Crucial Skills®

A Blog by Crucial Learning

Crucial Conversations for Mastering Dialogue

Increasing Respect for Educators

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

David Maxfield

David Maxfield is coauthor of two New York Times bestsellers, Change Anything and Influencer.

READ MORE

Crucial Conversations

Q Dear Crucial Skills,

I’ve been an educator for twenty-one years. I took a pay cut from a job in law enforcement because I saw teaching as a noble profession and as my calling to contribute to the development of good, productive citizens. I enjoy working with children and educators, even though it’s not always fun and games. I also want to be a positive role model and inspire at-risk students to go to college or at least finish high school.

Schools spend a lot of money hiring private companies to administer achievement tests and use those test scores against teachers. It seems many people blame all education problems on teachers and advocate that the solution to improving their child’s performance is to reduce teacher pay and spend money on research to measure and prove the low quality of teachers. They don’t consider that lifestyle, culture, language proficiency, vision, hearing, self-motivation, self-esteem, and parental support are huge influences on a student’s academic performance.

A teacher’s job is to teach. How can teachers reclaim their credibility and gain the public’s understanding of our specific duties?

Underappreciated Educator

A Dear Educator,

Teaching is a noble profession. Although your question focuses on the frustrations you face, I’m sure you also achieve many triumphs that encourage children on their paths to success. Thank you for your service to our children, our families, our society, and our nation.

Being at the front lines of education, you are a witness to its failings as well as its successes. Academic performance isn’t where it needs to be, but it isn’t fair to blame teachers alone for these failings. Education is a societal challenge.

Now, in a respectful way, I’d like to ask you to examine some of your comments using a skill we call Master My Stories. This skill helps us avoid Clever Stories that prevent us from moving toward success. When we feel under attack, we tend to look for villains and someone to blame, even when it’s more productive to look for allies and common ground. We see this when members of the public blame teachers instead of recognizing them as allies. I think we also see this when teachers blame student testing, parents, and taxpayers instead of making them their allies.

Here are a few facts that could be the basis for common ground.

  • We all want and need kids to succeed. Teachers, parents, taxpayers, and students themselves all want kids to complete their education and for that education to prepare them to contribute to society.
  • We all know kids bring problems to the classroom. The factors you list in your question—lifestyle, culture, language proficiency, vision, hearing, self-motivation, self-esteem, and parental support—can either support or undermine a child’s success.
  • We all know success is possible. There are wonderful examples of teachers, schools, and societies that have figured out significant parts of the solution. These solutions are varied and don’t yet point to a single “best way,” but they should certainly give us hope.

There are two ways to respond to your question. The first is to focus on what society and the education industry might do to improve educational success and respect for teachers. The second is to focus on what you can do when you feel frustrated or disrespected.

While all of us have ideas on improving education, I’ll focus here on what you might do when you’re feeling frustrated or disrespected. Here are three skills from Crucial Conversations that might come into play:

Start With Heart. Avoid getting sucked into a debate. Instead of responding to a provocation, stop and ask yourself, “What do I really want in the long-term for the kids, for the relationship, and for myself?” Then talk from your heart in a positive way. Explain what it is you really want, and then explain why it’s important to you.

For example, suppose someone says, “You teachers are all alike. All you care about is your pay.” Reflect for a second and ask yourself, “Is that true?” Of course not. What do you really want and why? Here’s a possible response: “What I really want is for these children to be successful and proud of their accomplishments. I want to be like Ms. Smith, a teacher I had when I was their age who pushed me to set high standards and helped me see what I could be. Does pay matter to me? Of course, but being a teacher isn’t about the pay. It’s about the kids. They are my priority.”

Master My Stories. When you feel attacked, it’s natural to see the attacker as your enemy. Instead, try to see the situation from the other person’s perspective. If you can see the situation through his or her eyes, you’re likely to see areas of common ground. Ask yourself, “Why might a reasonable, rational, and decent person do what this person is doing right now?”

For example, suppose the father of one of your students is accusing you of discriminating against his son. It will be tempting to jump into an angry denial, but ask yourself why a “reasonable, rational, and decent” father might have this perspective. He probably doesn’t have the full picture, and you may not either. At least he cares passionately about his son. This passion could be your common ground.

Mutual Purpose. Avoid getting too invested in your position or on any specific element of your status quo. Instead, keep your focus on your overall purpose, which is helping kids succeed. And try to help others become more flexible in their positions by helping them refocus on this same Mutual Purpose.

Teachers’ jobs are sure to change dramatically over the next few years. Wonderful innovations are taking place in education today and we’ll all need to support these evidence-based improvements. It’s hard to predict exactly how our children will be educated in the future, but we need to keep our eye on the prize—children who have the tools they need to succeed and to help us all be successful.

We completed an interesting study that focuses on teacher and educator burnout titled, Speak Up or Burn Out: Five Crucial Conversations that Drive Educational Excellence. If you’re interested in more tips and hints for improving educational performance, I encourage you to read it.

David

Develop Your Crucial Skills

Image for

What's Your Style Under Stress?

Discover your dialogue strengths and weaknesses with this short assessment.

Take Assessment

Image for

Subscribe Now

Subscribe to the newsletter and get our best insights and tips every Wednesday.

Subscribe

Image for

Ask a Question

From stubborn habits to difficult people to monumental changes, we can help.

Ask a Question

5 thoughts on “Increasing Respect for Educators”

  1. grizzly bear mom

    When I was superintending Sunday school a parent called the senior pastor to complain that their child’s diaper hadn’t been changed at Sunday School. They didn’t talk to the teacher, lead teacher, superintendent, director of Christian Education, or Education Minister. They escalated to the pastor of a 2,000 member church. Resolution of this was delegated to me. I regularly visited the classroom and often saw the teachers changing diapers, but having no children I don’t know what happens if a child’s diaper isn’t changed for 60 minutes or if you can even tell. I called “Miss Susie”, explained the situation and asked if she were willing to meet with the parents 30 minutes next week before Sunday School started. She agreed. They parents agreed to the same. The following Sunday Miss Susie and I waited for the parents never showed up. People don’t make the same accusations to someone’s face that they do behind their backs. I treat my employees and associates the same way. They are “innocent until proven guilty”. If there is a performance gap we collaborate to implement a solution. I believe that many of our education system’s problems would disappear if its administrators medicated disputes and advocated for the teachers instead of the parents. SUGGESTION: Would Crucial Conversations consider offering some free training to a really horrible school system, and then conduct a return on investment analysis of its impact on a school system? I’m sure some training manager somewhere would see the results and want to implement the same.

  2. editor

    @grizzly bear mom If you’d like to see how Crucial Conversations training helped one school district, read our case study about the San Antonio Independent School District (SAISD) here: http://www.vitalsmarts.com/casestudies/saisd/.

  3. David Maxfield

    Hi Grizzly Bear Mom, Thanks for your insight and suggestion. We are currently working with several school districts as well as with the KIPP Charter Schools. You can check them out at http://www.kipp.org
    They do a wonderful job!
    David

  4. Nathan Marsh

    The Link to your law of the hog video is not functioning. It loads the link, but the video never plays. Is there a reason for this and is there a new location to access this video? We use your books as trainings model for our managers and the video clip is a nice accompaniment to the introduction and training we do.

  5. editor

    @Nathan Marsh Our Law of the Hog video is now available on YouTube. Here’s the link: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eY9XTNpeAa8.

Leave a Reply

Get your copies
The ideas and insights expressed on Crucial Skills hail from five New York Times bestsellers.
Buy

Newsletter

Take advantage of our free, award-winning newsletter—delivered straight to your inbox