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Gene E. Hall - Change in Schools: Facilitating the Process

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This book summarizes nearly fifteen years of research in schools--research geared toward understanding and describing the change process as experienced by its participants. It addresses the question: What can educators and educational administrators don on a day-to-day basis to become more effective in facilitating beneficial change? The book provides research-based tools, techniques, and approaches that can help change facilitators to attain this goal. The authors contend that, in order to be more effective, educators must be concerns-based in their approach to leadership. Early chapters deal with teachers evolving attitudes, concerns, and perceptions of change, as well as their gradually developing skills in implementing promising educational innovations. The authors next turn to examine the role of the school principal and other leaders as change facilitators, and present ways that they can become better informed about the developmental state of teachers as well as how to use these diagnostic survey and data as the basis for facilitating the change process. The emphasis is on practical day-to-day skills and techniques, showing administrators how to design and implement interventions that are supportive of teachers and others. Each chapter presents not only the concepts and research of the authors but also translates the concepts in concrete applications which illustrate the ways they can be applied to obtain genuine and lasting improvements. The book also contains an important discussion and description of the change process, focusing on teachers, innovations, and the schools.

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Change in Schools title Change in Schools Facilitating the - photo 1
Change in Schools

title:Change in Schools : Facilitating the Process SUNY Series in Educational Leadership
author:Hall, Gene E.; Hord, Shirley M.
publisher:State University of New York Press
isbn10 | asin:0887063470
print isbn13:9780887063473
ebook isbn13:9780585060347
language:English
subjectSchool improvement programs--United States, Curriculum change--United States, School principals--Attitudes--United States.
publication date:1987
lcc:LB2822.82.H35 1987eb
ddc:371.2/07
subject:School improvement programs--United States, Curriculum change--United States, School principals--Attitudes--United States.
Page ii
SUNY Series in Educational Leadership
Daniel Duke, editor
Page iii
Change in Schools
Facilitating the Process
Gene E. Hall and Shirley M. Hord
State University of New York Press
Page iv
Figure 16 in this volume is from Implementation Checklist of the GINN READING PROGRAM, Copyright 1984 by Ginn and Company. Used with permission.
Published by State University of New York Press, Albany
1987 State University of New York
All rights reserved
Printed in the United States of America
No part of this book may be used or reproduced in any manner whatsoever without written permission except in the case of brief quotations embodied in critical articles and reviews
For information, address State University of New York Press, State University Plaza, Albany, N.Y., 12246
Library of Congress Cataloging in Publication Data
Hall, Gene E., 1941
Change in schools.
(SUNY series in educational leadership)
Bibliography: p. 365
Includes index.
1. School improvement programsUnited States.
2. Curriculum changeUnited States. 3. School
superintendents and principalsUnited StatesAttitudes.
I. Hord, Shirley M. II. Title. III. Series.
LB2822.82.H35Picture 21986 371.2'07Picture 3Picture 486-5714
ISBN 0-88706-346-2
ISBN 0-88706-347-0 (pbk.)
10 9
Page v
Contents
Preface
vii
Acknowledgments
ix
1. The Concerns-Based Approach: An Overview
1
2. The Literature: Leadership for Change
23
3. The Teacher's Point of View: Stages of Concern
52
4. Is It Being Used? Levels of Use of an Innovation
80
5. What Is It? Innovation Configurations
107
6. Little Things Mean a Lot: Incident Interventions
141
Picture 5
7. How Do Interventions Fit into an Overall Plan? The Intervention Taxonomy
177
Picture 6
8. What Kind of Change Facilitator Are You? Responder, Manager, or Initiator
215
Picture 7
9. Principals Do Not Do It Alone: The Consigliere and Other Change Facilitators
259
Picture 8
10. How Does the Concerns-Based Approach Really Work? A Case Study
285

Page vi
Picture 9
11. So What Else Is There to CBAM? Explorations of Additional Theory, Practice, and Research
329
Appendix A: Certified TrainersThe CBAM Cadre International
357
Appendix B: Example Interventions for Each Stage of Concern
361
References
365
Index
383

Page vii
Preface
In 1971 and 1972 when Dick Wallace, Bill Dossett, and Gene Hall started talking about a "different" change model, one that emphasized the personal side of change, there was little expectation that the proposed concepts would ever be systematically studied or result in useful applications. The group's first assumption, that change was a process not an event, was not in vogue in those days, when delivering a "teacher proof" box of new curricula was accepted as the way to produce immediate change. The second assumption, that the point of view of the individual is a vital consideration in changing an institution, was seen as heresy in terms of the dominant change model of the time. Now, both these assumptions are regularly stated as important and obvious by researchers, practitioners, and policymakers.
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