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See articles for School Heads, Business & Operations, Advancement, Academic Leadership, and Trustees, in addition to Private School News.

Scheduling and Chronobiology

Academic Leadership // October 25, 2010

There’s a lot of scheduling theory! So let’s pick just one area of it and see what it says about our schedules, and whether we are providing optimal learning environments for our students. Chronobiology is an integral part of thinking about time. Go to Chronobiology International to see some of the applications that are being made using this research!

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Contracts or Employment At-Will Agreements— What Are the Issues?

Business and Operations // October 25, 2010

Last month, we wrote about the importance of establishing “characteristics of excellence” as the foundation of your faculty hiring process. While we realize that contract season isn’t for several more months, the question of contracts has spurred a lot of discussion on the listserv recently. Therefore, we thought that we’d “jump ahead” to the end of the hiring process and focus on contract-related issues that all schools need to consider.

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How to Read an Insurance Policy

Business and Operations // October 21, 2010

ISM believes that schools need to view “Risk Management” (RM) as a separate (and then eventually integrated) process. An important part of this RM discussion revolves around the transference of risk as a control mechanism. You, for your school, can decide to retain risk if it is a fiscally sound decision or, if the chance of “it” happening is low and even if it does, you can afford to pay for it. Alternately, should the risk be far too costly for the school to retain, then passing (or transferring) the risk to someone else is the way to go.Perhaps the most obvious “risk transference,” and one we’re all familiar with, is that of purchasing insurance.

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Merit-Based Pay Is More Than A Trend

Business and Operations // October 18, 2010

Schools nationwide, are starting to question the way they hire and evaluate faculty. Seniority is becoming less important, which could be terrible news for teachers that use their tenure as leverage and not their teaching skills. Today, more and more schools are not necessarily looking for the teacher with the most experience, but the teacher that can prove their commitment to the students, the mission of the school, and their positive contributions to the overall faculty culture.

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Managing Stress 101

Business and Operations // October 18, 2010

Managing stress isn’t as simple as learning to take breaths or scheduling enough time to sit down with the family for dinner. Managing stress is a complicated self-examination process that, like all disciplines, takes time to master. Yet, it’s one of the most important skills you can teach yourself—not just for your health, but also for the health of your staff’s morale and student’s healthy habits. That’s why we’re going to run a two-part series on stress management. In this first article, we outline how you can identify stress in your life. Next month (once you’ve had some time to log a few entries into your journal), we will going to share with you some healthy tips on managing it.

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Now More Than Ever—Tell Donors What Their Gifts Will Achieve

Advancement // October 14, 2010

According to the recent Donor Confidence Report issued by Campbell-Rinker, a marketing research company for the nonprofit world, the overall Donor Confidence Index fell lower than any point since December 2008, meaning donors are less sure of their giving. That’s the bad news. The good news is the same report says that giving to educational institutions “remains relatively untouched by waning donor confidence in the post-summer season.”

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Tattoos … More Common Than Not These Days

School Heads // October 6, 2010

More and more, you see tattoos on people from all walks of life. Body art is becoming mainstream. American tattoo artist Don Ed Hardy has a hugely successful clothing line based on his art, which has branched out into shoes and even fragrance. His art is marketed in high-profile fashion areas.

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Cutting Tuition Is Not the Answer—Keep Your School Accessible

School Heads // October 6, 2010

“The current economy.” Those words often reverberate with some fear—fear that your school is pricing itself out of the market. And then the question comes, “Should we lower our tuition?” Or, “How do we keep our school affordable?” That question has become a hot topic on ISM’s Just for Heads listserv. The predominant response was “NO.” Once you lower tuition—even as a temporary response to a current economic condition—it is difficult to bring it back up to where it belongs to support your programs. Your school gets into a spiral of catch-up and your programs—and your mission—suffer.

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Teacher Anxiety Is Contagious

Private School News // October 4, 2010

The University of Chicago led a study observing math test scores of female students over the 2008-2009 school year. The study revealed that first-and second-grade girls scored significantly lower on math tests than their peers after spending a year with a teacher anxious about his/her own mathematic abilities.

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Teachers Gone Viral

Private School News // October 4, 2010

The Internet isn’t just for kids and computer nerds anymore. In fact, you don’t even have to be computer savvy any longer to have your own Web presence out there among the millions and millions of digital pages. All you need is something to say.

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