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Books > Social sciences > Education
Follow the journey of Benny Bumble Bee and his friend Betty Bumble
Bee in their adventures. Two stories in one colourful book.
""Why do I lead?"" With this deceptively simple question,
best-selling author Baruti K. Kafele begins a powerful examination
of what it takes to make a school community achieve the greatest
success in the classroom and beyond. In The Principal 50: Critical
Leadership Questions for Inspiring Schoolwide Excellence, Kafele, a
veteran school administrator, guides motivated school leaders
through 50 self-reflection exercises designed to yield a deeper
understanding of the meaning behind the work that they do. Along
with many other insights, this book shows how best to: Inspire and
motivate students, teachers, and other school staff to approach
their work with vigor and purpose. Ensure that all students,
regardless of color, creed, or origin, are valued and represented
in the school culture. Focus mission and vision statements to
address students' most critical needs and integrate shared values
and objectives into the fabric of the school. Engage parents and
other community members so that they feel a stake in the school's
success. Brimming with passion, written from the heart, and
informed by hard-earned experience, this transformative book is
essential reading for principals and other building-level
administrators determined to reinvigorate their practice,
revitalize their staff, and-most importantly-guarantee the
strongest outcomes for students.
Schools need to have purchase on the curriculum: why they teach the
subjects beyond preparation for examinations, what they are
intending to achieve with the curriculum, how well it is planned
and enacted in classrooms and how they know whether it's doing what
it's supposed to. Fundamental to this understanding are the
conversations between subject leaders and their line managers.
However, there is sometimes a mismatch between the subject
specialisms of senior leaders and those they line manage. If I
don't know the terrain and the importance of a particular subject,
how can I talk intelligently with colleagues who are specialists?
This book sets out to offer some tentative answers to these
questions. Each of the national curriculum subjects is discussed
with a subject leader and provides an insight into what they view
as the importance of the subject, how they go about ensuring that
knowledge, understanding and skills are developed over time, how
they talk about the quality of the schemes in their departments and
what they would welcome from senior leaders by way of support. We
have chosen this way of opening up the potentially difficult
terrain of expertise on one side and relative lack of expertise on
the other, by providing these case studies. They are suggested as
prompts rather than the last word. Informed debate is, after all,
the fuel of curriculum development. And why Huh? Well, 'Huh?' may
be John's first response when he walks into a Year 8 German class
but, in fact, we chose 'Huh' as the title of our book as he is the
Egyptian god of endlessness. As Claire Hill so eloquently comments
in her chapter, "Curriculum development is an ongoing process; it's
not going to be finished, ever." And we believe that 'Huh' captures
a healthy and expansive way of considering curriculum
conversations.
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