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A Guide for Faculty Meetings That Couldn鈥檛 Have Been an Email

How to make the most of staff meetings
By Mary Hendrie 鈥 August 01, 2024 3 min read
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When the EdWeek Research Center polled teachers earlier this year on when in their jobs they would like to spend less time, the top answer was meetings, with 33 percent of respondents longing for less meeting time. A flat zero percent of teachers wanted more meetings. Tough beat for meetings!

One solution to that widespread meeting fatigue may be to simply schedule fewer. Just look at the top Facebook comment when we shared the recent news story 鈥Teachers Hate All Those Meetings. Can Principals Find a Workaround?鈥: 鈥淵es, it鈥檚 called an email.鈥

But what about how to improve the truly necessary staff meetings?

It鈥檚 been a question on educators鈥 minds for a long time. In a 2010 91直播 Opinion blog post, Illinois administrator Ryan Bretag shared his six steps for planning a meeting that doesn鈥檛 leave participants grousing that 鈥渢his should have been an email.鈥 Step number 1? Leave the one-way information delivery off the agenda.

鈥淒o not treat these as a time for one person after another to stand in front of a large group sharing information,鈥 he warned. Instead, with the proper agenda, faculty meetings can offer fertile opportunities for collaborative learning and growth.

A year earlier, Thomas R. Hoerr was also homing in on the challenge of lackluster meetings with a simple litmus test: Imagine if your faculty meetings were voluntary. If teachers鈥 response to that prospect is 鈥渢hanks, but no thanks,鈥 you鈥檝e got a problem on your hands. Turning those meetings into something more than time-wasters starts with unlearning five persistent myths, the school leader wrote in his 2009 opinion essay.

Earlier this year, Opinion contributors Peter DeWitt and Michael Nelson offered some additional tips in 鈥Are Your Staff Meetings Unfocused and Disjointed? Try These 5 Strategies. Before listing out those five strategies, however, they echoed a similar warning by reminding readers that the goal of meetings should be learning together, rather than a forum for leaders to talk at their staff. 鈥淪taff meetings are an opportunity for leaders and teachers to work as a collective,鈥 they write, 鈥渁s opposed to what really happens, which is two different groups sharing a space together.鈥

That fundamental insight about what separates a productive meeting from a wasteful one wasn鈥檛 unfamiliar ground for DeWitt, who has been on the efficient-staff-meetings beat for years now. A consistent through line of the former principal鈥檚 advice has been a call to rethink the top-down model of staff meetings. Just like a flipped classroom, as he first explained in 2012, a flipped faculty meeting can allow principals to deliver important content knowledge before the meeting, freeing up in-person time for discussion and collaboration.

Want to know more on what that might look like in practice? DeWitt has you covered:

In addition to the frequency and structure of meetings, 91直播 Opinion contributors have also eyed behavioral shifts that can make meetings more collaborative.

One Colorado high school administrator has touted her school鈥檚 introduction of restorative practices to meeting time, starting with a 15-minute talking circle before each Monday administrative-team meeting.

Despite the busy schedules of everyone involved, those 鈥渟oft-skill conversations鈥 are well worth the time, Sonja Gedde explained in a February opinion essay. The talking circles both allow leaders to model the type of restorative practices they expect from teachers in the classroom, as well as bring them closer together as a team.

鈥淔or approximately 15 minutes each week,鈥 Gedde explained, 鈥渨e create a foundation of transparency and trust that informs our interpersonal interaction as teammates and permeates our leadership identities. Our talking circle establishes a tone of calm and intentional listening, allowing us to know one another as people first.鈥

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