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Title: Patrick F. Bassett, NAIS President bassettnais.org


1
Governance 201 New Models For Independent Schools
Patrick F. Bassett, NAIS Presidentbassett_at_nais.or
g
2
101 The Traditional ModelIt is easier to ask
forgiveness than permission.Distinct Job
Descriptions for the Four Power Players
The Faculty
The Board of Trustees

Decision-Making
The Head Administration
The Parents The Parents Association ( The
Advisory Board or Alumni Board)
3
Model Meltdown Boundary Crossings
  • ...by the Board e.g., bullying the head or
    misreading the culture of schools
  • by Parents e.g., assuming a stockholder posture
    politicizing demands the telephone call to
    the trustee All the parents think.
  • To Avoid The S.U.V. caucus (parking lot mafia)
  • New banner policy for schools Having your
    say does not equal getting your way.
  • Parental Signed Covenants and Parents on
    Probation
  • by the Head e.g., free-lancing on policy or
    getting out too far in front of the troops
  • You must always cultivate the favor of the
    inhabitants. Machiavelli
  • by the Faculty e.g., subverting administrative
    or board policies, undermining collegiality, or
    ignoring the quid pro quo with parents. (That
    child doesnt fit my teaching style.)
  • Case Study on Admissions

4
Inherent Dangers for Corporate Boards(Source
What Business Execs Dont Know-but should-about
Nonprofits, Les Silverman Lynn Taliento,
Stanford Social Innovation Review, Summer 2006)
  • What Business Execs Dont Know-but should-about
    Nonprofits
  • Under-appreciate the challenges of non-profit
    leaders.
  • Disdain not-for-profit management, thinking its
    undisciplined and non-quantified.
  • Discount how much harder it is to define and
    achieve goals which tend to be more complex and
    intangible (curing cancer or saving social
    security or educating children).
  • Misapply business metrics to non-profits RoI
    hard to measure.
  • Underestimate how frustrating and difficult board
    work for non-profits is cant accommodate the
    nonprofit sectors different culture and demands.

5
Inherent Dangers for Corporate Boards(Source
What Business Execs Dont Know-but should-about
Nonprofits, Les Silverman Lynn Taliento,
Stanford Social Innovation Review, Summer 2006)
  • What Business Execs Dont Know-but should-about
    Nonprofits
  • Cant identify with the major challenges for
    non-profit leaders school heads wield less
    authority and control than CEOs yet they must
    answer to a wider range of stakeholders lack
    straightforward performance measures yet they
    are under greater scrutiny from politicians, the
    press, and constituents compared to the
    corporate world, the nonprofit sector is
    under-funded, under-staffed, under-resourced, and
    under-trained.
  • PFB notes
  • Cant improve productivity and services via
    technology in people-intensive industry Baumols
    disease.
  • More like families than businesses Why a School
    Doesnt Run (or Change) Like a Business, Rob
    Evans.
  • Legislative vs. executive leadership command
    and control not possible or advisable. Good to
    Great in the Social Sectors, Jim Collins.

6
Models of Governance New Themes
  • Leadership vs. Management being effective vs.
    being efficient.
  • Peter Drucker Doing the right thing (leading)
    vs. doing things right (managing).
  • BoardSource Are you a board-dominant
    policy-setting board (Carver-model)
    CEO-dominant traditional board (corporate model)
    or a balanced partnership" board (Harvard/Chait
    model)?
  • NAIS Pat Bassett Key management skills for
    heads are monitoring shaping school climate and
    values school finances/fund-raising managing
    personnel partnering with the board and
    mayoral duties of keeping peace among warring
    constituencies. Key leadership skills for heads
    are
  • story-telling and change agency For change
    to happen, first leaders must model the change,
    then lead the change, then become the change.

7
Models of Governance New Themes
  • High-Impact Governance (Doug Eadie) Boards
    that pay attention to constituents, initiate new
    directions, evaluate and re-design themselves.
  • Generational Governance (Tom Peters) Does the
    board reflect the past, the present, and the
    future?
  • Constituency-based vs. Vision-based Governance
    (Christina Drouin--planonline.com ) old
    structures about politics and money new
    structures about outcomes and performance.
  • Groups vs. Teams (Lisa Parkerstricklandgroup.com)
    progression from forming, storming, normingto
    performing.

8
Developing the Board(Board Member, May 2004,
Chait et al.)
  • The SAT Analogy
  • Our board is to our school
  • as is to .

9
Problem Solving via Strategic Governance
  • Needed Three Levels of Trusteeship
  • Level One Fiduciary (auditing function of
    oversight and assessment of mission finance)
  • Level Two Strategic (leadership function less
    management/more governance via scanning and
    planning)
  • Level Three Generative (visionary function of
    shared leadership, RD orientation for imagining
    and experimenting).

10
Three Levels of Board Governance(Adapted from
Board Member, May 2004, Chait et al.)
The antidote to micromanagement is
macroengagement.Dick Chait. 3-tier thinking
applied to problem-solving?
11
Three-Tier Thinking
  • Address Rising Benefit Costs
  • Fiduciary thinking Increase co-pays to share
    costs with employees
  • Strategic thinking Market our absorbing of
    increased costs as recruitment/retention benefit
  • Generative thinking Form a benefit-purchasing
    consortium and/or incentivize employees to
    choose less expensive plans or no plan if covered
    by spouse.

12
Three-Tier Thinking
  • Add another Foreign Language Which one?
  • Fiduciary thinking OK which other language do
    we drop?
  • Strategic thinking Why dont we offer small
    enrollment courses (language or whatever) on an a
    la carte pricing basis?
  • Generative thinking
  • Why are we teaching low enrollment languages?
    (German after WWII, Russian after Sputnik, Arabic
    now, Chinese next?) vs. Chinese is strategic in
    a way that a lot of other languages arent.
    Scott McGinnis
  • Should we form a consortium to offer Mandarin?

13
Emerging Governance Issues
  • Accountability to the Government the
    post-Enron/Global Crossings/United Way world.
  • Margaret Spellings message to private schools
    In God we trust.
  • All others bring data.
  • Sarbanes-Oxley expectations for non-profits means
    more transparency (new 990 regs), more oversight
    (audit committees).
  • IRS private sector study Will scrutinize sixty
    schools. Our greatest vulnerability executive
    compensation for highly compensated,
    disqualified persons. The threat of
    intermediate sanctions and the safe harbor of
    rebuttable presumptions.

14
Emerging Governance Issues
  • Accountability to our Constituencies
  • Safety and security Background checking on all
    who cross the threshold (parents, visitors,
    workmen high tech solutions. Protecting children
    from Internet predators (www.myspace.com) vs.
    capitalizing on Web 2.0 future.
  • Features vs. benefits While savvy consumers like
    the former, they demand the latter.
  • High stakes testing NCLBs impact on public
    schools. The inevitable threat of the education
    governor. The lack of a universal, proactive,
    private school benchmark. One-day soon, an
    expectation for world-class standards with a
    metric to measure them. (PISA/ISA from ACER.)

15
Emerging Governance Issues
  • Strategy-Making Strategic planning is dead.
  • If you want to give God a laugh, tell Him your
    future plans (German Proverb). New Model an
    ongoing flexible strategic vision road
    map" (rather than a fixed and rigid plan)
  • Goal Moving the school from
  • Vision Sustainable Schools
  • Schools that are demographically,
    environmentally, globally, programmatically, and
    financially sustainable
  • Trustees who come on board to make a difference
    and depart the board by leaving a legacy.

16
Emerging Governance Issues
  • Parent Issues
  • Parents on boards. Balance of board make-up?
    Inherent conflict of interest?
  • Do teachers hate parents?
  • Resources Michael Thompsons Understanding
    Parents Wendy Mogels The Blessings of the
    Skinned Knee. NAIS Parent Guide Series
    Understanding your Child Surviving the College
    Search Gifts that Give Back etc.

17
Resources for Boards
  • www.nais.org Search on topics by term (e.g.,
    tuition remission Browse Library for
    Leadership Governance. In About NAIS, click
    on Principles of Good Practice. Scroll down to
    governance in the Frequently Asked Questions
    (FAQs) section under Resources Statistics
  • NAIS Publications for Trustees Trustee Handbook
    Trustee Pamphlet Services. Order from the
    publications page on the NAIS website.
  • Head Board Evaluations Tools NAIS Survey
    Center. BoardSources Board Online Assessment
    Tool (BOAT) and Head Assessment Tool (HAT).
  • BoardSource General resources for Non-profits.
  • Case studies and resources on issues of
    principled decision-making. Also search for
    case studies on www.nais.org and www.csee.org
    and www.globalethics.org.
  • Email NAIS for assistance (when all else fails!)
    boardhelp_at_nais.org

18
The End!
19
(No Transcript)
20
Skepticism about Self-reported Features
  • Levitt Dubners Freakonomics on Online-Dating
    Data
  • 4 claim income 200K (vs. nationally)
  • Men reported themselves, on average 1 taller
    than the national average 4 of men reported
    themselves as happily married.
  • Women reported themselves as 20 pounds less than
    the national average 70 of women indicated they
    were above average in looks, and only 1
    reported themselves less than average in looks
    28 reported themselves as blond, indicating a
    lot of dyeing or lying or both.
  • Greatest number of responses from women were to
    men who indicated they wanted a long-term
    relationship greatest number of responses from
    men were to women who said they just want a
    casual lover.

21
Governance Case Studies
  • The Brutal Facts
  • Download from http//www.blueskybroadcast.com/Cli
    ent/NAIS/Case/case.html
  • NAIS Case Study 31 Admissions Package Deal
    Who makes the call on development admits?
  • (NAISs Take on the Issues)

22
Case 31 The Case of the Package Deal
Leadership Issues in Play Ethical Practices at
Stake
  • Should the development office and the board have
    any role in attempting to influence admissions
    decisions?
  • How is this case different from a faculty coach
    trying to influence an admissions admit for a
    star hockey player with marginal academic
    credentials?
  • Whats the role of the head of school in a
    stand-off between the development/board interests
    and the admissions office/faculty interests?
  • How does the admissions director react when a
    head, however lightly, pressures her to consider
    factors beyond the match of the student to the
    school?
  • How does a school handle the conflict with
    another independent school who believes your
    school to be poaching its students?

23
Case 31 The Case of the Package Deal
NAISs Take on the Leadership Issues in Play
PGPs at Stake
  • Trustees like all other supporters of the school
    are welcome to encourage appropriate applicants
    to the school and to share recommendations on
    students and families. The boundary line gets
    crossed when the recommendation becomes lobbying,
    since the boards role is to stipulate the
    general type of student the mission dictates the
    school should accept (e.g., college-prep) but
    delegate to the head and his team the execution,
    the operational decisions about which qualifying
    students to admit.
  • Its naïve to think that development
    considerations would have any less influence than
    other considerations (athletics, legacies,
    faculty children, etc.), so long as the candidate
    matches the profile of those students who can
    succeed at the school.
  • In a stand-off between the development/board
    interests and the admissions office/faculty
    interests, the head makes the call (and takes the
    hit from one constituency or the other).

24
Admissions The Case of the Prominent Family
Package Deal Scott Looney
NAISs Take on the Leadership Issues in Play
PGPs at Stake
  • The heads team member (admissions director)
    needs to raise the ethical issues to his or her
    head if the head is wont to ignore them Part of
    the job of admin team members is to manage up
    and to be especially sensitive to ethical issues
    and principles of good practice.
  • In competition for students (and faculty),
    neighboring independent schools need to accept
    the ambiguity involved in competing Principles of
    Good Practice that assert collegial relationships
    as key between the schools but also note the free
    market right of parents to shop for the best
    match for their kids (or for faculty to explore
    other employment options). It is fair to point
    out that when parents break contracts they have a
    consequence (requirement to pay full tuition in
    many cases). When faculty break a contract, their
    consequence is the attitude that most heads
    adopt I wouldnt want someone in our school who
    breaks a contract, especially at a late date, and
    certainly wouldnt recommend that person to
    another school.

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25
NAIS Publications for Trustees
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