It is rare that I receive a letter that is 2 feet wide and three feet high. But there it was on my desk. It was signed by many students, some of whom included a carefully drawn heart at the end of their names.
The letter read:
Dear Mr. Branson,
This is a great school that you are running! Is it hard to run it? What is your favorite part of the school? How do you run the school? What are your jobs?
Love,
K-1
It is both rare and exciting to receive a letter that begins “This is a great school that you are running!” First of all, I really appreciated the exclamation point at the end! I don’t get to use those often, and now I think it is just the right thing to use at certain times! The sentence was also a bit interesting in that I agree that Indian Creek is indeed a great school, but I am not sure if I am running it or that its greatness should even be attributed to me doing the running. I decided to leave it that Indian Creek is a great school and yes, I do spend a good bit of time running.
Following that wonderful opening statement were four questions. It would be easy to contemplate that the K-1 class is engaged in some sort of lesson involved in letter writing and the teacher wanted the students to write (and receive) a letter. I prefer to think they just wanted to know more about the inner workings of an educational organization and its governance architecture and in addition some thoughts on the theory of transformational leadership!
My response, delivered to the K-1 class, appears below. Thanks students for writing, and great job on the letter!
February 6, 2012
K-1 Kindergarten Class
C/O Ms. Amy Watson and Ms. Mindy Probst
Indian Creek School
680 Evergreen Rd.
Crownsville, MD 21032
Dear students,
Thank you very much for your kind letter. It was a pleasure to read it. I was impressed by your careful wording and your use of punctuation. You did a very nice job. I also very much liked seeing each of your signatures. In your letter you asked me several questions. I would like to answer those.
About school, you asked me, “Is it hard to run it?” It is not hard to run Indian Creek School because so many people are actually doing all of the work. We have many people who help make the school run well. We have teachers, staff members, lunchroom servers, bus drivers, maintenance people, principals (we call them Division Heads), nurses, librarians and many more. We also have parents who help a lot. Students also help run the school, too, when they act as leaders in the classroom, at play, and every day in the hallways. Everybody in our school actually runs the school. I could never do all of the jobs that need to be done. More importantly, everybody does their jobs so well, it really means they run the school.
My favorite part of the school is watching students learn, play, and grow. Even more, I like seeing students work together. When students cooperate, they help one another in many ways. So my favorite part of school is seeing students learning, and learning with one another. My other favorite part of school is watching how friendly all of our students are. I like seeing students be friendly to one another and treat each other with kindness. I guess that means my favorite part of school is you. What is your favorite part of school?
You also asked, “How do I run the school?” Well, our school is very big. We have two separate campuses. We have 656 students. We also have 150 people who work at our school. So our school is quite big and that means it takes more than one person to run it. So I run the school by helping people work together. I bet that is what happens in your class, too. Do you work together to make your classroom run better? I think my biggest job is helping people cooperate. How do you help people cooperate?
Finally, you asked, “What are your jobs?” My main job is to communicate information among people at school. I really just spend a lot of time talking. I also spend more time listening. I think it is more important to listen than talk. Do you think so, too? Finally I try to help people do their jobs. So I try to help people, and that means I don’t tell them what to do. Instead, they tell me what they need to do their jobs better. When you are in class, do you spend more time talking or listening? How do you help your friends learn better?
Thank you for your letter. It was wonderful to hear from you. Have a good day today in school and enjoy your learning.
Kindest regards,
Rick Branson, Ed.D
Head of School
