Multiple Advisors
There's a proverb that reads, "Plans fail for lack of counsel, but with many advisers they succeed." As I said, I don't really know how this is all going to pan out, so I'm going to follow this advice. I've talked with many people about implementing SBG - principals, college professors, colleagues, department chairs, researchers, mentors, and students. They've given me many ideas, too many to really make sense of or remember. However, I find that as I talk to multiple sources, more clarity and direction starts to emerge.
Some advisors have contradicted each other in some areas, but the clarity comes where they have agreed. Because of this, I now see something I hadn't before: that SBG can be implemented slowly over time because there are multiple layers to it. Where I used to see it as one large irreducibly complex machine, I now see its component parts - feedback and reporting. SBG can be done for feedback outside of it being done for reporting. This breaks the beast into two more manageable sections and gives me direction and focus for my implementation.
Some advisors have contradicted each other in some areas, but the clarity comes where they have agreed. Because of this, I now see something I hadn't before: that SBG can be implemented slowly over time because there are multiple layers to it. Where I used to see it as one large irreducibly complex machine, I now see its component parts - feedback and reporting. SBG can be done for feedback outside of it being done for reporting. This breaks the beast into two more manageable sections and gives me direction and focus for my implementation.