By Chris Amirault, Ph.D., and Christine Snyder, M.A., coauthors of Finding Your Way Through Conflict: A Guide for Early Childhood Educators
To be sure, as two program directors, we understand that there’s always a lot for supervisors to do! But we see this as a missed opportunity for leadership development—one that has tremendous benefits if only we recognize them as such. Here are four simple steps we encourage, along with why we think they’re important.
1. Sell the PD with Your Engagement.
We’ve always thought it a bit strange when leaders demonstrate little interest in professional development that they’ve chosen and paid for! If you aren’t taking your own choices seriously as a development opportunity for the educators in your program, why would anyone else do so? If nothing else, you might as well lean into your investment to get your money’s worth—instead of underselling the product you are promoting your staff.
2. Distinguish Content, Skills, and Mindset.
Too often, professional development emphasizes only one area of development for adult learning. You know what we mean: the 57-page PowerPoint presentations with dozens of slides filled with sentence after sentence of overwhelming content—none of which is likely to change a single person’s behavior. If you engage with the training, you have the ability to point out and discuss the skills needed for thoughtful implementation of that content. But content and skills aren’t everything!
3. Model Growth Mindset.
Without a corresponding expansion of attitudes and beliefs, even outstanding training that aligns relevant content with excellent skill-building opportunities won’t have any lasting change on your program. You need a mindset shift, and you are the best person to model growth mindset. What ideas are most challenging to you? What is pushing you out of your comfy spot into a real zone of proximal development? Modeling that shift is the on-ramp to meaningful change as an outgrowth of the training.
4. Mentor Next-Generation Leadership.
We often ask our leadership colleagues, “Who are your three?” In every learning situation, collaborative meeting, study group, coaching session—you name it—we think you should be asking yourself, “Who are at least three people in whom I am investing leadership development?”
That simple question is revealing: true leaders laugh and list half a dozen or more people they are mentoring, formally or otherwise, whereas others are troubled, even offended, by the question. If you don’t know whom you’re mentoring to advance their leadership capacity, you’re not taking full advantage of each professional development opportunity! To grow as a leader and an educator, we encourage embracing the suggestions in this post and making the most of PD.
For thirteen years prior to that, he served as executive director of the Brown/Fox Point Early Childhood Education Center affiliated with Brown University in Rhode Island. During that time, he also taught early childhood education and development courses for area colleges and universities and served as a mentor and coach for providers throughout the community.
Previously, she was an early childhood specialist at the HighScope Educational Research Foundation in Ypsilanti, Michigan, where she focused on developing professional learning for teachers and curriculum for preschoolers and infants/toddlers. She facilitates training throughout the United States, internationally, and online, and has published several books, articles, training DVDs, and other classroom resources for teachers. She lives in Michigan.
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