Lemons to Lemonade: Resolving Problems in Meetings, Workshops, and PLCs / Edition 1

Lemons to Lemonade: Resolving Problems in Meetings, Workshops, and PLCs / Edition 1

ISBN-10:
1452261016
ISBN-13:
9781452261010
Pub. Date:
06/20/2013
Publisher:
SAGE Publications
ISBN-10:
1452261016
ISBN-13:
9781452261010
Pub. Date:
06/20/2013
Publisher:
SAGE Publications
Lemons to Lemonade: Resolving Problems in Meetings, Workshops, and PLCs / Edition 1

Lemons to Lemonade: Resolving Problems in Meetings, Workshops, and PLCs / Edition 1

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Overview

The complete guide to getting the most out of every gathering of educators!

Prevent meetings from descending into aimless rambling or counterproductive conflicts that end up wasting everybody's valuable time. This resource gives you a playbook to help anyone confidently lead group discussions so that problems get solved, not created. The authors, both veteran educators and experts in group dynamics, detail:


• How to prepare yourself to facilitate the discussion and keep it on task
• Best practices for squashing conflict without wounding pride
• Methods for dealing with “interrupters,” “subject-changers,” disputes, personal attacks, and other time-waster events



Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781452261010
Publisher: SAGE Publications
Publication date: 06/20/2013
Edition description: New Edition
Pages: 179
Sales rank: 451,160
Product dimensions: 5.50(w) x 7.60(h) x 0.60(d)

About the Author

Robert J. Garmston is Emeritus Professor of Educational Administration at California State University, Sacramento. He is co-developer of Cognitive Coaching with Art Costa and co-developer of Adaptive Schools with Bruce Wellman. He has worked as an educational consultant and made presentations and conducted workshops for teachers, administrators, and staff developers on leadership, learning, and personal and organizational development in twenty-four countries on five continents. Formerly an administrator and teacher in Saudi Arabia and the United States, his work has been translated into Arabic, Dutch, Hebrew, Italian, and Spanish. Bob lives in El Dorado Hills, California, near his five children and five (bright and cute) grandchildren.

DIANE P. ZIMMERMAN, Ph.D. is a writer and consultant focusing on entrepreneurial learning and schools that make a difference. She obtained her Ph.D. in Human and Organizational Development from the Fielding Graduate Institute. She recently retired as a superintendent of schools after a 36-year career in education that was rich in leadership, facilitation and conflict management.

Trained originally as a speech therapist, Diane worked early in her career as a teacher, speech therapist, program manager, and Assistant Director of Special Education in Fairfield, California. She subsequently became a principal in Davis, California and served consecutively in two schools over 13 years before being promoted to Assistant Superintendent for Personnel. In 2002, she began a nine-year journey as a superintendent of Old Adobe School Union School District, a small suburban elementary school district in Petaluma, California. She prides herself in moving the district’s teachers from contentious union interactions to cooperative collaborations as productive, interest-based educators who collectively set the highest standards possible for their school district.

Diane has been an active in professional development all of her career. While obtaining her administrative credential, Diane was assigned to Bob Garmston as her intern coach. This early career interaction turned into a life-long intellectual partnership and Diane joined the Cognitive Coaching consulting consortium founded by Bob Garmston and Art Costa.

Diane has taught in administrative training programs at several northern California universities and over the past 20 years has written and consulted in the areas of Cognitive Coaching, teacher supervision and evaluation, facilitation, stages of adult development, assessment of leadership skills, and constructivist leadership.

Leadership and mediation of conflict has always been a part of Diane’s life. She was encouraged to assume leadership roles throughout her career, from early work supervising in a family restaurant business, to her first teaching job in a new special education program, through her years as a principal. Throughout her career, she has been involved in handling divergent opinions and mediating conflict. She gained a substantive reputation as the “in house” expert in facilitation and her staff valued her ability to create learning communities long before “professional learning communities” were popularized

Table of Contents

About the Authors
Introduction
To Intercede Is To Lead
Why Read This Book
Problem Locater
Chapter 1. The Novice to Expert Journey
We All Begin as Novices
Accomplished Means Competent
Uninformed
Novice
Proficient
Accomplished
Highly Accomplished Expert
Proficiency Scale
Attributes of the Expert
Chapter 2. Building Personal Confidence
Connecting Mind and Body
1. Breathe
2. Try Progressive Relaxation
3. Walk
4. Center Yourself Physically
5. Over Prepare. Over Prepare
6. Address the Stress of Conflict
7. Check Your Negative Predictions at the Door
8. When Stuck, Move
9. Maintain Your Identity as a Facilitator
10. Monitor Your Need to Know
11. Take Care to Arrange the Room
12. Create a "Circle of Excellence "
Chapter 3. Intervention Principles
Principles Guide Decisions
1. Compassion
2. Precise Language
3. Congruence
4. From Low to High Risk
Chapter 4. Deciding to Intervene
Establish Meeting Standards
Set Working Agreements
Evaluate Working Agreements
Clarify Tasks
Intervene as Necessary
Deciding to Intervene with an Ad Hoc Group
Intervening Preemptively
1. Is the Agenda Relevant?
Plan the Beginning
Cluster Reports
Mix Strategies
2. Is Engery Waning?
Around the Room and Back Again
Card Partners
The Card Stack and Shuffle
3. Are Emotions Ratcheting Up?
First Turn/Last Turn
4. Might the Group be Heading Toward Conflict?
Grounding
Deciding When to Intervene
1. Is Intervening Important?
2. Am I the Best Person to Intervene?
3. Are My Observations Accurate?
4. Will It Be Quick or Take Time?
5. Can the Group Learn From It?
Chapter 5. Common Group Issues
Getting Attention
Attention First
Refocusing
Common Signal
Physical Proximity
Verbal Proximity
Redirecting Engagement
Join a Whole Table That is Off Task
Refocus Serial Storytelling
When Workflow is Hampered
Address a Refusal to Follow Directions
Assist with Difficulty Transitioning
Address Uneven Finishes with Group Work
Engergize a Quiet Group
Managing Your Emotions
Positional Thinking—Power Struggles
From Positions to Interest
Chapter 6. Managing Common Challenges
Low Engagement
Knitters
Non-participants
Daydreamers
Silent Participants
Frowners
Distracteds
Distruptive Group Members
Broken Records
Long-winded Speakers
Humorists
Inappropriate Humorists
Latecomers and Early Leavers
Resisters
Side Talkers
Know-It-Alls
Monopolizes
Misinformants
Interrupters
Subject-Changers
Cell Phones and Texting
Chapter 7. Strategies for Advanced Facilitation
1. Group Conflict
Grounding
Existing State—Desired State
2. Demoralizing External Events
Desired State
Third Point
Redirect Resistance
Pace and Lead
Structured Interviews
3. Disputes
Stop the Dispute Early
Verbalize the Issue
Acknowledge Each Position
Identify the Sources of Information
Check Perceptions
Reframe the Conflict as an Asset
4. Dissenting Views
Paraphrase Partner
Pace the Emotion
Redirect the Attack
Reframe the Opposition
Help Groups Utilize Styles
Assumptions Wall
Brainstorm Questions
Disperse to Agree
5. Personal Attacks
The Six-Step Response
Step Between Opposing Members
Change the Narrative
Enlist the Group in Solving the Problem
6. Challenges to the Leader
Process Commercial
Engage With More Intensity
Engage With Less Intensity
Request Civility
7. Subgroup Manipulation
Decision Matrix
Values Decision Matrix
Require a Quorum
Pace, Lead and Poll
One-Minute Advocacy
Alternate Microphone Advocacy
8. Sabotage
9. Irresolvable Conflict
Polarity Management
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