Why do people want to join independent school boards?
If we could make a complete list of reasons over cocktails one night, it would likely be a combination of reasons associated with our best selves – a desire to have a positive impact on a place about which we care deeply, sort of reasons, as well as other more selfish desires – for social currency and professional accolade, sort of reasons. Sometimes the reasons may be related to simple curiosity regarding how the school works behind the curtain.
The reality of board membership and desire to join a board, however, do not always fit neatly together. In my work for EXPLO Elevate, I have worked with many boards, and I have seen boards operate in remarkably varied contexts. Some are facing existential crises, while others are able to explore how best to allocate their ample resources to rise to even greater heights.
During a Board retreat I facilitated last year, a board member said this to me as she decided whether to take another miniature blueberry muffin and I rushed to finish my coffee before it reached room temperature: “Sometimes boardwork seems beyond our ability to make sound decisions – we don’t know enough, understand enough, work well enough together. And, at other times, most of the time, boardwork just seems a bit boring.”
Figuratively, I put this statement in my pocket to process later, but it seemed immediately that it contained some truth for many boards. Did she capture an inevitable truth of independent school boardwork? Not at all, but while I know it is not the truth for all boards, it is certainly the reality of many of them, and it is all too easy to slip into board practices that create the context where it can occur.
Neither extreme is healthy. Feeling (or being!) outmatched by the task is dangerous institutionally and threatens the board’s ability to serve as institutional fiduciaries and stewards. As for being boring, who wants to be bored, or even worse, who wants to be boring?
The problem this board member voiced names an issue related to building good habits of governance, a health plan of sorts, to build up the muscles between board-level crises management and routine board school report reading and school spectating.
To mitigate the challenge, boards must use the sparse resource of board time together extremely well. Here are some thoughts regarding how boards can create engagement (the answer to boredom), and prepare for whatever is next for the institution or education generally.
The truth is, schools bring people onto their boards for myriad reasons. (To be honest, I think schools should do a better job of interrogating those reasons.) However, we have not always used the resource they offer as trustees to its full potential. Schools can (the good news) and must (the hard news) do better.
I have had the remarkable opportunity to work with outstanding, highly functional boards. The commonality I have noticed is that their board members say, “This has been one of, if not the, most valuable and engaging volunteer experiences of my life.” Recognizing that this sentiment sets a high bar, it is not too much to ask of the board that serves young people.