Dedication List of Tables and Figures List of Handouts Foreword by Richard A. Schmuck Foreword to the First Edition by Paul D. Houston Preface Organization of the Book About the Authors Part I. Basic Concepts 1. Resiliency: Promoting Everyone's Potential to Succeed Why the Urgency? An Introduction to Resiliency The Problem With Problem Solvers 2. Building Resilient Communities Why Community Development and Resiliency Traditional Ways of Thinking About Community Three Realities of Community: Rural, Urban, and Suburban Visualizing the Resilient Community Leadership Activities for Building a Resilient Community: Where Do We Start? Part II. Resiliency for Everyone 3. Student Resiliency: Building a Base for Positive Living What Are the Problems That Youth Face? Changing Our Mind Maps: From Deficits to Potentials Student Resiliency: The Community and School's Responsibilities Leadership Strategies That Promote Student Resiliency Bringing It All Together as an Overall Resiliency-Building Approach 4. Educator Resiliency: Nurturing the Nurturers Resiliency Pathways and Educators' Performance Over Their Career Span The Ability of Educators to Perform Well Over Time: Coping With Plateauing The Impact of the School Environment on Educator Resiliency Strategies to Overcome School-Based Barriers to Educator Resiliency 5. School Resiliency: Creating Supportive Environments for Students, Educators, and Communities Does Your School Support Resiliency? Improving School Resiliency Means Changing Schools Backwards Planning School Resiliency-Building Strategies 6. Community Resiliency: Developing Partnerships Building Relationships Between Schools and Their Communities Communities With Characteristics of Resiliency Community Support Is Needed for School Resiliency School Support Is Needed for Community Resiliency From Reactive to Proactive Community Relationships Strategies for Improving Community Resiliency Part III. Making It Happen for Schools & Communities 7. Leading Resiliency Development Initiatives: Strategies for Managing and Assessing Change Bringing It All Together and Leading Resiliency Development Initiatives The Four Stages of Change Group Development Leadership Needs Facilitation Skills Assessment, Monitoring, and Evaluation 8. School and Community Resiliency Initiatives A Reality Perspective Communities on the Forefront of Improvement In Closing Resource A: Handouts References Index
"The book provides a wide selection of practical and user-friendly tools and strategies for understanding the meaning and importance of resiliency. A must for anyone concerned about the well-being of their schools and communities." -Doug Milne, Campus Manager University of Canterbury, Nelson Campus, New Zealand "Milstein and Henry establish an excellent set of guiding principles. Every educational administrator needs to read and reflect upon this important work." -John M. Daggett, Former Superintendent Ashland Public Schools, OR Develop an environment that fosters well-being and promotes success for the entire school community! As a practical guide for creating healthier school environments, this interactive workbook offers proven strategies for developing resiliency-the emotional strength and constructive attitude necessary for students, schools, and communities to thrive. Mike M. Milstein and Doris Annie Henry expand on the groundbreaking concepts presented in their first edition, Spreading Resiliency, to underscore the critical role of educational leaders and incorporate feedback from educators who have used the book to improve their schools. The updated exercises, case studies, and reproducibles are presented in a workbook style to help administrators: Diagnose current problems and implement strategies for change Assess their own readiness to facilitate resiliency initiatives Increase educator enthusiasm and strengthen professional development Build confidence and coping capabilities in students Partner effectively with surrounding communities This invaluable resource supplies all the tools that school leaders, teacher leaders, and district administrators need to foster resiliency and implement effective, positive improvement initiatives.
Mike M. Milstein is a partner in The Resiliency Group, Ltd., and Professor Emeritus of Educational Leadership at the University of New Mexico. His professional career also includes being Professor of Educational Leadership at the University of Buffalo and a classroom teacher. His teaching, research, and writing interests are in the areas of resiliency and organiza-tional change and development. He has been actively engaged in school and community resiliency development efforts in such places as Nelson, New Zealand, Ashland, Oregon; Battle Creek, Michigan; and Shelby County, Tennessee. The resil-iency initiatives he has facilitated include classroom instruction and cur-riculum improvement efforts, school wide activities that enhance the resil-iency of educators, and school-community partnerships that support resiliency development for both children and adults. He has written 11 books, including coauthoring Resiliency in Schools (2002; 1996). Doris "Annie" Henry is a partner in The Resiliency Group, Ltd., and retired Pro-fessor of Educational Leadership. Her research and writing interests focus on resiliency, restructuring, change, organization development, and school improvement. Her work with developing resiliency efforts includes Nelson, New Zealand, Ashland, Oregon; Tennessee State Department of Education; and Memphis, Tennessee. She has facili-tated resiliency at the classroom, school-wide, and community-school part-nership levels. Currently she is the National President of the New Zealand Educational Administration and Leadership Society (NZEALS), and serves on 10 international, national and local boards. Her professional career includes being Professor of Educa-tional Leadership at New Mexico Highlands University, the University of Memphis, and at the University of Nebraska at Omaha; an elementary school principal for nearly a decade in Arizona and Oklahoma, and a classroom teacher. She has published and presented widely in her areas of interest, most notably as coauthor of the national study, Becoming a Superintendent: Challenges of School District Leadership (1997).