Principals’ dialogue enhances First Amendment understanding
By Randy Swikle
We were north of the Mile High City near the Rocky
Mountains. The principals were voluntarily descending—not from the
tall peaks but from their position abutting the summit of school
hierarchy.
When they reached level ground, we could see each other
more clearly. And clear sight leads to insight.
That’s why three of us from J-Ideas met with
administrators and teachers gathered at Front Range Community College
in Westminster, Colo. We were linked with others at community college
sites across Colorado via video conferencing. We wanted
principals and teachers to meet eye to eye to determine if they
better could see eye to eye on First Amendment issues in schools.
The principal’s pedestal serves a purpose, elevating the
administrator to where he/she can have a panoramic perspective of the
school machine. Oversight is an essential function of the principal’s
job.
But when it comes to fixing things, the rigid hierarchic
pyramid is archaic -- long ago superseded by a horizontal strategy of
management that intrinsically motivates as it inspires and
accommodates good citizenship and positive change.
In an educational setting, the principal leaves his/her
office and joins a student team on their turf. The student newspaper
adviser, parents and other stakeholders participate in supporting the
team effort. The principal becomes a problem-solving citizen more
than an autocratic decision-maker, and in doing so he/she models
democratic principles rather than hierarchic clout.
Too often principals focus on their autocratic power and
students on their autonomist rights. In the confrontational mix, the
school mission can be a casualty to the shortsighted, self-serving
interests of each side. A team approach on level ground helps bring
potential disputants to common ground, and then the school mission
prevails.
In Colorado, the J-Ideas experiment was successful.
Dialogue enlightened participants about First Amendment scholastic
law and the important balance of rights, responsibilities and
respect. The integration of law and ethics became a more important
issue than “principal’s censorship v. student rights.”
When clout
properly yields to rational action, that’s when the school mission is
best served.
At eye level, we began to see eye to eye.
(Randy Swikle is a J-Ideas adjunct and writes and speaks frequently on behalf of the organization. He is a retired journalism adviser from Johnsburg, Ill., and former Dow Jones Newspaper Fund journalism teacher of the year.) |