Friday, July 11, 2025

How Might We Keep Learning How To Lead?


Last week Derek Wenmoth and myself hosted a Day of Celebration for 18 APDPs who had participated in our 20 week Refresh Reconnect Refocus (RRR) programme.


Programme Structure

The programme aimed to help Senior Leaders develop their leadership capabilities and to explore opportunities for meaningful change. It focused on three key areas:


  • Refresh: Taking a pause to reflect on personal and professional priorities

  • Reconnect: Exploring personal motivations and learning tools to plan and maintain momentum with a personal focus area

  • Refocus: Developing a future focused approach with a supportive community and practical steps 


The programme structure included:

  • An initial three day retreat in Wellington

  • A 20 week period of on-line support, including whole-group meetings and one-on-one coaching/mentoring

  • A one day celebration event


Range of Focus Areas

A feature of the programme is that participants are given support to decide on their particular focus area over the 20 weeks. They are provided with tools to flesh out their thinking, develop a hypothesis, create a plan to test their hypothesis, embrace experimentation and maintain momentum.


At the Day of Celebration we heard their stories across a range of issues which included:

  • Imagine if Assessment for Learning practices were consistent across the school.  All children would be exposed to a consistent process for learning, no matter the context.  Language would be consistent so there is no cognitive overload, allowing the focus to be on agentic learners who are in charge of their learning.

  • Imagine if students were exposed to and learned how to have more agency in their learning, and in doing so experienced deeper learning, higher levels of engagement and satisfaction - enjoyment even! Imagine if school was a place students wanted to be!

  • Imagine if our School was the school where every Year 11 teacher was deliberately tracking and  planning interventions to student learning and achievement  Imagine if every Year 11 knew that their teachers, Deans and DP cared about their learning and knew they were being actively helped to achieve.

  • Imagine if we adopted a coaching and mentoring mindset, so that leaders can empower their teams, foster a sustainable leadership culture, and create clear pathways for growth at our school. Through structured models and targeted mentoring, we can then unlock leadership potential and drive lasting impact.  

  • Imagine if, as educators, we embraced a culture of experimentation and failure in our own teaching practice. What if we gave ourselves the freedom to try new strategies, tools, and approaches without the pressure to get everything perfect? Imagine the impact it could have, showing our learners that failure is simply a stepping stone to success and that true growth comes from the courage to experiment, learn, and evolve.

  • Imagine if every student left our School as a confident, competent writer? A writer equipped with the skills to succeed in NCEA Literacy and pursue their chosen pathway in life. We’re confident we have a program that will have a profound impact—not only on your teaching but also on the students you work with. This is the opportunity we have to shape their future with an amazing explicit writing programme.

  • Imagine if we developed a Graduation Ceremony which truly captured a broader definition of success and acknowledged the journey of growth experienced by our ākonga.

  • Imagine if we could ensure that wellbeing thrived in our school for all by having a specific and proactive focus to support groups of students who have serious, stubborn and identified needs in our community – our rainbow, migrant and disabled students. 


Outcomes

All participants acknowledged that the level of momentum they were able to maintain would not have been possible without the support of the like-minded leaders with them on the programme and the one-on-one coaching and mentoring provided. This is a unique feature of this programme.


These 18 are now part of a graduation cohort of 50 leaders in Aotearoa and Australia who have completed these programmes.


What Did Participants Say About The RRR Programme?

  • I rated it 10/10 because it offered a powerful blend of professional connection, strategic insight, and personal recalibration elements often overlooked in the relentless pace of school leadership.

  • I really enjoyed meeting all of the other course members, and having the chance to learn and grow from others in a similar role to me.  The expert support from Derek and Maurie was inspiring and motivating.

  • The most valuable elements for me were those that helped deepen my self-awareness and clarify my purpose, especially the work around understanding my 'why' and the one-on-one mentoring sessions. These provided both affirmation and stretch.

  • One unexpected benefit was the opportunity to pause and genuinely reflect in a structured yet low-pressure environment, something that’s rare in the fast pace of school leadership. This space helped me reframe challenges not as operational problems to solve, but as leadership opportunities to approach with clarity and intent.

  • Maurie and Derek provided exceptional inspiration and mentorship throughout the programme, guiding participants with clarity, wisdom, and deep educational insight. Their coaching empowered every individual to grow as a more effective and reflective leader of learning and education. The connections made with fellow leaders of learning in their respective roles was a highlight - after all, sharing is what wise teachers and leaders do best! Thank you all!


The Good News

We’ve been asked to offer this opportunity again in 2026 so are opening up for registrations of interest through this link. If you are seeking further information please visit our website.





Thursday, July 10, 2025

EdRising: How Might We Turn a Moment Into a Movement?

 

How Might We Turn a Moment Into a Movement?


This is the challenge Derek Wenmoth set us as he welcomed us to the 2 day EdRising Convening held over the last 2 days at Albany Senior High School.


100 education sector representatives including teachers, leaders, professional development providers, and system leaders gathered to listen to both global and Aotearoa thought leaders address a range of provocations across 5 major themes - including a panel of current primary and secondary ākonga.


Littered throughout the 2 days were several opportunities to process and respond to what was being shared with us as we set about trying to shape a future focused education system for Aotearoa.


Equity and Agency

Rhonda Broussard really set the scene for me when she highlighted the connection between Equity and Agency. She shared her position that addressing Equity is a mammoth challenge and can easily overwhelm us, but that if we focus on the more manageable, but still complex, issue of Agency we begin to break down the inequities.


She invited us to ponder the question, “who has the right to access inquiry/agency?” It made me wonder that are we more inclined to provide true agentic, inquiry-based learning to one set of students and not to others. While I was principal at Hobsonville Point Secondary School I was often told that what we were doing was all good for students from our socio-economic cohort but would not work in schools of lower socio-economic status. I absolutely despair of that view. We need to have Rhonda’s question out from under the shadows.


She also stated that we must be able to answer “why are we learning this?” whenever it is asked.


Purpose and Meaning - Our Why

Tony MacKay prompted us to be clear about our purpose, align our values and beliefs to that purpose and to align our practices to that purpose.


Martin Westwell reminded us that our first choice is to be purpose-driven, and George Philhower emphasised that simply changing practice does not bring about transformation - it’s our values and beliefs that drive transformation.


Maxine Graham reinforced that our values are within us and that we must reflect these at all times.


Tony Monfiletto emphasised that the number one priority in relation to education for young people is to experience learning with meaning and purpose.


Te Riina Leonard left us with an inspiring, possible vision for our work - Nurture the children, leaders of tomorrow.


Outdated Model

Jeff Wetzler stated the tragic fact that most students are learning in an outdated model of schooling and Bill Lucas talked about our system and schools not being fit for purpose.


A Way Forward?

One of my table participants reminded us that 95% of Maori learners are in mainstream schools and generally not experiencing success, while the other 5% within Kura Maori are experiencing high levels of success, suggesting the answers for addressing inequity already exist here in Aotearoa.


Hana O’Regan challenged us to acknowledge the coloniality of power, of knowledge and of being so we could acknowledge our inequitable history, and acknowledge that our tamariki have been exposed to a lifetime of biases, prejudice and racism before we accept what we are going to leave behind so that we can move forward.


Barbara Ala’atoa implored us to acknowledge that curriculum is the most powerful weapon that we have and that by maximising that power we can do the right things for our ākonga despite external pressures and mandates. And Bill Lucas challenged us to join the “unstoppable practitioners out there exerting influence.”


Sandra Milligan revealed that in all her work and research that the real impetus for transformation comes from within schools, which reminded us to believe in the power that we have. Her call to provide “dignity of equal status” to both academic and knowledge learning and to dispositional growth resonated with the participants.


The panel of ākonga from Stonefields School, Albany Senior High School and Hobsonville Point Primary blew us away with their simple formula for what made learning engaging and meaningful for them:  teachers who cared for them, teachers and students collaborating, teachers engaging with my learning.


Redefining Success

Sarah Martin shared her school’s mission to measure what they truly value driven by the principle that assessment must Do No Harm. She shared the awesome tool of SchoolTalk and how that was being used to make sure that the way we measure ākonga does not limit our redefining of success.


One of the participants at my table felt liberated by what she heard as she reflected on the fact that we have never been brave enough to truly define success. After Sarah’s presentation (complementing that of Sandra Milligan) we could see it was now possible.


Moment to Movement

Now the hard work really begins as we process the feedback from the participants and look for ways to drive momentum as we move to establish a movement to transform our schooling system.


There’ll be plenty of opportunities to join in and contribute to the movement. In the meantime check out our EdRising webpage and watch this space.