Transformational Educators | School Leadership Stories

Why Adding More Initiatives Burns Out Your Staff Before Culture Forms ft. Bethany Rees | Transformational Educators Ep. 34

32 min · 18 de jun de 2026
Portada del episodio Why Adding More Initiatives Burns Out Your Staff Before Culture Forms ft. Bethany Rees | Transformational Educators Ep. 34

Descripción

School leaders who keep adding initiatives without removing anything will burn out their staff before culture ever takes hold. Bethany Rees, principal and founder of Leadership on the Rocks, scaled a brand-new Texas 6A high school from 1,200 to 4,000 students while hiring 213 staff in one semester, and she learned fast that the "magic program" fallacy destroys the very capacity leaders need. Her "who before do" framework shows how anchoring every decision in shared identity, not the next initiative, is the only way to build a culture that holds when the storms hit. Bethany opened her 6A campus in 2018, anchoring the school's identity in the "Grizzly Growl," a five-pillar framework covering growth mindset, respect, ownership, work ethic, and leadership. Every decision, whether it involved a student, teacher, parent, or community member, was checked against those pillars. To build the feedback loop that kept the framework alive, she ran small-group teacher town halls where she positioned herself as secretary, letting staff name every gap and every solution. Rather than chasing external ratings, the internal check of those town halls drove continuous improvement and became, in her words, the system that made every other system better. Listeners leave with a clear build order: lock shared identity before purchasing any program, then establish communication, safety, logistics, classroom environment, and teaching and learning as load-bearing systems. Bethany names three mistakes that collapse that sequence: deciding without teacher input, buying a magic-bullet program and sprinting to implement it, and adding to the plate without ever removing anything. COVID stress-tested her work-ethic pillar hardest, proving that culture cracks where the foundation was skipped. Practically, that means running town halls where the leader takes notes rather than talks, replacing twenty-email threads with a two-minute conversation, and auditing the plate before every new initiative by naming what gets cut first. Connect with Bethany Rees: LinkedIn [https://www.linkedin.com/in/bethanyrees/] Leadership On The Rocks [https://www.leadershipontherocks.com/] Book (Amazon – Hardcover) [https://www.amazon.com/Leadership-Rocks-Survive-Succeed-Wilderness/dp/B0FCTL58Y3] Podcast (Apple Podcasts) [https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/leadership-on-the-rocks/id1608044408] Instagram [https://www.instagram.com/leadershipontherocks/] Linktree [https://linktr.ee/leadershipontherocks] 🔗 Explore Gracelyn University’s online programs [https://sholink.to/gracelynuniversity] and leadership resources Transformational Educators | School Leadership Stories Thank you for listening to Transformational Educators, where we share real stories of servant leadership, trust-building, and purpose-driven change in schools. 📖 Read Dr. Matthew Flippen’s new book, Win With Your Talent Pipeline [https://sholink.to/WinYourTalentPipelineBook] 📅 New episodes release every Thursday at 6 AM CT. Watch and subscribe on YouTube [https://www.youtube.com/@TransformationalEducators?sub_confirmation=1]. If today’s conversation inspired you to lead with courage and care, share it with another educator or school leader. Together we can build schools that truly transform lives. Produced by APodcastGeek [https://itl.ink/APodcastGeek]

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35 episodios

episode Why Adding More Initiatives Burns Out Your Staff Before Culture Forms ft. Bethany Rees | Transformational Educators Ep. 34 artwork

Why Adding More Initiatives Burns Out Your Staff Before Culture Forms ft. Bethany Rees | Transformational Educators Ep. 34

School leaders who keep adding initiatives without removing anything will burn out their staff before culture ever takes hold. Bethany Rees, principal and founder of Leadership on the Rocks, scaled a brand-new Texas 6A high school from 1,200 to 4,000 students while hiring 213 staff in one semester, and she learned fast that the "magic program" fallacy destroys the very capacity leaders need. Her "who before do" framework shows how anchoring every decision in shared identity, not the next initiative, is the only way to build a culture that holds when the storms hit. Bethany opened her 6A campus in 2018, anchoring the school's identity in the "Grizzly Growl," a five-pillar framework covering growth mindset, respect, ownership, work ethic, and leadership. Every decision, whether it involved a student, teacher, parent, or community member, was checked against those pillars. To build the feedback loop that kept the framework alive, she ran small-group teacher town halls where she positioned herself as secretary, letting staff name every gap and every solution. Rather than chasing external ratings, the internal check of those town halls drove continuous improvement and became, in her words, the system that made every other system better. Listeners leave with a clear build order: lock shared identity before purchasing any program, then establish communication, safety, logistics, classroom environment, and teaching and learning as load-bearing systems. Bethany names three mistakes that collapse that sequence: deciding without teacher input, buying a magic-bullet program and sprinting to implement it, and adding to the plate without ever removing anything. COVID stress-tested her work-ethic pillar hardest, proving that culture cracks where the foundation was skipped. Practically, that means running town halls where the leader takes notes rather than talks, replacing twenty-email threads with a two-minute conversation, and auditing the plate before every new initiative by naming what gets cut first. Connect with Bethany Rees: LinkedIn [https://www.linkedin.com/in/bethanyrees/] Leadership On The Rocks [https://www.leadershipontherocks.com/] Book (Amazon – Hardcover) [https://www.amazon.com/Leadership-Rocks-Survive-Succeed-Wilderness/dp/B0FCTL58Y3] Podcast (Apple Podcasts) [https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/leadership-on-the-rocks/id1608044408] Instagram [https://www.instagram.com/leadershipontherocks/] Linktree [https://linktr.ee/leadershipontherocks] 🔗 Explore Gracelyn University’s online programs [https://sholink.to/gracelynuniversity] and leadership resources Transformational Educators | School Leadership Stories Thank you for listening to Transformational Educators, where we share real stories of servant leadership, trust-building, and purpose-driven change in schools. 📖 Read Dr. Matthew Flippen’s new book, Win With Your Talent Pipeline [https://sholink.to/WinYourTalentPipelineBook] 📅 New episodes release every Thursday at 6 AM CT. Watch and subscribe on YouTube [https://www.youtube.com/@TransformationalEducators?sub_confirmation=1]. If today’s conversation inspired you to lead with courage and care, share it with another educator or school leader. Together we can build schools that truly transform lives. Produced by APodcastGeek [https://itl.ink/APodcastGeek]

18 de jun de 202632 min
episode Why Backing Staff Unconditionally Costs You Your Best Teachers ft. Dr. Todd Dugan | Transformational Educators Ep. 33 artwork

Why Backing Staff Unconditionally Costs You Your Best Teachers ft. Dr. Todd Dugan | Transformational Educators Ep. 33

Building school culture requires more than backing your staff; aspiring principals who confuse loyalty with tolerance risk losing their best teachers and normalizing mediocrity.  Superintendent Dr. Todd Dugan spent three deliberate years fixing culture before touching instruction in Bunker Hill School District, guided by a concrete standard: you get what you model and what you tolerate. In this conversation with host Matthew Flippen, Dugan explains why test scores are a symptom rather than the goal, how a neglected building silently communicated low expectations, and how a CNA nursing pathway sent students into $20-an-hour healthcare careers before graduation, proving that psychological safety and high standards are not opposites. His district funded the first 15 college credit hours for every qualifying student, backed by research showing five college courses make students 22 percent more likely to succeed post-secondary. The district's north star is now graduating every student with either 15 credit hours or an industry credential. That goal is reachable only because culture came first: psychological safety enabled risk-taking, modeled standards replaced tolerance of mediocrity, and a renovated environment signaled that students were worth investing in. Leaders who reverse the order, chasing test scores before trust, end up pressing the accelerator with the emergency brake still engaged. Connect with Dr. Todd Dugan: LinkedIn [https://www.linkedin.com/in/todd-dugan-219a74117/] Bunker Hill District Website [https://www.bhcusd.org/] 🔗 Explore Gracelyn University’s online programs [https://sholink.to/gracelynuniversity] and leadership resources Transformational Educators | School Leadership Stories Thank you for listening to Transformational Educators, where we share real stories of servant leadership, trust-building, and purpose-driven change in schools. 📖 Read Dr. Matthew Flippen’s new book, Win With Your Talent Pipeline [https://sholink.to/WinYourTalentPipelineBook] 📅 New episodes release every Thursday at 6 AM CT. Watch and subscribe on YouTube [https://www.youtube.com/@TransformationalEducators?sub_confirmation=1]. If today’s conversation inspired you to lead with courage and care, share it with another educator or school leader. Together we can build schools that truly transform lives. Produced by APodcastGeek [https://itl.ink/APodcastGeek]

11 de jun de 202624 min
episode The Hidden Cost of Ignoring Culture as a New School Principal | Transformational Educators Ep. 32 artwork

The Hidden Cost of Ignoring Culture as a New School Principal | Transformational Educators Ep. 32

New principals who prioritize systems over relationships risk cratering campus culture before improvement ever begins. Dr. NaTasha Crain, first-time principal at Jones Elementary in Marshall ISD, learned this the hard way: inheriting a D-rated campus with $88 in the activity account and a devastating organizational health score of 4 out of 100. Rather than doubling down on compliance, she rebuilt trust through shared leadership, modeled vulnerability with her staff, and used a one-thing coaching model to grow teacher capacity one skill at a time. The result was a campus that climbed to a B rating and a 98 culture score, proving that relational intentionality, not just strong systems, is the real engine of school transformation. Dr. Crain arrived at Jones Elementary mid-June with 14 vacancies out of roughly 27 to 30 staff positions, no campus handbook, and no master schedule. She filled every seat before the first day, then built a daily intervention block into the master schedule from scratch. Roughly 30 percent of third through fifth graders were two or more grade levels behind, so she layered Texas Instructional Leadership protocols and tools including MAP, iREADi, and Star Renaissance onto tier one instruction. Every three weeks her team reviewed individual student progress toward what she called a magic number, a specific question threshold on state assessments. She also hosted community job fairs, partnering with the Texas Workforce Center to place ten parents in jobs on site, directly connecting family stability to student readiness. Listeners leave with a repeatable turnaround sequence: build a daily intervention block before anything else, assign every student a specific measurable growth target rather than a grade-level benchmark, and separate coaching observations from formal evaluations in writing so teachers risk vulnerability without risking their jobs. Dr. Crain's modeling of mistakes in PLCs, including openly admitting she was not a math expert, gave staff permission to practice and fail before students paid the cost. Her job fair model shows that family engagement need not require a budget, only creative partnerships. Each tactic connects back to the episode's core argument: relational trust is not a soft precondition to systems work, it is the mechanism that makes systems work. Connect with NaTasha: LinkedIn [https://www.linkedin.com/in/dr-natasha-crain-337575b5/] Website [https://natashacrain.com/] Marshall ISD [https://www.marshallisd.com/page/cia] 🔗 Explore Gracelyn University’s online programs [https://sholink.to/gracelynuniversity] and leadership resources Transformational Educators | School Leadership Stories Thank you for listening to Transformational Educators, where we share real stories of servant leadership, trust-building, and purpose-driven change in schools. 📖 Read Dr. Matthew Flippen’s new book, Win With Your Talent Pipeline [https://sholink.to/WinYourTalentPipelineBook] 📅 New episodes release every Thursday at 6 AM CT. Watch and subscribe on YouTube [https://www.youtube.com/@TransformationalEducators?sub_confirmation=1]. If today’s conversation inspired you to lead with courage and care, share it with another educator or school leader. Together we can build schools that truly transform lives. Produced by APodcastGeek [https://itl.ink/APodcastGeek]

4 de jun de 202642 min
episode When Behavior Data Masks the Real Problem in Schools | Transformational Educators Ep. 31 artwork

When Behavior Data Masks the Real Problem in Schools | Transformational Educators Ep. 31

What if your school’s biggest breakthrough starts with diagnosing the real problem, not reacting to the loudest symptom? In this episode of Transformational Educators, Matthew Flippen sits down with Amy Mason, former Principal at Madison County Elementary School, now a consultant and ACCEL Director. Amy shares how she stepped into a Title I pre-K to eighth grade school with some of the lowest scores in the district and helped lead lasting transformation through trust-building, root cause analysis, instructional leadership, teacher collaboration, and practical changes that made a measurable difference. Amy unpacks how behavior data, school schedules, student relationships, and stakeholder voice all connect. From moving middle school P.E. to the end of the day, to rethinking block scheduling, to building predictable meeting rhythms with teacher leaders, this conversation is full of grounded strategies for leaders who want to improve school culture and student outcomes without losing the human story behind the data. You’ll also hear how Amy supports schools today through instructional walkthroughs, Blue Ribbon Schools consulting, and long-term partnerships that help leaders identify needs, support teachers, and create schools where students and families feel seen. Connect with Amy: LinkedIn [https://www.linkedin.com/in/amy-mason-bb761382/] Website [https://www.aim2educate.com/] NAESP Spotlight  [https://www.naesp.org/spotlight/amy-mason/?utm_source=chatgpt.com] 🔗 Explore Gracelyn University’s online programs [https://sholink.to/gracelynuniversity] and leadership resources Transformational Educators | School Leadership Stories Thank you for listening to Transformational Educators, where we share real stories of servant leadership, trust-building, and purpose-driven change in schools. 📖 Read Dr. Matthew Flippen’s new book, Win With Your Talent Pipeline [https://sholink.to/WinYourTalentPipelineBook] 📅 New episodes release every Thursday at 6 AM CT. Watch and subscribe on YouTube [https://www.youtube.com/@TransformationalEducators?sub_confirmation=1]. If today’s conversation inspired you to lead with courage and care, share it with another educator or school leader. Together we can build schools that truly transform lives. Produced by APodcastGeek [https://itl.ink/APodcastGeek]

28 de may de 202634 min
episode The Unspoken Mindset: What Nobody Tells New School Principals | Transformational Educators Ep. 30 artwork

The Unspoken Mindset: What Nobody Tells New School Principals | Transformational Educators Ep. 30

The hardest parts of school leadership are not in the training manual. In this episode of Transformational Educators, Dr. Matthew Flippen sits down with Joyce Conley-Hemmings, a practicing elementary principal in Orange County Public Schools and author of The Unspoken Mindset: What No One Tells You About School Leadership. Joyce shares how the real gap between administrator preparation and effective campus leadership is not a skills gap; it is a mindset gap. Joyce opens up about her journey from assistant principal to leading a Title I elementary school, including the internal pressure of following two strong predecessors, the challenge of walking into an A-rated school where only 50% of students were reading proficiently, and the mindset shift it took to rally her team around a single bold goal. She explains why training builds skills but mindset determines whether those skills ever become leadership, and why transparency, calibration, and starting with one thing are the keys to building momentum as a new principal. Whether you are an aspiring administrator, a first-year principal, or a veteran leader looking for renewed clarity, this conversation offers an honest, practical look at what it really takes to lead a school through transformation. Connect with Joyce: Website [https://theunspokenmindset.com] LinkedIn [https://www.linkedin.com/in/joyceconley] Instagram [https://www.instagram.com/joyce_theunspokenmindset/] Book (Amazon)(The Unspoken Mindset) [https://www.amazon.com/Unspoken-Mindset-Tells-School-Leadership/dp/B0GPMVSBWW] 🔗 Explore Gracelyn University’s online programs [https://sholink.to/gracelynuniversity] and leadership resources Transformational Educators | School Leadership Stories Thank you for listening to Transformational Educators, where we share real stories of servant leadership, trust-building, and purpose-driven change in schools. 📖 Read Dr. Matthew Flippen’s new book, Win With Your Talent Pipeline [https://sholink.to/WinYourTalentPipelineBook] 📅 New episodes release every Thursday at 6 AM CT. Watch and subscribe on YouTube [https://www.youtube.com/@TransformationalEducators?sub_confirmation=1]. If today’s conversation inspired you to lead with courage and care, share it with another educator or school leader. Together we can build schools that truly transform lives. Produced by APodcastGeek [https://itl.ink/APodcastGeek]

21 de may de 202625 min