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Dive into the research topics where John M. Novak is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by John M. Novak.


Archive | 2014

Managing and Mentoring your Educational Self

John M. Novak; Denise E. Armstrong; Brendan Browne

Managing and mentoring for personal educational fulfillment involve making choices in order to artfully orchestrate savouring, understanding, and bettering experiences so they become more a part of one’s daily life. As a start, this entails exercising one’s imagination, constructing flow experiences, using realistic and positive self-talk, building habits of self-reflection, and taking a proactive stance to personal wellness.


Archive | 2014

Leading Educational Communities

John M. Novak; Denise E. Armstrong; Brendan Browne

The thoughtful use of metaphorical language is an important way for inviting educational leaders to communicate and structure vision, and focus creative efforts. The contrasting images of a school as an inviting family or as an efficient factory provide very different perspectives on the values and aims of educational organizations.


Archive | 2014

Hope for Educational Leadership

John M. Novak; Denise E. Armstrong; Brendan Browne

Putting into artful practice the LIVES model requires persistence, resourcefulness, and courage. It is not for the weak of heart, thought, or action because when you are working with five living systems there are always new dynamics developing. Looking at educational leadership from the perspective of expressing oneself through a language rather than achieving a final outcome, pursuing the LIVES model can be a creative quest for an educational life well lived.


Archive | 2014

Leading from the Inside Out

John M. Novak; Denise E. Armstrong; Brendan Browne

Leading involves more than pointing in an educationally desired direction. It also means imaginatively seeking out a direction and moving that way oneself because of one’s embodied beliefs about educational ends. To lead with integrity for educational life means to be clear about the values that enliven one’s sense of purpose and to develop a nuanced understanding of the complexities of reality, the paradoxical workings of the perceptual processes, and the expansive psychology of the self-system.


Archive | 2014

Leading Within and Beyond Schools

John M. Novak; Denise E. Armstrong; Brendan Browne

Invitational leaders are not to be charismatic advocates of the status quo but rather consistent and persistent campaigners for educational living both within and beyond their schools. This means not only caringly dealing with current community forces but conscientiously working to move attention and energy to deeper educational causes.


Archive | 2014

The Inviting Perspective

John M. Novak; Denise E. Armstrong; Brendan Browne

For an approach to take hold in schools it needs to resonate with an educator’s deepest intuitions, provide a defensible intellectual position, and lead to creative and ethical practices. That’s a lot to ask for but the inviting perspective aims to be an appealing, coherent, and useful theory of practice by focusing on the quality, consistency, and direction of the messages that are sent, with the aim of making schools places that intentionally call forth educational living for all involved.


Archive | 2014

Managing a Starfish

John M. Novak; Denise E. Armstrong; Brendan Browne

Everything and everyone in a school either adds to or takes away from the success of each student and the quality of life of the educational community. This is perhaps most especially true of educational leaders. In the management of inviting schools, educational leaders work with people to promote and design places, policies, programs, and processes that intentionally communicate care and competence.


Archive | 2014

Artfully Managing Conflict, Really

John M. Novak; Denise E. Armstrong; Brendan Browne

Even when people intentionally practice invitational leadership, conflict does not vanish. It can, however, be managed in ways that exemplify the basic principles of the inviting approach and, in some cases, can be growth-producing for all involved. Rather than fighting fire with fire in an already heated situation, principled strategies at different stages of tension can redirect the energy toward positive solutions.


Archive | 2014

Education Matters, Really

John M. Novak; Denise E. Armstrong; Brendan Browne

Education is much more than what happens in schools. As an activating ideal, education can be seen as an imaginative act of hope focused on the possibility of calling forth and sustaining the capacity and inclination to lead flourishing educational lives. Leading is about communicating and orchestrating a compelling vision for developing the rich context for such lives.


Archive | 2014

Managing Educational Sensibilities

John M. Novak; Denise E. Armstrong; Brendan Browne

Although it is important for invitational leaders to care about thinking, it is also important that they think about caring. By managing from and reflecting on caring, core leaders are able to make invitational learning come alive, help call forth successful intelligence, and promote the development of ethical fitness.

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Joan Shaw

University of Western Ontario

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Steve Sider

Wilfrid Laurier University

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