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An Ageless Question
from Kindergarten
by Tom Terez
Several months ago, I did something I haven't done in 33 years: I went to kindergarten.
That's right, I sat down with 20 five-year-olds and did my best to absorb the day's
activities.
No, I wasn't there for a refresher course on colors and letters. As the parent of
a soon-to-be kindergartner, I was checking the place out.
Truth be told, I arrived fully expecting to enroll my child in this school. It was
just five minutes from our house. How perfect can you get?
Well, it was anything but perfect. From the moment I arrived until the moment I practically
ran out, the classroom was an exercise in behavior control. At every turn, kids were
given firm instructions on what to do and what not to do. Even art projects came
with step-by-step decrees on how to color, what to cut, and where to glue. Loud voices
were quickly quelled. Even an "aha" brought on by a learning moment prompted
a rebuke from the teacher.
Then it was time to move from one room to another. The kids formed what appeared
to be a pretty organized single file, but the teacher, who seemed to mistake this
group for a troop of Marine Corps recruits, wanted something better.
"John, get behind Susan. Susan, stop looking around. Chris, go and put that
book away." John, Susan, Chris, and their classmates all had that glazed look
that comes from being told too many times to do this and do that and please can you
hurry up?
As I drove those five quick minutes back to our house, I decided that my child would
never attend that school. And I felt so bad for those 20 kids who were in the process
of having their creativity and curiosity drilled out of them.
I went on to visit several other kindergartens. Not all of them were so focused on
rules and behavior, but overall, it seemed as if the top priority was to keep the
kids in line. One teacher told me she was against small-group activities because
then "I can't control what's happening."
These visits reminded me of the hundreds of interviews I've conducted with employees
from all walks of life. Over the years, so many people have told me about workplaces
that are all about managing behavior and, seemingly, constraining curiosity and enthusiasm.
As one person put it: "My company is rule-driven. We should be mission-driven."
Are organizations this way because people love rules and behavior control? Is it
because we really think this is the best way to manage a complex enterprise? Is it
because we have some innate desire to keep things tightly organized?
Or is it because of how we are nurtured in our early years?
In some areas of India, elephants are trained in a very traditional way. When they're
still babies, they're tied to a thick tree with a heavy chain. Over time, the chain
is replaced with something lighter, and the tree might give way to a stake in the
ground. Then the chain is replaced with a thin rope tied to a post. Pretty soon,
the elephant no longer tries to move beyond the length of the rope. The behavior-control
system has become its own self-inflicted prison.
Of course, there's no comparison between the brain capacity of an elephant and that
of a human being. But science abounds with studies that show how early experiences
create paths -- ruts, in some cases -- that lead us through the rest of our lives.
My search for a kindergarten eventually took me across town to another school district.
I entered with a hard shell of cynicism and took a seat in the back of the room.
Then I noticed that things here were different. With a bit of facilitative guidance
from the teacher, the kids went to work in groups of three or four, creating their
own buildings out of modeling clay.
From group to group, the creations that took shape were wonderfully different. A
hum of excited conversation floated through the room. Occasionally a child from one
group would visit another for ideas. You could almost feel the electrical charges
in these young minds as they exerted their creative powers. They were so engaged
that no one seemed interested in getting "out of line."
Part of this school's mission is to foster passionate curiosity and a love of learning.
And that day, I watched as their mission came alive. It was the same day that my
search for a kindergarten reached a successful end.
We have just sold our house and bought a new one, and we're getting ready for the
character-building endeavor of moving an entire family. In our own way, we're trying
to stay mission-driven.
But I'm still thinking about how this applies to workplaces. And I'm starting to
appreciate just how profoundly our early management training -- very early, as in
kindergarten -- shapes the way in which we manage and lead.
So what about it? Are so many organizations so rule-bound because we have a deep
fondness for policies and behavior control? Nope. Do we really think that rules and
controls are the best way to manage a complex enterprise? To get compliance, maybe,
but certainly not to stir commitment among employees. Do humans possess some deep
desire to keep things always under their thumb -- a "control" gene of sorts?
Hardly.
Every workday, tens of thousands of managers wrestle with what and how questions.
"What products should we launch in the next sales cycle?" "What new
policy will prevent this problem?" "How can we reduce turnover?" "How
can we increase customer satisfaction?"
Given all of the above, perhaps the most critical questions begin with a why. Why
are we organized the way we are? Why are our systems designed the way they are? Why
do we manage and supervise the way we do? As you explore these questions, be sure
to go back far enough -- at least to kindergarten.
ABOUT THE
AUTHOR:
Tom Terez (TomTerez.com) is an international consultant and frequent
speaker on organizational performance (BetterWorkplaceNow.com) and personal excellence (InnerBest.com)
Copyright 2001
Crain Communications, Inc.
Copyright © 2008 Tom
Terez Workplace Solutions, Inc. All rights reserved.
P.O. Box 21444, Columbus, Ohio USA 43221-0444. Tel.
614-488-9721. Online Contact Form
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