- Resisting the urge to micromanage. Rather than scripting every instructional move, leaders can engage teachers in setting shared goals and trust them to chart the best path toward those goals. For example, at a school where Carrie coached, benchmark data revealed inconsistent levels of student mastery in English language arts (ELA). Rather than mandating a solution, school leadership brought the ELA team together and said, “Our shared goal is to ensure that all students demonstrate mastery on ELA standards. I’d like us to focus on using checks for understanding more intentionally. I trust each of you to decide what that looks like in your classrooms.” One teacher began incorporating quick writes throughout the lesson and exit slips at the end. Another used digital tools for annotation and embedded formative assessment questions to get real-time feedback. This leadership approach led to improved student outcomes and greater teacher investment because teachers felt ownership of both the problem and the solution.
- Creating structures for shared leadership. Teachers want a seat at the table when decisions are made. Involve them in scheduling decisions and professional learning planning in meaningful ways—not through tokenistic surveys that lack leadership follow-through on results.
- Focusing feedback on growth, not compliance. When feedback conversations center on outcomes, student impact, and continuous improvement—not on rigid protocol adherence—teachers feel respected as professionals.
Empowering teachers means recognizing that the people closest to the work often have the best ideas for improving it.

- Making appreciation specific and personal. Instead of generic praise, such as “Thanks for all you do!” recognize individual strengths and contributions: “Your relationship-building with students transforms their engagement in ways we all learn from.”
- Connecting individual strengths to the school’s mission. Show teachers how their skills advance the school’s mission so they see themselves as indispensable to the school’s success. One educator explained that after mentioning to their principal that they were interested in developing more inclusive learning strategies for students with diverse needs, their principal arranged for them to attend specialized training.
- Investing in their growth, not just their output. Ask about teachers’ aspirations. Some may aspire to become instructional leaders, mentors, curriculum designers, administrators, or content experts. Others may wish to present at conferences, lead equity work, or engage families more deeply. Offer leadership opportunities, personalized professional development, and mentorship pathways that match their passions and goals.
- Addressing toxic behavior promptly. Culture protection is leadership work. When gossip or unethical behavior arises, leaders must confront it swiftly and clearly. One educator shared that their administration singled out the individuals responsible for such behavior and worked with them directly, as opposed to sending out a pointed email to the entire staff. Left unchecked, toxicity drives away good people faster than any other factor.
- Prioritizing collaboration. Teaching is often isolating by default, but it doesn’t have to be. Leaders can build structures for regular meaningful collaboration, peer observation cycles, and professional learning communities so teachers learn with and from one another.
- Being visible and accessible. When leaders are present in hallways and classrooms—and not just in meetings—teachers feel more connected and supported.
'I stayed because my principal didn’t just talk about an open-door policy: she lived it. She showed up in classrooms, she asked real questions, and she listened.'

- Involving teachers early in decision-making processes, not just gathering feedback after decisions are mostly made. One educator shared, “Administrators ask for our input on big decisions and try to take into account how something will affect the faculty and students on the whole.” Teachers value that kind of consideration.
- Creating genuine listening structures. These might include teacher advisory groups whose work is tied to real decision points. “With each check-in,” one teacher explained, “my supervisor would ask, ‘If you had a magic wand, what would you change?’ He would write down these ‘wishes’ and do everything in his power to make them a reality.”
- Following up and communicating clearly. Teachers want to know how their input influenced (or didn’t influence) the final decision.
Creating Reasons to Stay
Reflect & Discuss
Which of the four strategies outlined in the article represents your greatest leadership challenge? Why?
How might you communicate value to teachers, as opposed to merely showing appreciation?
What listening structures could you create to give teachers more meaningful input on school initiatives?
Make Your School Irresistible
Secrets to finding, attracting, and retaining great teachers who will contribute to a promising future for your school, your students, and your community.
