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Innovation & Transformation by Asking the Right Questions

Friday, July 30th, 2010

My newest opportunity at New England Law | Boston (more widely known as the New England School of Law or NESL to the many denizens) is re-teaching a lesson I remember from Arthur Anderson about questions.  It’s best to ask the right questions than to pretend you have any of the answers.

Right now I am asking lots and lots of questions to figure how best to develop a successful alumni and development program at a school that has dabbled in both over its 100+ years but never embraced either as central to the mission or its future.  Much of what I’ve found is honest attempts at modest programming that resulted in equally modest results.

With a new Chairman, a great Dean and loads of unforeseen opportunity in a vulnerable economy, a shaky commercial real estate market and largely untapped alumni and friends, transformation for New England Law is a legitimate possibility.  The Chairman believes, and rightly so, that transformation is most possible if alumni step up and lead through giving, encouraging applicants who were accepted to pick New England Law, and by hiring or helping fellow alums to find jobs.

It’s quickly coming down to Money, 1Ls and Jobs.

To make significant gains in Money, 1Ls and Jobs for New England Law alumni, we need to innovate new ways of raising funds, getting applicants accepted here to matriculate and connecting alumni with appropriate jobs.  That innovation has to largely arise from how we engage our potentially most powerful constituents - the 10,000-plus lawyers who earned their degree at New England Law.

So how do we know what will lead to transformation in Money, 1Ls, and Jobs?  First, ask that question of any one of the alumni willing to answer. Figuring out who will answer and who is informed enough to answer is a piece of the puzzle, but the key is to ask and keep asking.  Answers will guide direction and engage volunteers.

Second is asking why we do the things we do on a daily basis.

When asking why, I’ve discovered that the answer is often, “That is what we’ve always done,” or “That is what I was taught to do.”  The reasons why are sometimes forgotten or not articulated.  With a clearer sense of strategic priorities, the answers to why help determine what we do with greater intensity and what to stop doing.

The last question that is critical to ask repeatedly is how. How do we help our colleagues and volunteers achieve their goals? How do we make systems serve our strategic interests? How should we deploy scarce time and financial resources to get momentum going?  This is where it is most critical to ask and keep asking the right questions.

Transformation through innovation is a greater possibility with every question that we ask.  I must remember to never stop asking or the innovation will end.

Peace Corps, Nukes & Unemployment

Saturday, April 10th, 2010

Great to learn that President Obama and Dimitry Medvedev of Russia signed the “new START” treaty this week in an effort to reduce the number of nukes by one-third. It is just a start but a solid one with proliferation and a complete breakdown between US and Russian relations during the previous administration. Is the world safer? Not really, but at least the big boys are talking, agreeing to keep a lid on things and and an eye on new entrants into the nuclear bomb family of nations.

Simultaneously, a bill is coursing through Congress to put some more money into creating Peace Corps jobs that I believe should have a Department of Labor contribution in it. Is the “More Peace Corps” bill a State Department activity? Of course. But isn’t also a smart way to boost unemployment in a small but meaningful way.  A couple of thousand PCV jobs are always welcome and these kinds of jobs are just what is needed. They build new skills, meet national security interests if deployed properly and send the signal that the US is investing in its people in creative ways.

The confluence of national security interests and reducing unemployment should not be a novel concept. I do not believe there is any linkage of this sort between the Departments of State and Labor. There certainly are linkages between the Departments of State and Defense but one more player at the table is needed.

Until we see foreign aid, the crippled economy and unemployment as national security issues, the kinds of action needed by Congress and the bureaucracies will be harder to come by and a signature of the way the US leads through creativity and innovation.

Gary Indiana’s Response to High Dropout Rates

Tuesday, March 16th, 2010

 

Gary, Indiana’s leaders share profound concern and inspiring commitment to their young people, many of whom are being left behind by the 21st Century.  Over the past three years, Gary’s leaders produced their Multiple Education Pathway Blueprint. The blueprint may serve as a catalyst for  education attainment that leads to employment and supports economic development in Gary and NW Indiana.

In-School Portfolio of Options: In 2008, the Gary Community Schools unveiled a set of ten specific strategies known as the “The New Secondary Experience.” The objective was to implement best practices from work being done in other cities that were possible with limited resources.

The ten components include:

  1. Collecting and utilizing school-based data to provide early indicators of students at-risk of dropping out by: a) identifying all students falling behind, b) classifying students by credits earned, and c) using KidTrax data systems to foster connectedness between community and in-school activities,
  2. Transforming schools to allow students to pursue interests, talents and abilities
  3. Eliminating all social promotions and engage students and their parents in developing a plan for credit recovery and intensive remedial education
  4. Implementing “Double Dose” classes for students falling behind in mathematics and language arts
  5. Implementing extended day strategies supported by existing Title XX and remediation funds
  6. Engaging employers and workforce specialists to provide career and job awareness, exploration, mentoring and employment
  7. Implementing immediate instructional interventions and exploring the use of technology options to support teachers and counselors
  8. Implementing reading and literacy classes at the high school level to provide remediation for those students not reading English at grade level
  9. Providing credit recovery and acquisition opportunities for all students classified as behind their grade level in credits earned after regular school day, and
  10. Developing an individual Career Pathway Plan for all Gary students

New Pathways Options through “Magnet Schools”: In the winter of 2008, faced with a $22 million budget shortfall, the Gary Community Schools Board designed and passed a sweeping secondary school re-organization built on principles of “The New Secondary Experience.” The strategy, “Magnet Schools,” requires students, parents and faculty to choose where their talent and interests lie in selecting one of four schools that will offer choice of 1) Leadership/Military Academy & Gifted/Talented Focus, 2) Science, Technology, Engineering, Math (STEM),  3) Career and Technical options, and 4)Visual & Performing Arts.

Oldest and Closest”: An immediate strategy to arise from MEP Blueprint planning process is for the Gary Community Schools and its partners to rapidly identify its 2008-2009 students missing the least number of credits and who were oldest students at risk of “aging out” for immediate interventions. It was estimated that roughly 10% of the students most likely to drop out were in this category. Intensive time and resources for students in need of assistance to secure credits or a satisfactory ISTEP score to graduate could produce momentum and early success.

 

Job Creation

Friday, January 15th, 2010

The Christian Science Monitor posed an interesting set of eight ways to reduce unemployment in its December 6, 2009 issue that make pretty good sense. Two of them - training workers for 21st employment and direct spending by the Federal government for projects that will create jobs - work. So far. summer youth jobs, infrastructure and energy/environmental services are three areas that have produced real jobs for people. There ought to be some thinking about global competitiveness, particularly in higher cost advanced manufacturing, where the Federal government should inject significant funds to aid US companies to compete by producing subsidized products initially and as costs go down, competitive ones.

Investing taxpayer funds in rebuilding a manufacturing sector focused on high tech, advanced textiles, biological products, chemicals and specialty vehicles to level the playing field with other nations that subsidize their startup and competing industries is not an ideological choice, it is an economic and job creation choice.

Adaptability, Resilience & Versatility in the 2008-09 Economy

Saturday, September 12th, 2009

Over the past week, I’ve had to think long and hard about what it is that I’m doing for clients as the national economy grinds along and opportunities remain scarce for all of us.

The work in the area of literacy, lifelong learning and a comprehensive educational pipeline is, I believe, so very important. But what is the ultimate goal? I believe it is helping people have the tools to be resilient, versatile and adaptable.  These words are not synonymous entirely but pretty close.  In a changing world where employers come and go in the blink of an eye and technology changes just about the time we figure out how to use it, we must all be constant learners and know when to move on from old ways.

I worry about so many of my generation and colleagues I work with who seem to be stuck in a way of working that does not adapt, is not versatile and leads to defeats or disappointments that require resiliency that is being used up in enormous chunks to the point of exasperation.

We must all learn from the British-led invasion of Gallipoli in 1915 where the British figured out how to crush the Germans by hitting its soft underbelly through southern Turkey.  The disaster was brought on by attempting a brilliant strategy using outdated, rigid tactics that doomed 20,000 men.  The book “Military Misfortunes” by Cohen & Gooch is a great description of the worst that can happen when leaders are not versatile, adaptable and resilient.

The pace of change is so rapid that we must all strive to find and nurture the skills needed to be adaptable, versatile and resilient.  If we can help others do that, we are making a sound contribution.  All the while we must nurture our own skills and be ready to embrace the need to adapt and change.

Remembering Senator Edward M. Kennedy

Friday, August 28th, 2009

We join the community and the nation in mourning the loss of Senator Edward Kennedy this week. He truly was a great legislator and champion for the little guy.

He and his staff were everything that the remembrances of the past few days claim.  See http://www.tedkennedy.org/tributes for the thoughts of dignitaries and residents of the Commonwealth of Massachusetts.

My own experiences with Senator Kennedy were professional and personal:

  • uncommon responsiveness and help with the Immigration & Naturalization Service to obtain the paperwork needed to adopt our daughter in 1994,
  • Senator Kennedy’s tremendous personal time, money and thoughtfulness for the nursing care he received in 1964 at Cooley Dickinson Hospital in the four years I served as director of community relations and development, and
  • delivering on his word in helping shepherd through the Pediatric AIDS Grant to the Boston VNA in 1988 when the Reagan Administration was still resisting the need to acknowledge, protect and invest in care and research for HIV.

Senator Kennedy was an imperfect man in many ways, a but a tremendous person and special public servant.

He personally contributed to my professional success, to helping my family have the blessing of our daughter, Joanna, and to teaching me the lesson of the importance of remembering those who showed care and kindness.

We’ll miss Senator Kennedy and the many things he did for those in need.

Welcome to Bauler Consulting

Monday, May 11th, 2009

The greatest blessing that comes with working with innovative leaders is the chance to learn from those with the courage and discipline it takes to overcome complex challenges that limit people achieving their dreams.

This purpose of this blog is to record and share some of those stories and to explore approaches that leaders and systems take in an attempt to solve problems or shift the dynamics a little in the favor of underserved or struggling people.

I hope that this spot on the Internet is a place where readers will post ideas, objections and questions in the interest of sparking new ideas or eliciting ones that haven’t been recorded and shared. 

Thanks for stopping by - Bradley C. Bauler


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