Approaching October half term is always an important time for our senior leaders to focus on fixing behaviour. The new intake, hormonal battles and plans in the summer that seemed so sweet are now in action as we descend into darkness. The challenge is joining up two big, different ideas. To get it right, they need to Elevate Intentionality, fight against being settled (Combating Complacency), keep pushing people to improve (Championing Growth), and Inspire Deeper Connections across the school team.
Inspiring Deeper Connections: Agency Versus Authority
The biggest challenge for our senior school leaders is figuring out how to Inspire Deeper Connections between two very different plans that represent two different types of leadership. On one side, we have the vital, detailed work—the kind often done by operational leaders—of making sure all our rules and systems (like the detailed checklist offered for children’s files and using data analysis) are working perfectly. This work puts children and colleague agency first.
On the other side is the big, expensive new idea: the Behaviour Hub and the focus on detentions as a key area of development. This model risks being seen as the traditional, middle-aged approach of command-and-control authority.
Leaders must join these two ideas together. If they don’t, the simple but important fixes—the little things that empower staff—will get ignored because everyone will be focused on the high-profile, costly project, letting authority overshadow agency. This is about making sure everyone is working on the same team, with a clear link between how we manage small problems and how we handle big ones.
Elevating Intentionality: Justifying the £250,000 Crossroads
Great school leadership starts with Elevating Intentionality—meaning leaders must think very carefully and on purpose about where every penny goes. The desire to fix things ourselves shows a real impetus to focus on strong internal processes.
But then there’s the Behaviour Hub, which is a special, full-day provision for students, mainly Years 7 and 8. It is set to cost about £250,000 every single year to run. This is a massive amount of money. Leaders need to be very intentional when they look closely at this cost and ask: Will spending all this money just reinforce a powerful, male-coded disciplinary structure, making us complacent about the vital work of operational leadership?
Elevating Intentionality means making sure that the resources are shared; fixing the simple things—the checks, balances, and children’s trails. Leaders must prove that the Hub is truly needed because the system-level fixes alone weren’t enough, not just because the powerful intervention model is easier to demonstrate action is being taken.
Championing Growth by Combating Complacency
The way we decide to handle poor behaviour shows if we truly want to Champion Growth. The plan to focus heavily on detentions as a key area of development is simple to enforce. But this easy punishment route, often seen as a quick fix from the top, risks making staff Complacent because it stops them from asking the challenging question: why did the student behave that way?
The Behaviour Hub suggests a better way to Champion Growth. It requires reflective practice, uses behaviour passports and praise on exit, and must be curriculum aligned. This approach, focused on teaching and understanding, sees poor behaviour as a chance to teach something new. Leaders must Champion Growth by making sure this reflective attitude, which values collaboration over consequence, is used by all teachers, not just the Hub staff. They must use the data driven approach to selection from the Hub to help the whole school learn how to better teach students self-control, which is a better goal than just giving out a detention. Behaviour is a curriculum model. Would not resources be better used to adapt and develop the curriculum in such a way that enhances the opportunities for children to learn and develop rather than knit pom-poms and bake cakes? Is this allowing our children to be able to adapt and thrive?
What Happens Next? The Unresolved Questions
These two sets of ideas—the detailed rule-making and the expensive new room—are both important. But the biggest challenge is making sure they work together. As senior leaders look at this plan, they need to be honest and Elevate Intentionality to solve the following problems:
- Why is the high-cost, high-control Hub model being pushed forward so quickly? Does it risk marginalising the less visible, but vital, work of developing internal processes that empower colleagues agency?
- How can leaders Inspire Deeper Connections so that the different ideas—like the collaborative reflective practice in the Hub and the strict use of SLT detentions—actually make sense together without one feeling like a defeat for the other?
- Are we simply Combating Complacency by spending a massive £250,000 on a new room, or are we truly trying to Champion Growth across the entire school with our daily actions and our respect for different styles of leadership?
- Will the pressure to get the new Hub up and running cause the equally vital work of systemic reform to be tabled for wider discussion and just forgotten about later, thus quashing the agency-focused approach?
The systematic, curriculum approach, one that spreads responsibility, offers potency to all colleagues and creating a dynamic for children in which to develop and grow is the actual champion. Better to tackle these matters collectively than to shift towards an out of sight, out of mind model. There’s a reason that the dunces cap and standing in the corner facing the wall went the way of the cane.
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