Lessons Learned
Numbers, Numbers,
Numbers
In a word, metrics. How do we measure
up? Are we faster, better, or stronger than the last time we checked? Are all
of our measurable qualities demonstrating continuous improvement? Success of
any organization or entity, these days, boils down to numbers and can readily
be assessed on the pan balance of comparison. Good numbers constitute good
work, and good work is the all in all. Eons and billions are spent monitoring
and managing metrics, and profit empires are built on such. This is humongously meaningful for countless
things such as those that are inanimate, but what of those that are not? What
about people? With respect to people,
there are a number of immeasurable qualities which significantly influence
successful outcomes. Many of the immeasurable qualities that powerfully
contribute to success are contingent on the affective culture or mindset of the
people involved. In the flurry of checklist assignment dispensing, deadlines
pressing in, paper gathering, number crunching, outcome analyzing, and bottom
line ramifications, where are the people? Where are the feelings of the people?
Machines heartlessly and most effectively produce brilliant metrics. The human
variable notches down the effectiveness because this pesky variable has feelings;
unquantifiable feelings that can and do unpredictably tip the balance. Drat and
double drat. Take schools, for instance. Are all of the boxfuls of voluminous paperwork
generated and tabulated for each student honestly, truly honestly improving that
student’s understanding of content, application of understanding, and
capability of producing connection building scaffolding? I do not think so.
From my vantage point of thirty years in the classroom, I see the areas in most
dire need of bolstering among students to be relational. Feelings, communication, empathy, and compassion
are all immeasurable and they all lead to understanding. Understanding leads to
meaning-making which suddenly brings relevance into the educational picture. Encouragement is another immeasurable but
remains by far the single most important and long-lasting motivator. We can try
to motivate extrinsically but when the novelty of the incentive wears off we’ve
lost. Encouragement, on the other hand, cumulatively builds confidence and
commitment and requires no paperwork, simply words spoken from one heart to
another heart. A leader comprehends this
human need and harnesses its power as a strong motivator of people. A leader
comprehends that to create and to innovate, which exist at the top level of
Bloom’s Taxonomy of learning domains,
the affective environment needs to be one of encouragement. The affective
environment of a metrics driven organization is fear, fear of the pan balance
upon which each one’s efforts are regularly measured. Fear can surely be a motivator, but in a very
sad, unhealthy, and dysfunctional sort of way.
Fear binds creativity. The data obsession of a metrics environment
aligns all efforts on an efficient and lock-step path of conformity which is
neatly quantifiable, but deals the death blow to all things time-consumingly
creative. The pendulum swing of those
cultural values to which we most deeply cling is presently at its widest arc in
metrics glorification, but it will swing back because historically it always
does. Numbers can never and will never paint the whole picture when the hearts
and dreams of people are involved.
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