Byron's Babbles

Practice Makes Permanent

Last week during one of my Focused Leader Academy gatherings we did an activity around “mantras” as part of our core values series. We all have a mantra whether we know it or not. Those things we believe in and the values we always act on. Others we serve even develop mantras that they use when describing us. Mine, from when I was a principal, was “Make it so!” I always wanted everyone in the school to be empowered to think through what they needed so when they told me what they intended to do I could say, “Make it so!”

One of the participants at Silver Creek School Corporation last week, Grant Condon, was really engaged in this activity and it even created a productive struggle for him. He knew what he valued and what he believed he displayed as a teacher leader, but was having trouble putting it all together – he wanted to get it right. He asked if he could take the development of his mantra as homework. The teacher in me was loving it; he was asking for homework. I love it!

True to his word, Grant did the homework and sent his thoughts to me. His work on the mantra was outstanding and I asked his permission to share. 🎤 Get ready for the mic drop, because his response is a great lesson for us all. Here it is:

Good morning,

I have been thinking a lot about the mantra that I could not decide on during our last meeting on Wednesday. I wanted to focus on effort for it, which I am, but I think I was too set on having the word “effort” in it. The more I thought about it, the more I realized that I already know of the perfect one, and it doesn’t have the word “effort” in it.

When I was on the 5th grade basketball team we had two coaches. One of them was my dad and the other was the dad of one of my best friends. The two of them taught us a lot of fundamentals and foundations of basketball, but they both used the same quote all of the time. In life, you hear a lot of people that say “practice makes perfect”, but they made a twist to that quote that I really like. They always told us that “practice makes permanent”. 

I love that for my mantra because it goes right along with giving effort. If you practice by sitting there and doing nothing, then that’s what you are going to bring to the table during a game(or test). Developing habits is what we do in practice. I like to think of classwork and homework as the practice, and the tests/quizzes as the game. When students won’t ask questions, pay attention, or even attempt the work given to them, that is practicing poor effort that will become permanent habits.

I am sure that I have plenty more that I could say about this topic, but I will save that for another time!– 

Grant Condon

Silver Creek Middle School

8th Grade Math

Welcome To Your New Addiction

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What’s At Your Core (Value)?

Where to begin? There is so much I want to say! Yesterday we had a great gathering of our Florida 3D Leadership group outside Orlando at Renaissance Charter School at Boggy Creek. I love going there and spending time with this group. Yesterday’s topic was core values. We spent the morning setting the stage with some cool activities (Emoji tattoos, making graphic mantras) and discussions around core values and what they wanted to do with their lives and what they wanted their legacy to be.

Then, the coolest thing happened – Lunch!

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Our lunch was delivered and catered from Fuzzy’s Taco Shop. First of all, as the truck, bright yellow, pulled up, it caught my eye out the window I had immediately seen the shiny object and was off topic. Check out the picture of the truck and you will understand what I am talking about. So, as they were setting up at one end of the room we were in, I asked one of the workers, Mariah Miller, whether she liked working at Fuzzy’s Taco Shop and if she did, why? Well, let me tell you, she jumped right into our core values discussion and said that she liked it because her boss did not act like a boss and did not want to be called a boss. He wanted to be considered a coworker.

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Graphic Recording by Amy Reynolds

Then her coworker (boss), or leader, as he likes to be called came in, not having heard me ask the question. I called him over and asked him what his workers would say his mantra was (this was a core values discussion from the morning). He then basically reinforced everything Mariah had told us. We were amazed by the message that David Morales had for us in what became an outstanding extemporaneous luncheon keynote, literally.

IMG_8404David explained he had ended up in Florida, via Texas, because he quit his job, and I quote, “because my core values did not match those of the company I was working for at the time.” Of course I am beaming at this point and everyone was looking at me like I had set this up, which I had not. We had discussed how individual and organization core values needed to match. I had said earlier in the day that is was just a fact that if at any point your own core values become much different from the organization you work for, that it was time to quit. He was affirming everything we had talked about earlier in the day, but with the flare of personal experience and a lot of passion.

IMG_5535He then told us about looking for a job and finding Fuzzy’s Taco Shop. He told us how he cut the deal for Fuzzy’s Taco Shop to cater for the Dallas Cowboys and Texas Rangers. He told us about how he has opened 29 businesses. Finally, he explained how core values build communities of commitment. We had been discussing how core values communicate what is important, influence behavior, and inspire people to action. We had also talked about how core values enhance credible leadership. David Morales from Fuzzy’s Taco Shop had become our exemplar. We did not need to spend very much time with his employees to know he was credible.

…it is clearly necessary to invent organizational structures appropriate to the multicultural age. But such efforts are doomed to failure if they do not grow out of something deeper; out of generally held values.” ~Vaclav Havel

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Graphic Recording by Amy Reynolds

Core values are what support the vision, shape the culture and reflect what an organization values. They are the essence of the organization’s identity – the principles, beliefs or philosophy of values. Many organizations focus mostly on the technical competencies but often forget what are the underlying competencies that make their organizations run smoothly — core values. Establishing strong core values provides both internal and external advantages to the organization. Clearly, Fuzzy’s Taco Shop and David Morales have mastered this.

Needless to say, we were amazed at this outstanding example of a company and it’s employees living out shared core values. Would you, your organization, or school have been able to extemporaneously keynoted our lunch today with the same level of authenticity related to core values as David Morales, Mariah Miller, and Fuzzy’s Taco Shop were able to?