The activities in the guide will help you connect the suggestions and strategies in Classroom Instruction from A to Z to your real-life teaching experiences. For each of the 26 chapters in the book, you will find a series of three activities that will help you reflect on your current practices. They ask you to ACT now and turn your classroom into a place where students can thrive. Assess where you are right now. Identify your strengths and pat yourself on the back! Then, identify your challenges and get busy deciding how to be more effective. Consider trying something new. This portion of the study guide asks you to step out of your comfort zone and consider trying one of the strategies or practices you've read about. Take away a valuable idea. Finally, be prepared to walk away with something you could literally use tomorrow.

Study Guide

by Ronald Williamson and Barbara Blackburn

Published 30 April 2010

Written to accompany the strategies presented in The Principalship from A-Z, the activities in this book will help you apply the leadership concepts of Blackburn and Williamson to your own experiences as principal. Here, the authors guide you through the process of turning each idea into an actionable plan for your school, allowing you to take productive next-steps immediately.

The activities in this guide prompt you to ACT:

  • Assess where you are right now. Identify your school's strengths and challenges.
  • Consider trying something new. Step out of your comfort zone. Visualize yourself implementing a better plan.
  • Take away a valuable idea. Put your strategy into practice - as soon as today.

Do each of these exercises in conjunction with your reading of The Principalship from A-Z for a complete best-practices overview, and work toward creating an atmosphere of school-wide success.


In today’s educational climate, advocacy is a critical part of any teacher or leader’s job. Advocacy From A to Z unpacks the difficult task of understanding the movers and shakers—including teachers, parents, the union, legislatures, and policy makers—that impact your school, affect your students, and shape policy. Organized into 26 chapters—one for each letter of the alphabet— this book provides school-based examples and specific strategies needed to be a successful advocate for education. Advocacy begins at the local level, and the newest book in the A to Z series helps educational leaders navigate, plan, and shape their message to the right people at the right time. Now you can find your voice and become an active advocate to help your students succeed.