Inspire Connect Engage Create
Challenge, Instinct and Resilience
My first week in my new post as Deputy Head Teacher has probably been the most challenging five days of my career. Unfortunately I cannot be as candid about my experiences as I normally would be, due to a number of reasons, including some legal ones. Let’s just say “a baptism of fire” would be an understatement.
The week has been all about firsts. When you are starting somewhere new, everything you do will be for the first time. Learning about the routines for assembly, end of playtime, dinner routines, seeing behaviour policies in action, dealing with incidents. When you are thrust into situations where you are a little unsure or even completely unsure, it is a huge challenge.
Carrying something to write on has really helped as things to do, information and names have come thick and fast. I have also punctuated so much of my work with a smile, a joke to lighten the air with colleagues.
Strangely enough I have walked away from the last 5 days with a better understanding of myself, my resilience and ability to adapt. I understand the importance of my open mindedness and have a clearer appreciation for the inner strength you need to stray way beyond your comfort zone.
I have learned that you cannot plan for every outcome in certain situations and that sometimes you learn a lot more about people and yourself when all you are able to do is react. No time to think, just react. With everything stripped away, you are just left with your professional instincts.
This week I have learned that I can be visibly calm under intense pressure and the impact this has on those looking to me to lead. In fact I have surprised myself with my ability to think with clarity when pressed, it hasn’t been an act, but simply how I approached situations this week.
No other 5 day stretch has ever examined and pressurised my professional facets as those just gone.
I know for certain that I am lucky to be part of an amazing staff, a fantastic group of professionals who have supported and helped me through a tough week. I am very grateful to them for that. It is a week to be included in the memoirs one day.
Pic: Father’s Strength by Shavar Ross Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs License
Similar Ideas
| Print article | This entry was posted by tbarrett on April 18, 2010 at 8:03 pm, and is filed under Featured, Leadership. Follow any responses to this post through RSS 2.0. You can leave a response or trackback from your own site. |
Leading With The First Step
about 2 weeks ago - View Comments
Both of these films meant something to me. They both show people leading, they both show people taking action – they are both very different and yet we can learn something from each.
Leadership can happen in many forms, it can occur in the smallest of actions as well as the more obvious ones. What did
Seeing School Differently
about 3 weeks ago - View Comments
Since moving up to senior management the story of school has changed for me. A school is the centre of so much activity, central to the daily lives of so many people, each with their own part to play in it. Each person sees school in a different way, everyone has their daily narrative.
My story
What Am I Good At?
about 2 months ago - View Comments
On a Friday our school has a celebration assembly that allows us to share the great things going on in school. It occured to me this week how important our role is in helping children find their specialism, the one thing in life that they are great at, that they enjoy and even have a
Reflections on Being A Foundation Teacher
about 3 months ago - View Comments
I have spent the last half term as a Foundation 2 (4 and 5 year olds) classteacher in my new school. Combined with a multitude of other factors, including finding my feet as a Deputy Headteacher, it has been the most challenging and intense seven weeks of my teaching career.
I thought I would take
If Fish Were Ideas
about 4 months ago - View Comments
Pete and Chris, an assistant head teacher and a newly qualified teacher, enjoyed sharing ideas for learning with me. But it was when I showed them Twitter and where to find future ideas that they saw the potential of online networks.
Give a teacher an idea and you spark an interest for a week. Lead a
I Hope…
about 5 months ago - View Comments
My son will soon be pitched headlong into full time education. As a father and a teacher I have certain hopes for the kind of experiences he will have in the next 15 years or so.
I hope he will be in classrooms that are bright and engaging.
I hope that he will think school is exciting, where
#newleaders
about 5 months ago - View Comments
Doug Belshaw and Stuart Ridout were instrumental in the production of the fantastic #movemeon book,
“Tips, ideas and suggestions for all teachers from the Twitter community.”
The book was created from the tweets of fellow Twitter users, all collated with the #movemeon hashtag.
Another effort was soon started after this one titled #newleaders. I will soon be
Is the Label “Games Based Learning” Useful?
about 8 months ago - View Comments
Whichever way you look at it the words Games Based Learning create a very neat little box. In that box we are meant to see all “learning” that is centred on, or “based” around a game – which invariably and most recently refers to a console or computer game.
In the recent few days I have
Discovery
about 1 year ago - View Comments
Last week as I was helping a child in my class with some data entry using the excellent Create-a-Graph, I watched as a child sitting next to them learned something new. I was simply using the TAB keyboard short-cut to move between fields when adding some data. I could see that the boy next to me had
The Philips Entertaible in our School
about 1 year ago - View Comments
Last Wednesday evening I attended my first TeachMeet event held in the Forth Room at the SECC. Typically I was first out of the hat to do a seven minute talk and kick the evening off – I was very nervous and my careful plans seemed to evaporate as I walked up to the stage.

about 3 months ago
I can feel the Friday night sigh in this, one I remember all too well from most of my weeks, months and years teaching. It's a good sigh, but one you hope gets lessened with every week that passes. It sounds to me as if there's the makings of a superb TeachMeet talk in there for our fifth year – I love the fact that the only technology that really suited your needs was a pencil and paper, also my tools of choice for keeping on top of things. Hurrah for the pad!
about 4 months ago
Hi Tom!
I started at a new position last year and feel your pain! You describe it so well-as yes, it can be a time in learning about yourself and others. It sounds like you have a good colleagues at your school! I hope your weeks at your new job get better!
about 4 months ago
“This week I have learned that I can be visibly calm under intense pressure and the impact this has on those looking to me to lead”
Tom, that is a very valuable insight and a very useful skill to have.
I guess as you are a 'new boy' in the school, other staff members may be 'testing' you (in a nice way) to see if you are on their side, perhaps to find your strengths, your views and maybe what makes you tick.
All of which is only to be expected. Stay strong, stay calm and let your best shine through (at least that's what one teacher once told me) and things will work right for you.
All the best and thanks for sharing your insights. Maybe you have learned as much as the kids in those 5 days!
about 4 months ago
Well done sir! Every 'challenge' that doesn't break you means you walk away stronger; tired maybe, but better equipped to meet what might be yet to come. Bit like running perhaps?
Hope you're not facing any #ashtag challenges this week
about 4 months ago
Enjoyed reading this Tom. When I was involved in school leadership I realised that you don't always have to make decisions quickly on the spot. It is sometimes better to try and generate some thinking or consultation time so that you don't make a snap decision that you might come to regret.
about 4 months ago
Hello Tom.
I have followed your blogging for about two years now and wondered what you may write about after gaining a new position. Firstly, as a deputy principal in a high school, I read this post and it perfectly related the way a week can challenge one well beyond anything ever imagined when at university studying to be an educator. I empathised!
Secondly, well done! You continue to honestly, openly reflect on the nature of our work and experiences. You learn and share, we all benefit!
I look forward to your ongoing adventures…
about 4 months ago
Well done to you! I think appearing calm under pressure is really important in leadership – if those in charge look flustered it affects everybody else negatively. Good luck for your next week!
about 4 months ago
Hi Tom. Sounds like you have coped extremely well with a really difficult week. I have also been in a situation where I was way, way out of my comfort zone in a new job. However, it sounds like you have exactly what you need to survive and thrive – supportive colleagues. Unfortunately, I didn't but that was a long time ago now.
Here's to the next weeks, months and years!
about 4 months ago
Well done on getting through the first week. It's easy to forget how difficult it is going into a new school at ANY level from NQT to Headteacher. From the little things like “what's the photocopier code?” to more heavyweight policies and practice, there's loads to know!
I'm really looking forward to my new job in September and fully expect similar stories and baptisms of fire!