Saturday, November 17, 2007
Can You Manage A Kindergarten Class?
I was a kindergarten teacher for a year and it's NOT easy. Imagine more than a dozen kids screaming and running and wanting to do other things while you try to teach. In the midst of all this chaos, you have to establish discipline and some form of learning. The good thing about children is that you will always grow attached to them. A level of responsibility, care and trust is given to a teacher by parents and this is what we try to live up to.
That's not to say managing adults would be much easier. Although more mature individuals know that they are paid to work and some people will succumb to what needs to be done because that's what the job entails, a manager should take the same responsibility for these people. As a manager, you won't always have brilliant or disciplined staff members, it will then be up to you to teach your staff not only to be better at the job they do but also as individuals.
According to "The New Dynamics of Strategy: Sensemaking is a Complex and Complicated World," from IBM Systems Journal, last 2003 by C.F. Kurtz and D. J. Snowden, one of my most admired knowledge management theorist David Snowden said that effective leaders manage chaos the way a kindergarten teacher manages her students...
"Experienced teachers allow a degree of freedom at the start of a session, then intervene to stabilize desirable patterns and destabilize undesirable ones, and when they are very clever, they seed the space so that the patterns they want are more likely to emerge."
And so my challenge to managers is just that. Can you manage a kindergarten class? Maybe you should start managing your department the way you would a kindergarten class.
(image from Strategic Talent Management)
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