What if we used a Management By Solution approach to solving education-related issues?
Would it work?
You’d be surprised at how easy the process can be from start to finish.
COVID continues to wreak havoc on the world, especially for providing answers for implementing distance learning.
Teachers want to return to their classroom, parents wish their work routines were back in place, and children want to be with their friends.
We all have the same goal, but our viewpoints can become detached.
We all must be prepared for every scenario possible for whatever the future holds.
Regardless of our perspectives, everyone must have a unified belief that all decisions are made in the best interest of the staff and students.
This goal makes it particularly challenging to make the best decisions when so many compounding variables determine the result.
Questions like “if a person is suspected of having caught the virus, will the individual just be quarantined, or will others have to be quarantined?”
Decisions will not be easy.
So there has to be an approach to making the best decision. It is a process that makes it easier to reach a consensus with all the details on the table.
It’s here where I discovered Dr. Kuttan’s Management By Systems (MBS). The philanthropist and National Education Founder (NEF) Founder uses a simple approach to tackle difficult tasks.
The father of Cyberlearning has even created the National Education Foundation University, which has over 8,000 courses for any K-12 to learn almost any topic. (Side note – contact me if you have questions about these courses. They are amazing!)
While thinking about the Distance Learning dilemma over the summer, I used the MBS approach to gain better insight.
In this example, I picked out one problem with distance learning.
We want all students and staff members to conduct the school safely and orderly, where teaching and learning can be enhanced regardless of location.
To make this goal a reality, all children must connect to their classes at home.
All available resources within your reach or the network must be identified.
Here’s where one gets to think of the impossible solutions and list them—a chance to dream in a situation that otherwise may not occur.
I recommend using data to see specific places identified as weaknesses and use those points to create unique solutions.
With the digital divide between students with Internet capability and those who do not have access, consider a way to add hot spots to areas within the district so children can log in to their classrooms.
Here’s a perfect example. I read one place using school buses as mobile hot spots. They configured the bus to be a portable server and significantly increased the number of students connected.
Just as easy as it sounds, list them out.
Take the steps from prioritizing the solutions and adding a timeline to them.
Include which teams and personnel are individually responsible for all action items.
7. Implement.
Roll out!
Please take a moment to celebrate, as it is a great time to recognize others for their contributions and dedication to the project.
Take data from every aspect possible. From student, teacher, and parent surveys, gather as much data as feasible.
Consider looking at the bandwidth at certain times of the day and how many students still can’t connect even with laptops.
The teams responsible for developing and deploying the mobile buses share the data. Invite solutions for better performance and ways to reduce costs while maintaining the capacity desired, possibly.
The people and the imagination turn multifaceted tasks into achievable solutions.
With our children, failure is not an option. We must strive with every resource available to give them the best chance at learning.
That’s how we should roll, or should I say, make the wheels on the bus go round and round.
Do you have a complicated issue surrounding distance learning? Need for someone to figure out your own Management By Solution?
Are you stuck and can’t seem to find any reasonable answers?
Let’s work on it together! Contact us for a free consult call, and let’s get started.
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