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~ J Clay Norton, Ed.D.

The Book Chamber

Category Archives: Truth

Educational Leadership and the Responsibility of an Audience Face

30 Friday Jan 2026

Posted by The Book Chamber in Audience Face, Authentic, Balance, Character, Choice, Decisions, Educational Leadership, Emotion, Emotional Temperature, Essence, Illusions, Image, Know Your Why, Leader, Leadership, Preparation, Purpose, Relationships, Respect, Responsibility, Trust, Truth

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Education, Educational Leadership, Leader, Leadership, Learning, Respect, school, Teachers

One day last week, while driving to school and listening to the radio, I heard a broadcaster joke that he had a “face for radio.” It is a familiar phrase, but it caught my attention in a different way this time. As I listened, I started thinking about how often we talk about “face” in leadership, the face we put on, the face we show in difficult moments, or the face others come to expect from us.

The more I reflected on it, the more I realized that educational leaders are constantly showing their face, and often their facial reactions, whether they intend to or not. Leadership, especially in schools, is always happening in public.

So, here is what I think about educational leaders and the idea of having an audience face.

Educational leaders are rarely out of view. Classrooms, hallways, meetings, community forums, and informal interactions all function as public spaces. Leadership in schools is not only about decisions made behind closed doors, but about how those decisions are embodied in front of others. This is where the concept of an audience face becomes central to effective educational leadership.

An audience face is the consistent public presence a leader brings into shared spaces. It is shaped less by isolated moments and more by patterns, including how a leader responds under pressure, communicates priorities, and navigates uncertainty. In schools, where trust and morale are fragile and hard won, this presence matters deeply.

Why an audience face is necessary in educational leadership

From a leadership perspective, having an audience face is not optional. Schools are complex organizations, and ambiguity from leadership often creates instability. A well-formed audience face helps reduce that uncertainty.

A constructive audience face provides:

  • Clarity: Leaders signal what matters through what they emphasize, tolerate, and address publicly.

  • Consistency: Predictable leadership behavior builds trust and reduces organizational anxiety.

  • Psychological safety: When leaders are steady and transparent, educators feel safer taking professional risks.

  • Cultural direction: How leaders show up teaches others how to behave, respond, and lead themselves.

In this sense, the audience face is not about image management. It is about sense making. People look to leaders to interpret the environment, especially during moments of tension or change.

The role of discernment, not performance

A common misconception is that an audience face requires emotional distance or artificial positivity. In reality, effective leaders practice discernment. They understand that not every reaction belongs in public space and not every concern should be processed collectively.

An intentional audience face helps leaders:

  • Decide what should be addressed publicly versus privately

  • Regulate emotional responses without denying them

  • Hold steady when others are uncertain or overwhelmed

This is not suppression. It is professional judgment. Educational leaders carry positional power, and how they express emotion, frustration, or doubt has ripple effects throughout the system.

When an audience face becomes a liability

An audience face becomes harmful when it shifts from alignment to performance. Educators are highly sensitive to inconsistency, and trust erodes quickly when public messaging does not match lived experience.

Warning signs include:

  • Saying what sounds right instead of what is accurate

  • Projecting confidence without follow through

  • Avoiding difficult truths to preserve approval

  • Becoming overly attached to maintaining a leader image

In these cases, the audience face functions as a mask rather than a stabilizing presence.

A reflective leadership practice

Strong educational leaders treat their audience face as an ethical responsibility. They regularly ask:

  • What do my public actions communicate about our priorities?

  • What patterns am I reinforcing through my responses?

  • How does my presence affect trust, morale, and decision making?

Ultimately, leadership in schools is not defined by visibility but by impact. The audience face is one of the most powerful tools leaders have to shape culture, signal values, and guide organizations through complexity. Used intentionally, it strengthens trust and coherence. Neglected, it allows confusion and misalignment to grow. In educational leadership, how one shows up in front of others is not secondary work. It is central to the work itself.

As you step into your role today, remember that you are not just an educator and leader but a shaper of the future. Your actions and decisions profoundly impact the lives of those you guide. Go, be the great educator and leader that our future needs.

Remember… Think Leadership and Be For Others…

©2026 J Clay Norton

Want more Leadership Thoughts? Follow me on… X @thebookchamber or follow the blog directly.

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The Double-Edged Sword of Transparency in Leadership

21 Friday Feb 2025

Posted by The Book Chamber in Accountability, Actions, Authentic, Balance, Clarity, Clear, Decisions, Educational Leadership, Effective, Embrace, Honest, Leader, Leadership, Sacrifice, Transparent, Trust, Truth, Wisdom

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business, Education, Educational Leadership, Leader, Leadership, Learning, management, personal-development, Respect, school, Teachers, teaching, transparency, Trust

“You can’t handle the truth!” The famous line of Colonel Jessup in the movie A Few Good Men.

Transparency is one of the most valued traits in leadership, but it is also a paradox. We hear it thrown out all over the place – in corporate boardrooms, political speeches, and team meetings. We say leaders should be open, honest, and forthcoming. However, while most people claim they want transparency, the reality is far more complicated. When fully revealed, the truth can be uncomfortable, unsettling, and sometimes even disruptive. When trust is established, transparency thrives, making leadership stronger, relationships healthier, and organizations more effective.

At its core, transparency means sharing the full picture, hence the word of seeing it all, the victories, failures, opportunities, and obstacles. However, when the truth is inconvenient, many second-guess whether they truly wanted it. People want leaders to be open about challenges until those challenges require hard sacrifices. People want to know why decisions are made until they hear the reasoning and realize it contradicts their assumptions.

Leaders, therefore, are tasked with a delicate balancing act. If leaders are too guarded, they risk losing trust. If they are too open, they may incite panic or resistance. The solution lies in what I term responsible transparency. It’s about sharing enough truth to foster trust while also providing the wisdom and guidance needed to move forward productively. Transparency isn’t about unloading unfiltered reality onto people; sometimes, it’s simply too much to handle. Instead, it’s about leading through it with clarity and integrity.

Trust is a really big deal when it comes to transparency. Last fall, a good friend and mentor gave me a book by Stephen M. R. Covey, The Speed of Trust, and I highly recommend it. The book highlights how trust accelerates relationships, decision-making, and overall effectiveness. When leaders cultivate trust, transparency follows naturally, creating an environment where honesty is valued, not feared.

If we truly value and seek transparency, we must also be prepared to embrace the truth when it arrives. It may challenge our perceptions, force us to confront harsh realities or demand personal growth. But in the end, genuine transparency, embraced with courage, strengthens everything and everyone around, fostering healthier, more authentic leadership.

As you step into your role today, remember that you are not just an educator and leader but a shaper of the future. Your actions and decisions profoundly impact the lives of those you guide. Go, be the great educator and leader that our future needs.

Remember… Think Leadership and Be For Others…

©2025 J Clay Norton

Want more Leadership Thoughts? Follow me on… X @thebookchamber or follow the blog directly.

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Sometimes, your voice is loud enough, but a motion for a roll call vote goes unheard… HB1433 goes to the floor…

07 Friday Feb 2025

Posted by The Book Chamber in Accountability, Actions, Choice, Clarity, Decisions, Distance, Education, Educational Leadership, Expertise, Fair and Equitable Education, Intentions, Leader, Leadership, Learning, Legislators, Public Schools, Purpose, School Choice, Teachers, Trust, Truth

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community, Education, Educational Leadership, Leadership, Legislators, MSLeg, news, politics, Respect, school, School Choice, school vouchers, schools, Teachers, teaching

In any democratic process, transparency and accountability are fundamental. When these principles are sidelined, the integrity of governance is at stake. This past Tuesday, a recent incident in the House Education Committee highlights a disturbing trend in educational leadership: the refusal to allow a roll call vote on HB1433, the House bill for school choice/vouchers. Special thanks go to various educational groups who were at the Capital this past Tuesday and were able to report to the public what transpired through their social media. The quotes and summaries are credited to The Parents’ Campaign and Toren Ballard.

The House Education Chair recently acknowledged that legislators had received an overwhelming response from their constituents regarding HB1433, a bill concerning public and private school choice. He stated that representatives had received “millions of phone calls and texts” opposing the bill. Despite this, he urged committee members to vote in favor of it.

What followed was a clear case of leadership disregarding democratic norms. When the bill was put to a voice vote, the nays were audibly in the majority. Yet, the Chairman moved the bill forward to the calendar for a floor vote. When committee members requested a roll call vote to formally acknowledge each legislator’s stance, he refused, simply stating, “We aren’t going to have a roll call vote today. I’m sorry.” My questions are, “Why? What are we afraid of?” There needs to be an answer…

This refusal has significant consequences… By not allowing a roll call vote, the public is denied the opportunity to know how their legislators voted in the committee process. Why would you not want votes acknowledged? Obviously, some legislators wanted their votes made public… This lack of transparency prevents constituents from holding their elected officials accountable. The public has a right to know whether their representatives represent their interests or follow party directives. Some legislators may argue that their votes will be counted on the floor, which is when it really counts. A vote is a vote regardless of whether it is in committee or on the floor.

The role of education committees is to ensure policies that shape the future of our schools are debated and decided upon fairly. If committee leadership disregards established procedures to push forward bills with minimal scrutiny, it sets a dangerous precedent. And this is a rabbit hole worth going down… The legislative process should not be manipulated to silence opposition or fast-track controversial measures.

The implications extend beyond HB1433. Other bills have passed out of committee for this session hurt public schools. What did those votes look like? So, are we at the point where legislators will ignore overwhelming public opposition and silence dissent in committee meetings? What other policies might be passed without proper oversight? This alone is a crucial reason for us to remain engaged, follow along with bills that will affect society and our interests, and demand that legislative bodies operate with integrity.

This incident also underscores the importance of continued civic engagement. Regardless of what side of the debate you are on, your voice matters. As HB1433 moves to the House floor, where votes will be officially recorded, it is imperative to keep advocating for transparency, accountability, and fairness in the legislative process. As I have previously written in other blogs, educators know more about education than legislators do.

The “need” to silence roll call votes is more than a procedural issue. It is a deliberate act of disrespect to the democracy for which we have representatives. If legislators cannot be held accountable for their votes, then the very foundation of democratic governance is at risk. It is time for educational leaders and the public to demand better from those who say they represent our educational interests.

But I will close with this… Thank you to the House members who voted no on HB1435 yesterday. We know who you are and greatly appreciate you standing up for public education.

As you step into your role today, remember that you are not just an educator and leader but a shaper of the future. Your actions and decisions profoundly impact the lives of those you guide. Go, be the great educator and leader that our future needs.

Remember… Think Leadership and Be For Others…

©2025 J Clay Norton

Want more Leadership Thoughts? Follow me on… X @thebookchamber or follow the blog directly.

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Theological Thoughts about Leaders and Leadership…

08 Friday Nov 2024

Posted by The Book Chamber in Actions, Christian Worldview, God, Knowledge, Leader, Leadership, Trust, Truth, Understanding

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bible, business, christianity, Education, Educational Leadership, election, faith, God, Leader, leaders, Leadership, Learning, Respect, school, soverignty, Teachers, teaching

This blog post is something that I have been thinking about for some time… even before the recent election. I have many conversations with myself… go figure. One question I often ask myself is, “How did so and so a person get that job?” or “Why was that person selected for that role?” As Christians, one of our greatest witnessing tools is ourselves; we are on public display 24/7. Regardless of those in authority and leadership positions in general, I am comforted that I serve a God in total control…

In the aftermath of any election or a new leadership change, emotions can run high. We see it on TV, hear it on the radio, podcasts, etc. I’ve been on both sides of this with many elections thus far since my time voting. A winning majority often feels relief, and the other half is disappointed, and vice versa; prayers are answered and unanswered, it seems. However, as a Christian, there’s a theological truth I find confidence in that offers profound peace in times of political change and any change of leadership at any level, for that matter… God is sovereign, controlling the entire universe, and knows what is best. Romans 8:28 states, “And we know that for those who love God all things work together for good, for those who are called according to his purpose.” All things are all things and do not adhere to any categories. This concept of sovereignty means that God rules over all creation, history, and human affairs, including elections and those in leadership. Regardless of the outcome, as Christians, we can trust that nothing happens outside His knowledge and purpose.

explore-the-bible-mystery

In Scripture, we see that God’s will unfolds in two ways: His revealed will and His secret will. Deuteronomy 29:29 states, “The secret things belong to the Lord our God, but the things that are revealed belong to us and to our children forever, that we may do all the words of this law.” God’s revealed will consists of the principles and commands He has given us through Scripture… directives for living lives of integrity, justice, and love. His secret will, however, includes those things He has chosen not to disclose fully to us, such as specific plans for nations or why particular leaders rise and fall. Though we may not understand why God allows certain leaders to come into power, we can trust that His secret will is at work for His glory and, ultimately, for the good of those who love Him. What Scripture is silent on, it is silent. This foundational belief reassures us that no leader or election result surprises Him. His purposes are ultimately beyond our understanding, yet they always serve a greater good and work according to His divine plan. This is indeed a mystery.

The Bible teaches us in Daniel 2:21a that “He changes times and seasons; he removes kings and sets up kings.” This verse reminds us that the authority of every leader is granted by God Himself. Whether we support a person in leadership or not, we can trust that God has a purpose for the leadership in place and that His wisdom far exceeds our own. One clear command in God’s revealed will is that we are to pray for our leaders. Paul writes in 1 Timothy 2:1-2, “First of all, then, I urge that supplications, prayers, intercessions, and thanksgivings be made for all people, for kings and all who are in high positions, that we may lead a peaceful and quiet life, godly and dignified in every way.” Oh, how hard this often seems and actually is. Whether or not we agree with those in office or even in any leadership position, praying for wisdom, justice, and guidance for our leaders aligns our hearts with God’s purposes and keeps us rooted in humility.

As we move forward and live daily, I find comfort in God’s sovereignty, praying for our leaders in authority and trusting that God’s plans, though sometimes hidden, knowing that they are always good and perfect. At the same time, as leaders, we have a responsibility to foster unity and peace, and lead with wisdom, justice, and compassion.

As you step into your role today, remember that you are not just an educator and leader but a shaper of the future. Your actions and decisions profoundly impact the lives of those you guide. Go, be the great educator and leader that our future needs.

Remember… Think Leadership and Be For Others…

©2024 J Clay Norton

Want more Leadership Thoughts? Follow me on… X @thebookchamber or follow the blog directly.

Want to share this leadership thought with others? Click on one of the social media sharing buttons below and help spread the good…

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