Craig
Hockenberry Finding Our Values
Craig
Hockenberry: A Leader Sharpens a District’s Focus
By
Craig Hockenberry Superintendent
As the new Superintendent of Three Rivers School
District, I engaged in a series of conversations with the community.
I used this time to learn the community’s expectations for the district.
I was also using these meetings to lay the
groundwork for addressing a gap in the Three Rivers culture. The district had
never identified its core values nor, in recent memory, created a strategic
plan.
The work of identifying our values included
four clear steps
-
Gathering the community for
visioning and drafting
-
Writing the goals
-
Getting authentic feedback
-
Communicating the core values
First, I recruited a trusted and experienced
community member to lead the conversations. Then I created the space and time
for discussion, as described in a previous post. The main emphasis was that the
district compensated people for their time and energy, providing meals and a
beautiful space for doing the work.
Craig
Hockenberry: Drafting our core values
I recruited Tim Urmston to guide us in the
process. He had led Fortune 500 companies through this work and - just as
importantly - his children attended Three
Rivers schools. I couldn’t say no when he told me I would need to
co-facilitate the process.
My initial groundwork to eliminate barriers to
participation was rewarded. On this Sunday, when we gathered to draft our core
values, every Three Rivers administrator was present. This dramatically
increased the chances that our results would be not only fully representative
of our district, but would be widely supported and implemented.
The process of discerning core values includes
working to lower our social barriers and creating an environment of trust. As
residents of several small towns tied together by our schools, there was
already a strong sense of community.
Then Tim prompted us for specific statements
describing what we hoped our schools would be, or what they would reveal about
and add to our community.
The statements we came up with helped capture
the true spirit of the schools as I saw them.
When I arrived, we had a vacancy for the High
School Principal position. We hired Ceair Baggett, who had been
principal of a Cincinnati Public elementary school. While his work in the
community, fighting for every student’s right to a chance at success, was
remarkable, it was also worth noting that he was the first Black administrator
ever hired in Three Rivers.
The Three Rivers community was exceptionally
welcoming. The lack of Black administrators was more a factor of being a rural
district with almost no Black students or families, and not a measure of any
sort of discrimination.
Our community was also incredibly supportive
of students with disabilities. Ohio law allows those Catholic and private
schools to choose their students, and they often lack resources to meet the
needs of students with individualized education plans and extraordinary needs.
So those students attended our schools.
I was happy to see that the descriptions
we came up with in our drafts all spoke to our love of diversity and our
concern that every person felt welcomed and challenged to be their best selves
at our schools.
Craig Hockenberry: Turning drafts
into core values
What we were hearing from the small groups and
seeing shared out in pictures was a common pattern, and it formed one of our
values.
I felt the community really captured their
heart when one of the values we identified was “Nurture inclusion.”
Many schools and districts claim to be
inclusive, but it is done as an afterthought. I was proud that we had adopted
it as an intentional practice on our part.
Some would see our school system as
compromised in some fundamental way. After all, some saw us as a mix of
students who couldn’t afford to attend Catholic school and students prevented
from attending those schools because of their disabilities.
But we chose to understand that these
characteristics made us strong. It made us a community.
And, in fact, some parents who could afford to
send their kids to Cincinnati chose to keep their students in their community
school. This made us strong.
And this increased our commitment to
excellence - expecting the best from every child and adult in the system. Our
next identified value was “Cultivate excellence.”
Craig Hockenberry: Looking to
the future
In the drafting phase, then, we had identified
and taken pride in who we were. We would nurture inclusion.
We had also proudly embraced who we wanted to
be - the best versions of ourselves. We agreed we would “Cultivate excellence.”
We had also identified a vision for who we
could be in the future. A core value that spoke to our bright future that met
our needs and that drew others to our community. A future that perhaps kept a
few more families right here at home, while opening new vistas for our existing
students.
We knew that we could try new things, with the
freedom of having a cohesive, successful community school system. So we created
a space to invent with our third core value.
We would “Inspire innovation.”
At the end of a long Sunday together, we knew
we had taken an important first step. However, identifying our three core
values was the start of a larger process of truly inculcating those values into
our school system.
That was the work of the next few months - getting
meaningful feedback and then widely spreading and applying these
values.
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