The Dock School Leader Podcast

Talks to inspire and equip Anabaptist school leaders.

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Episodes

2 hours ago

Perhaps one of the greatest needs in our schools is godly, competent, and visionary administrators. Administrators have a great gift to offer to their schools, their families, their churches, etc., is if they are willing to pay the price of developing into godly men and women. Drawing from Ezekiel, Steven develops a biblical basis for the work of an administrator. Administrators are called to build up the wall and stand in the gap.
What does that look like? What must administrators do that no one else can do with the same positive impact? For those of you who are lead teachers, principals, or administrators, what tasks are you uniquely positioned to perform? And what potential can you uncover for your school by performing those tasks with competence?
Steven emphasizes three things that administrators must do:
Lead himself
Define the environment
Connect the stakeholders
 
Steven explains and illustrates these tasks.
For the first one, have a look below to see the lists referenced in the talk.
In addressing the administrator’s need to define the environment, Steven describes the reality that administrators set the culture directly or indirectly. They are never exempt from this role. They either proactively model and shape a culture or else a culture develops in response to their lack of initiative. He offers three components that are helpful in defining an environment where teachers love to teach.
Caring for our people
Asking the important questions (There are lots of examples in the talk.)
Dealing with problems
 
Due to running out of time in the original talk, there’s very little here on connecting stakeholders. To hear Steven talk more about this, you can listen to his earlier episode on this podcast, Why Administrators? One of the big ideas here is that the administrator stands at the intersection of all the parties involved in school, including parents, teachers, board members, and students. Thus, the clarity and leadership or lack thereof provided by the administrator has widespread influence on the school. You can uncover great potential for your school by bringing stakeholders together into strong partnerships. Perhaps more than anyone else, administrators have the responsibility to steward the vision and embody the values of the school.
 
Lists for leading ourselves
2 Pt. 1:5-8
Oswald Sanders, natural leadership vs. spiritual leadership
self confident / confident in God
makes own decisions / seeks to know God’s will
ambitious / self effacing
originates own methods / taught by God
Bill Hybels
Is my calling sure
Is my vision clear
Is my passion hot
Is my character submitted to Christ
Is my pride subdued
Are my fears at bay
Are interior issues undermining my leadership
Are my ears open to the Spirit’s whisper
Is my pace stable
Are my gifts developing
Is my heart for God increasing
Is my capacity for loving deepening
What are my big rocks/roles? What do I want in relationship to those realities? How will it impact my schedule?
 
Links
[Book] Seven Habits of Highly Effective People – Stephen Covey
[Book] Seven Laws of the Learner – Bruce Wilkinson
[Book] Spiritual Leadership: Principles of Excellence for Every Believer – J. Oswald Sanders
This talk was first published as The Administrator's Job Description - Teachers Week 2012
Events: https://www.thedockforlearning.org/event
Contact us: https://thedockforlearning.org/contact-us/
3-minute feedback: https://forms.office.com/r/1G564EGQkn

Tuesday Jun 16, 2026

Along with our last episode on school structure, this week focus on curriculum are well-suited to planning for the upcoming school year. From working on your school’s scope and sequence to helping teachers focus their energy, Linford Horst offers a valuable mix of perspective and advice. Linford has many years of teaching experience at Horizon Mennonite School where he has also served as principle. See the show notes for an outline of his points.
Pressure points
Packed curriculum
Progressivism
Nationalism
Family dynamics
Inexperienced teachers
Blossoming teachers
Foundations/anchors
We do not need to start a revolution
Church, home, and school must share responsibility
We are not performance oriented
Commit as much time to teacher development as curriculum development
Effectiveness is more important than efficiency
Practical steps
Making a scope and sequence for your school
Determining the 20% core in which a teacher will invest 80% of their energy
Combining grades into one class
Learning how to integrate the curriculum 
 
Links
This talk was first published as “Rethinking Our Curriculum Structure” https://www.thedockforlearning.org/content/rethinking-our-curriculum-structure
Events: https://www.thedockforlearning.org/event
Contact us: https://thedockforlearning.org/contact-us/
3-minute feedback: https://forms.office.com/r/1G564EGQkn

Tuesday Jun 02, 2026

Summer is a great time to think about something like school structure. Anthony Hurst is our speaker on this week’s episode. Anthony taught for many years and more recently has been interacting with dozens of schools as a rep for Christian Light and as a speaker at educational events. He brings a wealth of experience to the subject of structure in a school.
 
Anthony begins by distinguishing between healthy and unhealthy motives for school structure and challenges us to focus our school structure on serving our students and patrons and not projecting a lofty self-image. Our structure needs the guidance of clear vision, says Anthony. And not just the vision of one person but that of the community.
Structure provides consistency across staff changes and grade changes and across time. Structure provides a sense of security. It offers some protection to us on our bad days and keeps us from falling to the level of our flaws.
In the conclusion of his talk, Anthony also touches on some specific elements of structure that will help you get started evaluating the quality of the structure at your school.
Links
This talk was first published as “Intentional School Structure” https://www.thedockforlearning.org/content/intentional-school-structure
Educational Events: https://www.thedockforlearning.org/event
Contact us: https://thedockforlearning.org/contact-us/
3-minute feedback: https://forms.office.com/r/1G564EGQkn
 

Tuesday May 19, 2026

Carson Baer lives in British Columbia and approaches his talk about new teachers as an ordained church leader and as a board member. He cares deeply about school and the tremendous significance of teachers.
Carson offers inspiration and direction for school leaders in the sometime overwhelming work of staffing a school. There are many good teachers who have never taught because no one has done the hard work of finding, developing, and evaluating them. There are many potential teachers who have taught one or maybe two difficult years without solid support and concluded that teaching is not for them. This doesn’t have to be the case at your school. 
This talk is addressed to school boards but comes packed with excellent questions for school leaders in any capacity.
What is school all about anyway and why do teachers matter so much?
What does it take to get ahead of teacher turnover?
What are the stages of the hiring process and what is involved in each one?
Finding
Onboarding
Developing/Evaluating
And more.
This was presented as an interactive session and this recording includes some of that interaction where the audio was intelligible.
As Carson has recognized, the task of finding and developing a new teacher can be daunting. It’s particularly discouraging if you have to repeat the process every year or two for every role. Faith Builders has been working for years to help provide training for teachers to better equip them and encourage them to stay in the classroom long-term. We are working on a new program to provide on-the-job training for newer teachers as another means of supporting school leaders in developing new teachers. This is scheduled to begin the summer of 2027. Email fbrg@fbep.org for more information.
 
Links
This talk was first published on The Dock as “The New Teacher: Finding, Developing, Evaluating” https://www.thedockforlearning.org/content/the-new-teacher-finding-developing-evaluating
Teacher Training Events: https://www.thedockforlearning.org/event
Contact us: https://thedockforlearning.org/contact-us/
3-minute feedback: https://forms.office.com/r/1G564EGQkn

Tuesday May 05, 2026

One generation starts it, the next enjoys it, the third loses it. There’s some truth to this. We’re over three generations into the Christian school movement in North America. Of course, at the level of individual communities this is very uneven. Maybe you’ve just started a school. Regardless of where you are, it’s important that you ask yourself: am I content with a 3 generation Christian school movement? If not, you have some challenging work cut out for you to bridge whatever generation you’re in, to the one following you and the one before you.
This episode has 2 parts: perspective of an older man and the response of a younger man on what it takes to continue a vision for education across generations. How can an older leader effectively hand over his responsibility and a younger leader take it up?
Edwin Eby has served on the CASBI committee and also speaks as a pastor. Mark Miller has experience in the school board and administration at Legacy Christian School in Ohio.
Speaking for the older generation, Edwin emphasizes that each generation must in some sense start over. And while an older person can’t just package his values and vision in a neat bundle and give it to a younger person, he believes that one generation can purchase the values of another through their own labor and investment. This transfer of ownership is vital to the continuity of a vision and leadership. To say this another way, we can’t repeat another’s experience or just assume their sense of responsibility; each man must hold his own baby before he knows the meaning of being a father.
Edwin outlines a process for older men to walk ahead, walk beside, then walk behind leaders in training. For younger men it’s reversed. They first walk behind, then walk beside, and finally walk ahead, taking the lead into the future.
Mark responds by recognizing that owning responsibility and vision as a younger person requires overcoming selfishness and gaining a perspective larger than your own. Become a student of history, both of your organization and the wider history of the world, says Mark. Without this you run a high risk of leading in the wrong direction. In addition to understanding the history of your organization, you need to understand the people you’re leading. You need to know their culture. Once again, this calls for attentiveness and patient learning in a young leader. Mark highlights servant leadership as key to both the effective transfer of leadership and to the fruitfulness of any leader. In addition, there are numerous issues that Mark sees as important for school leaders to tackle including working with homeschooling families, business as mission, and excellence in academics.
 
Links
This talk was first published as “I Must Decrease; You Must Increase”: https://www.thedockforlearning.org/content/i-must-decrease-you-must-increase
Contact us: https://thedockforlearning.org/contact-us/
3-minute feedback: https://forms.office.com/r/1G564EGQkn

Tuesday Apr 21, 2026

In the last episode, we heard from Gerald Miller about the central role of the family. For this special question and response feature, I sat down with Gerald Miller, administrator at FBCS for a related conversation about the role school leaders have in growing healthy families in their communities. We talked about the current parenting scene, tried to paint a picture of what could be, and thought about the opportunity at hand.
We’re delving into this topic because it’s vitally important and often complicated. Messy, as we often say. How do teachers and school leaders avoid trespassing onto the territory of the parents? What do we do with all the knowledge we gain about families and parents? What do we do with problems in the home? How do we hear and respond to the concerns, frustrations, and aims of parents? In short, how can you as a school leader work to care for the families in your community? What is your role in growing healthy homes?
 
Links
Contact us: https://thedockforlearning.org/contact-us/
3-minute feedback: https://forms.office.com/r/1G564EGQkn

Tuesday Apr 07, 2026

What if we understood school as part of the heart of the church rather than a useful arm? Would this change the way we did school? What if we saw teachers as working in close collaboration with the ordained leaders of a church, as extensions of that ministry?
The New Testament points to the church established by Christ as the essential basis of the kingdom of God. In this episode, Gerald Miller says, “The church is where the kingdom of God finds its expression. And the local body of believers is the heart of the kingdom.” What does this mean for the school?
Gerald, a long-time teacher and school leader sees the school as a servant of the church. There’s at least two things to emphasize here, the work of education is essential, more like a heart than a hand. Secondly, the work of education is a corporate responsibility and never the exclusive domain of the school. Gerald describes the role of the individuals in a school as raising up young people that love God with everything and serve others and as transmitting the values of the church. In sum, this is a vision of educators working closely alongside of the church.
That’s the first half.
In the second half, Gerald offers basic practical outlines for roles that must work at pulling together if the church and school will be effective partners. He gives valuable advice for each one. Those roles are church leaders, board members, parents, teachers
A key idea you’ll hear in this talk is the critical importance of communication and of investment in people.
 
Links
This talk was first published as “It Takes a Community to Educate a Child” https://www.thedockforlearning.org/content/it-takes-a-community-to-educate-a-child
Contact us: https://thedockforlearning.org/contact-us/
3-minute feedback: https://forms.office.com/r/1G564EGQkn

Tuesday Mar 17, 2026

Description
Drop us a question for the special, upcoming Q & R episode with Gerald Miller.
What does it take to cultivate love in our students? As teachers, we don’t just want to transfer important information to our students. We want to change their lives. We want them to love God with their heart, soul, mind, and strength. In Steven’s words, “Stories are one of the most powerful tools available to us as teachers for shaping loves.”
If you want to shape your students’ loves, carefully choose your stories. Steven Brubaker is the administrator of Faith Builders Educational Programs. He began his work in education as a principal and teacher in a grade school. In this talk, Steven implies that, in fact, there’s no avoiding the reality that you will shape the loves of your students by the story of your life and the stories that leak out of you or that you reference or approve. As you evaluate the loves of your students ask yourself how you’ve contributed to those loves, good and bad, by the stories that you’ve given to them. You are in a position to bend the desires of your students. Stories wield powerful influence in shaping and nurturing the hearts of your students.
Steven addresses numerous practical questions related to infusing your teaching with stories.
How do you use stories across the disciplines
How can you become a collector of stories?
Where do you find stories?
How do you use the stories that you’ve collected?
 
Included in Steven’s advice are systems for recording, organizing, and retrieving stories and tips for collecting stories through book sales, your personal experience, your reading, and our history.
 
Book titles referenced in the talk:
The Sunflower by Simon Wiesenthal
The Rest of the Story by Paul Harvey, Jr.
Let Me Tell You a Story, by Tony Campolo
Two Brothers One Mission by Mary Fretz
Chariots in the Smoke by Margaret Epp
Coals of Fire by Elizabeth Bauman
They Loved Their Enemies by Marian Hostetler
Annie Funk by Sharon Yoder
Small Man of Nanataki by Liam Nolan
Blood Brothers by Elias Chacour, David Hazard
The Brigade by Howard Blum
The Witch of Blackbird Pond by Elizabeth George Speare
Dragon’s Gate by Laurence Yep
To Kill a Mockingbird by Harper Lee
Les Miserable by Victor Hugo
God Spoke Tibetan by Allan Maberly
Twenty and Ten by Claire Huchet Bishop, Janet Joly
Henry’s Freedom Box by Ellen Levine
Story of Ruby Bridges by Robert Coles
Faith the Cow by Susan Bame Hoover
 
Links
This talk was first published as “Practices That Nurture God Love” https://thedockforlearning.org/lecture/practices-that-nurture-god-love-steven-brubaker/
Other recordings from Teacher’s Week 2013: https://www.thedockforlearning.org/series/teachers'-week-2013
Questions for the Q & R episode:https://forms.cloud.microsoft/r/KQnYsYgPAq
Contact us: https://thedockforlearning.org/contact-us/
3-minute feedback: https://forms.office.com/r/1G564EGQkn
library.upenn.edu
CAM Books
Christian Learning Resource
Christian Light

Monday Mar 16, 2026

Drop us a question for the special, upcoming Q & R episode with Gerald Miller.
As principals and administrators, it’s your responsibility to guide your teachers in effectively disciplining students and to get involved in handling the toughest cases. Many of you also teach and are on the first line of discipline yourselves. In this episode with Glendon Strickler, you will hear an overview of how to discipline students that will enable you to better equip your teachers as well as grow in your own approach to discipline.
Glendon’s ideas have been formed through his experience of some very challenging teaching assignments and through his experience as a principal. He backs up his points with numerous stories from those experiences. Throughout the talk you’ll hear him unpack lessons he’s learned such as: effective discipline takes time, why students misbehave, approaching discipline through a student’s perspective, building a strong defense, and more.
There are three main sections in the talk.
Basic discipline techniques (6:25)
The steps in a discipline session (28:00)
Techniques to avoid (41:15)
 
Links
This talk was first published as “Modeling and Teaching the Anabaptist Christian Faith in a Practical Way Through Discipline” on The Dock: https://www.thedockforlearning.org/content/modeling-and-teaching-the-anabaptist-christian-faith-in-a-practical-way-through-discipline
Other recordings from Teacher’s Week 2010: https://www.thedockforlearning.org/series/faith-builders-teacher's-week-2010
Questions for the Q & R episode: https://forms.cloud.microsoft/r/KQnYsYgPAq
Contact us: https://thedockforlearning.org/contact-us/
3-minute feedback: https://forms.office.com/r/1G564EGQkn

Tuesday Feb 24, 2026

Drop us a question for the special, upcoming Q & R episode with Gerald Miller.
Sometimes problems come to us disguised as great opportunities. This episode with Stephen Gingerich addresses the challenge of working with high needs students. We’re not exploring specific learning disabilities here. That is sometimes part of the picture and deserves attention. This is more general and establishes a baseline for how we engage a high needs student.
Drawing on his years of experience in education, much of it gained through his work in Guatemala, Stephen develops his approach around the three great virtues: faith, hope, and love. He reminds us that our goal is to prepare children for life. And for that they need well-formed skills but they need well-formed character more. And this character they absorb from their role models. This means they will take a part of us with them through their life.
Stephen’s talk is generously sprinkled with stories of what relating to needy students looks like.
 
Links
This episode was first published as "Working with High Needs Students" on The Dock: https://www.thedockforlearning.org/content/working-with-high-needs-students-(stephan-gingerich) 
Questions for the Q & R episode: https://forms.cloud.microsoft/r/KQnYsYgPAq
Contact us: https://thedockforlearning.org/contact-us/
3-minute feedback: https://forms.office.com/r/1G564EGQkn
[book] The Five Love Languages: https://a.co/d/03ROxKG0

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The Dock School Leader Podcast

This podcast aims to serve administrators of our conservative Anabaptist schools. We want our schools leaders to gain inspiration from other leaders. We want administrators from all over the country to have access to trustworthy talks on Christian education from their peers.

We’re here to help you to lead your school community with greater wisdom and courage. Transformative schools need effective leaders. And effectiveness requires patient training.

We hope this podcast will be a way that you as a school leader can refill the reservoir from which you give to your school community. 

 

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