Question #36 – Does Your Board Delegate Authority and Provide Support to the Superintendent?

(49 Questions to Ask Your Board) The role of trustees is to hold what approximates absolute power over the institution, using it operationally only in rare emergencies – ideally never. Trustees delegate the operational use of power to administrators and staffs, but with accountability for its use that is at least as strict as now obtains with the use of property and money…In essence, this view of the use of power holds that no one, absolutely no one, is to be entrusted Read More …

Question #35 – Does Your Board Set Expectations for Management?

(49 Questions to Ask Your Board) Superintendent job performance will be monitored systematically only against the Superintendent’s job expectations, which are reasonable progress toward organizational accomplishment of the Fundamentals stated in Board Policy 1800 OE-1, and the organizational operation within the boundaries established in the other Operational Expectations set forth in Board Policy 1800. ― Mercer Island SD1 Written policies such as the example shown above direct and guide the superintendent’s actions on a continuous basis by establishing clear expectations. Read More …

Question #34 – Is Your Board Ready to Hire the Next Superintendent?

(49 Questions to Ask Your Board) Prime evidence of flawed board governance has been high superintendent turnover. Between 1994 and 2004, 35 urban districts serving near 11 million students appointed 135 superintendents and interim superintendents. These turnovers usually resulted in further destabilizing districts desperately attempting to raise test scores and meet state standards. ― Thomas Glass1 If we are to judge its success a hiring process that ends with candidate selection and contract signature ends too soon. Many boards are Read More …

Question #32 – Does Your Board Give the Superintendent Management Guidance?

(49 Questions to Ask Your Board) …when district leaders are carrying out their leadership responsibilities effectively, student achievement across the district is positively affected. – Tim Waters and Robert Marzano1 In a landmark study of district leadership, Marzano and Waters reported a significant relationship between student achievement and certain district leadership factors, such as the goal-setting for achievement and instruction, the length of superintendent tenure, and delegation of authority in a manner that they call defined autonomy. Their lessons for Read More …

Question #31 – Does Your Board Facilitate Governance?

(49 Questions to Ask Your Board) “Where previously such admonition from the chair had to come from that person’s own belly of conscience, this policy gives them fodder for the canon of board leadership, to call to task any trustee who has trodden from the path of policy proviso and gotten off into areas which the board has agreed are off limits.” ― Gene Royer1 The above is a description of board policy that grants authority to the board chair Read More …

Question #29 – Does Your Board Define its Own Role?

(49 Questions to Ask Your Board) The Board’s job is to represent, lead and serve the community and to govern the district by establishing expectations for district results, expectations for quality operational performance, and monitoring actual performance against those expectations. – Lake Washington School District1 In the brief statement above, the board succinctly defines its own role. Role clarity is one of two key conditions (the other being goal clarity) organizational consultants often assess to assure that “roles and goals” Read More …

Question #28 – Does Your Board Give Itself Governance Guidance?

(49 Questions to Ask Your Board) Historically, studies of school boards have tended to examine the behavior of members as individuals but not the behavior of the school board as a collective. ― Peter Cistone1 Boards don’t often think of whole board performance. Focusing on individual board members’ boardsmanship behavior, whether in designing training or in developing policy, is certainly necessary but it is not sufficient. The board must also remain aware of its governance performance, defining its expectations of Read More …

Question #27 – Does Your Board Facilitate Boardsmanship?

(49 Questions to Ask Your Board) If, as is usual, there are several trustees, their chairman has a special obligation to see that the trustees as a group sustain a common purpose and are influential in helping the institution maintain consistent high-level performance toward its goals. The chairman is not simply the presider over meetings, but also must serve and lead the trustees as a group and act as their major contact with the active inside leadership. ― Robert Greenleaf1 Read More …

Question #26 – Does Your Board Set Expectations for Boardsmanship?

(49 Questions to Ask Your Board) When asked, “How can a new school board member get off on the wrong foot with colleagues?” experienced board members replied: – Be belligerent– Talk too much or too loudly– Have all the solutions for all the problems of the district– Fail to be a good listener– Neglect to read your board policy manual– Show apathy– Discuss with press and constituents board matters discussed in executive session– Backstab another board member – Monopolize the Read More …

Question #25 – Does Your Board Define the Board Member Role?

(49 Questions to Ask Your Board) To be brutally honest, many board members simply do not know what their jobs are. They busy themselves doing things, many times the wrong things, which results in frustration shared by everyone associated with the organization. – Randy Quinn and Linda Dawson1 The above assessment was offered by Aspen Group, International based on many years of experience consulting with school boards. Perhaps as a first step toward defining what the board member role should Read More …