The Shift From Executive to Operator
The role of a superintendent has changed. It used to focus on policy, reports, and long-term plans. That model still exists. It just doesn’t work on its own anymore.
Schools face faster problems now. Staffing gaps appear mid-year. Student needs shift week to week. Systems break under pressure.
A superintendent who only plans will fall behind. A superintendent who operates can respond in real time.
A 2023 AASA report found that over 60% of superintendents say daily operational demands now take up more time than strategic planning. That shift shows where the job is headed.
The operator mindset is not optional. It is required.
What the Operator Mindset Actually Means
It’s Not About Doing Everything
Being hands-on does not mean doing every task. It means staying close to the work.
An operator understands how systems run:
- How schedules affect learning
- How staffing decisions impact classrooms
- How space is used during the day
- How students respond to changes
They don’t rely only on reports. They see the system in action.
Andrew Jordan once described walking into an empty school library during the middle of the day. “It looked like a room nobody wanted,” he said. “I didn’t need a report to tell me that space was wasted.”
He changed it within weeks. That is operator thinking.
Why Distance Creates Problems
Reports Don’t Show Everything
Data matters. Reports help. They don’t show the full picture.
A report might show average attendance. It won’t show which hallway students avoid or which class struggles at a certain time.
Operators gather information in real time.
They walk the building. They talk to students. They listen to teachers.
Jordan explained one moment that shaped his approach. “A teacher told me she lost ten minutes every class because of a slow process,” he said. “That wasn’t in any report. We fixed it that week.”
Small inefficiencies add up. Operators remove them quickly.
Speed Is a Competitive Advantage
Schools Can Move Faster Than They Think
Many schools operate on slow cycles. Monthly meetings. Quarterly reviews. Annual plans.
Students don’t learn on those timelines.
Operators work in shorter cycles. Weekly reviews. Daily adjustments.
A RAND study found that schools using frequent progress checks improved student outcomes up to 30% faster than those relying on longer cycles.
Speed improves results.
Jordan runs short weekly check-ins. “We look at what changed this week,” he said. “If something isn’t working, we don’t wait.”
That approach keeps systems flexible.
Operators Build Systems That Work
Simplicity Beats Complexity
Complex systems slow schools down. Staff spend more time managing processes than helping students.
Operators simplify.
They create systems that:
- take minutes to understand
- require minimal training
- produce clear results
Jordan reduced one reporting process from two forms to one. “Teachers stopped repeating work,” he said. “That gave them more time with students.”
Simple systems scale faster.
Visibility Drives Better Decisions
You Can’t Fix What You Don’t See
Operators stay visible.
They visit classrooms. They observe transitions. They check how spaces are used.
This visibility creates better decisions.
Jordan once noticed students gathering in a hallway because they had no place to study. “They were sitting on the floor with notebooks,” he said. “That told us what we needed to build next.”
That observation led to a new study space.
Leaders who stay in offices miss these moments.
Action Plan: How to Lead Like an Operator
Step 1: Walk the Building Daily
Spend 20 minutes each day moving through classrooms and common areas. Look for patterns.
Step 2: Shorten Feedback Loops
Replace long review cycles with weekly check-ins. Focus on a few key metrics.
Step 3: Fix One Problem at a Time
Choose a single issue. Solve it fully before moving on.
Step 4: Simplify Systems
Remove steps that do not add value. Combine tasks where possible.
Step 5: Act on What You See
If something slows learning, fix it within days, not months.
Common Mistakes to Avoid
Staying Too High-Level
Strategic plans matter. They cannot replace daily awareness.
Overcomplicating Solutions
Complex ideas delay progress. Simple changes create momentum.
Waiting for Approval
Some problems can be fixed immediately. Act where you can.
Ignoring Staff Feedback
Teachers see issues first. Use their input.
The Balance Between Strategy and Execution
Operators Still Think Long-Term
Being hands-on does not mean ignoring strategy. It means connecting strategy to action.
Operators test ideas before scaling them. They use small wins to guide larger plans.
Jordan described this approach during a project rollout. “We tested it with one group first,” he said. “Once we saw results, we expanded it.”
Execution informs strategy.
Why This Model Matters Now
Education challenges are increasing. Learning gaps. Staff shortages. Rising expectations.
Traditional leadership models cannot keep up alone.
Operators adapt faster. They respond earlier. They improve systems continuously.
A Learning Policy Institute report found that schools with adaptive leadership models saw stronger staff retention during high-stress periods.
Flexibility keeps teams stable.
Final Thoughts
The superintendent role is no longer just about direction. It is about execution.
Operators see problems early. They act quickly. They simplify systems. They stay connected to the work.
Andrew Jordan summed it up during a busy school week. “If you’re not in the building, you’re guessing,” he said.
That mindset defines modern leadership.
Superintendents who operate will move their schools forward. Those who don’t will struggle to keep up.