Building Effective Leadership Teams in Schools

Most schools don’t have leadership teams—they have overextended individuals. Learn how to build a curated, high-functioning school leadership team.

Curating a leadership team

Most leadership teams in schools aren’t really teams. They’re collections of capable, overstretched individuals doing their best but not working as one. Meetings feel disjointed. Execution is rushed. Collaboration relies more on goodwill than on design.

It’s not a talent problem. It’s a structure problem.

The answer? Curation.

From Collection to Curation

Many schools fill roles based on need:

“We need a coordinator. A dean. An assistant principal. Post the jobs.”

But effective curation starts differently:

“What must this team achieve in the next 12 months and what contrasting capabilities make that success inevitable?”

The best leadership teams in schools are intentional. They offer:

  • Coverage: No blind spots.
  • Contrast: Diverse thinking styles.
  • Cadence: Clear rhythms for getting things done.

They don’t just exist. They operate.

Introducing the CURATE Framework

I use the CURATE method to build and strengthen leadership teams in schools:

  • Clarify outcomes and constraints
  • Understand your people and school rhythms
  • Recruit for complementarity, not similarity
  • Align on goals, decisions, and cadences
  • Train deliberately on small, high-leverage skills
  • Empower with real authority and fast feedback

Let’s break it down.

How to CURATE a Leadership Team

Clarify before hiring.
Don’t start with job titles. Start with the non-negotiable outcomes for teaching, culture, and operations.

Understand your people.
Audit your current team’s strengths, blind spots, and energy levels. Spot gaps before they become issues.

Recruit for contrast.
Hire the person who completes your team and not the one who mirrors your thinking.

Align decision-making.
Clarify roles using D.A.D. (Driver, Advisor, Doer). Set rhythms with weekly huddles and monthly reviews.

Train with intent.
Short, high-impact reps. One focus skill per quarter. Don’t leave leadership growth to chance.

Empower clearly.
Give real ownership, shared dashboards, and fast feedback loops.

From Heroics to Systems

Strong leadership teams in schools don’t rely on heroics. They rely on clarity, cadence, and trust.

If you can’t name who leads instruction, culture, operations, and data right now then you don’t have a team. You have individuals with overlapping roles and unclear lanes.

Start small:

  • CURATE your next hire.
  • Map your current capabilities.
  • Redesign how you meet and make decisions.

Your school deserves a leadership team that leads.

Let’s Talk

Are you building or inheriting a leadership team this year?
How are you curating, not accumulating?

Drop a comment to share your strategy.

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Dr Jake Madden
I’m Jake Madden (Dip Teach; B.Ed; Grad Dip: Leadership; M. Ed: Leadership; EdD; FACEL; MACE), and I’ve had the privilege of working in education for over thirty years as a teacher and principal. Throughout my career, I’ve focused on supporting teachers to build their capacity, developing learning approaches that respond to the needs of today’s world, creating flexible learning spaces for 21st-century learners, and designing curriculum that encourages global mindedness. I’m particularly passionate about the concept of teacher-as-researcher, and I’ve been fortunate to contribute to this area by sharing my experiences through books and journal articles. My work reflects what I’ve learned from leading and navigating educational change, and I’m always eager to continue learning from others in the field.

Author: Dr Jake Madden

I’m Jake Madden (Dip Teach; B.Ed; Grad Dip: Leadership; M. Ed: Leadership; EdD; FACEL; MACE), and I’ve had the privilege of working in education for over thirty years as a teacher and principal. Throughout my career, I’ve focused on supporting teachers to build their capacity, developing learning approaches that respond to the needs of today’s world, creating flexible learning spaces for 21st-century learners, and designing curriculum that encourages global mindedness. I’m particularly passionate about the concept of teacher-as-researcher, and I’ve been fortunate to contribute to this area by sharing my experiences through books and journal articles. My work reflects what I’ve learned from leading and navigating educational change, and I’m always eager to continue learning from others in the field.

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