Six Ways to Endear Yourself to Your Principal
October 6th, 2010 By: Diane Trim in Administration, Articles, Learning Community
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Most of your contact with your principal happens outside of your formal evaluations, so my advice is to try to make every meeting with your principal a positive one, even if it’s just a casual word in the hallway or a faculty meeting. Let’s face it: her opinion of you and your teaching extends beyond your classroom doors and bell schedule. I’m not saying to ingratiate yourself to your principal, but I am saying that it’s wise for her to form an opinion of you as professional and competent – before she sets foot in your room with a clipboard and an evaluation form.
1. Respect her time. I’m pretty sure lightening will strike me down for this as I type, but try hard to be on time for everything. If you’re the one who shows up late to every faculty meeting, you’ll stick out in your principal’s mind, but not in a good way. If she schedules a meeting with you, be prompt. If she asks you do to something, do it as soon as you return to your classroom. When you drop in on her during your prep period, always ask if it’s a good time to talk or if she has five minutes to talk. If she doesn’t have a spare minute, tell her you’ll send her a meeting request instead.
2. Have positive things to say. It’s really smart to have something nice to say to your principal every time you see her. I’m not saying you should complement her on her nice jacket, but you should have some bit of good news for her. Maybe one of your students who has been struggling has had a really good week. If you witnessed a couple of students help another pick up the books she dropped, pass that on. When the teacher down the hall watches your class for you, so you can run to the restroom, let your principal know that, too.
3. Pay attention. When your principal calls a faculty meeting, don’t be one of those teachers who is correcting papers. It just looks bad. If the group at your library table is whispering and talking, don’t participate in their hushed conversations and don’t sit with them next time.
4. Keep your kids in the classroom. Principals respect teachers who keep their students in the classroom, on task, and learning. Kids who are walking the halls unsupervised are often looking for something better to do than factor polynomials. If they’re your students who are slow-motion walking outside the closed study hall, the principal won’t be impressed. Better to limit passes judiciously than to have your students roaming the halls.
5. Dot your i’s. All of your contact with the school office should be professional. When you send a student to the office on a referral, make sure you’ve listed all the phone calls you’ve made to the student’s parent, all the ways you’ve tried to fix the problem, any detentions the student has served, and why the student can’t remain in class that day. The more complete your referral form, the less work you make for your principal and the more opportunities she has to look well informed when talking to parents. You want your principal to stand behind you and she wants to talk to parents intelligently. When your principal sees one of your referral forms, you want her to think how easy you’ve made her job.
6. Do your homework. If someone in the office requests paperwork from you, send it back right away. Have the reputation in the office as the first person to meet a deadline. The office administrative assistants have a lot of contact with your boss, the principal. Make sure your reputation with them is that you’re responsive and someone who meets deadlines and exceeds expectations.
The bottom line is to be professional in all your dealings with your principal. That’s true of parent interaction and even interaction with your students. Good work habits like having a positive attitude, meeting deadlines, and doing good work will endear you to any boss. But, having these good habits will endear you to your principal and save her time, which will give her a favorable impression of you long before she enters your classroom for your evaluation.
How about you? What do you do to make sure that your relationship with your principal is a good one? Is that something that teachers should be concerned about or should we just focus on the classroom and our students’ results? Share your opinions in the comments.
Tags: evaluation, principal, teacher evaluation