I must say that this is probably our toughest group to please; however your messages were so powerful and inspirational, we felt it necessary to ask you to return and be our lead speaker at our Annual E+Qual Conference.
Franklin P. Schargel is an former classroom teacher, school counselor and school administrator who implemented an improvement process for his inner-city school which dramatically increased parental involvement, increased post-secondary school attendance and significantly lowered the dropout rate.
Franklin is an educational contributor to the Huffington Post.
Mr. Schargel is an internationally recognized speaker and author of ten books and over 100 published articles. He has delivered workshops dealing with leadership, organizational culture and dropout prevention in forty-nine states and nine countries. The U.S. Department of Education, Business Week, Fortune Magazine, National Public Radio (NPR), Public Broadcasting System (PBS) and The New York Times have recognized Mr. Schargel's work.
Almost one-third of our K-12 students never graduate – increasing the likelihood of their imprisonment, single parenthood, poverty and the use of alcohol and drugs. No community, no matter how affluent is exempt. Using specific research-based, data-driven examples developed by the National Dropout Prevention Center, and tools developed as “best practices” by some of America’s outstanding schools and programs, workshop participants will not only learn what to do but how to aid at-risk youth to graduate.
We know a great deal about change. We know it’s inevitable. We know it is accelerating. We have even formalized it by having “change agent” as part of many job descriptions. We also know it cause resistance because it threatens the way organizations and people do their jobs.
Many business leaders say they desire their organizations to change. Businesses change everyday! The question is are they improving? Frequently we measure change and think we are measuring improvement. In today’s business climate, improvement and innovation are more critical than ever before.
This keynote will address the differences between change and improvement.
Next to high performing teachers, successful leadership is the key to increased academic achievement and higher graduation rates. We asked 200 high performing, high minority, high poverty successful leaders in urban, rural and suburban schools why they were successful when most schools dealing with at-risk learners are failures.
Educators are aware that some schools support a culture that is not only hostile to learning but is toxic to students, parents and staff. We asked the school leaders how they were transforming a hostile culture into a supportive learning environment.
The business world is undergoing a dynamic change. Increasingly, agricultural nations are becoming industrial nations, while industrial nations are becoming nations that develop and sell knowledge. No longer do companies compete solely in domestic markets. The global marketplace has become reality. Businesses must depend on a well-trained, technologically prepared workforce. If they cannot find those workers in their home nation, they will seek locations where they can find that labor supply. Nations are being drawn into the global marketplace without regard to the impact on their cultural, social, economic or educational environments. The graduates from the United States are not competing for jobs with those from Canada but with the best graduates from around the world. Our schools must become as globally competitive as businesses.