by Gary Keller

Crucial Conversations Tools for Talking When Stakes Are High by Kerry Patterson

Content from Selected

Download one-page summary

About Selected

Selected helps teachers find jobs at schools they love. We offer a free school matching and career support platform for teachers that connects them with 1,100+ PK-12 public and independent schools in urban metro areas in the Northeast and West Coast, including New York City, NJ, CT, Philadelphia, Washington DC, Boston, and Los Angeles. Create a FREE profile and start speaking with hiring schools immediately!