
Choice Made Simple!
Too many options?Click below to purchase an online gift card that can be used at participating retailers in Village Green Shopping Centre and continue your shopping IN CENTRE!Purchase HereHome
Holding the System: Leadership and Durable Improvement When Conditions Are Hard
Coles
Loading Inventory...
Holding the System: Leadership and Durable Improvement When Conditions Are Hard in Vernon, BC
By None
Current price: $11.19
Original price: $13.99

Coles
Holding the System: Leadership and Durable Improvement When Conditions Are Hard in Vernon, BC
By None
Current price: $11.19
Original price: $13.99
Loading Inventory...
Size: Kobo eBook
*Product information may vary - to confirm product availability, pricing, shipping and return information please contact Coles
Public education does not need another turnaround fantasy.
It needs honesty about how improvement actually happens when conditions are hard.
In Holding the System, the author offers a clear-eyed account of leadership inside the realities that most reform narratives flatten: poverty, mobility, staffing instability, attendance disruption, policy churn, and relentless public pressure to produce visible results on demand. This is not a book about slogans, silver bullets, or heroic reinvention. It is a book about the quieter and more demanding work of keeping a system coherent long enough for students to benefit.
Across nineteen sharply argued chapters, Hill challenges the assumptions that dominate modern school improvement. Scoreboards measure motion, but not continuation. Urgency matters, but urgency without architecture produces churn. Accountability can expose inequity, but it cannot teach systems how to improve. The work that changes outcomes most meaningfully is often the work least visible in real time: protecting sequence, stabilizing expectations, preserving reentry, and refusing to confuse activity with progress.
Grounded in lived systems leadership rather than abstract theory, Holding the System reframes what effective leadership looks like in public education. It argues that durable improvement is built through stewardship, not theater; through coherence, not constant initiative; through structures that remain open to students whose lives do not follow predictable timelines. Graduation, persistence, trust, and readiness are not accidents. They are the late results of disciplined design.
For superintendents, principals, board members, policymakers, and anyone serious about school improvement, this book offers a harder truth and a better standard:
Not the work that performs in the moment.
The work that remains.
Public education does not need another turnaround fantasy.
It needs honesty about how improvement actually happens when conditions are hard.
In Holding the System, the author offers a clear-eyed account of leadership inside the realities that most reform narratives flatten: poverty, mobility, staffing instability, attendance disruption, policy churn, and relentless public pressure to produce visible results on demand. This is not a book about slogans, silver bullets, or heroic reinvention. It is a book about the quieter and more demanding work of keeping a system coherent long enough for students to benefit.
Across nineteen sharply argued chapters, Hill challenges the assumptions that dominate modern school improvement. Scoreboards measure motion, but not continuation. Urgency matters, but urgency without architecture produces churn. Accountability can expose inequity, but it cannot teach systems how to improve. The work that changes outcomes most meaningfully is often the work least visible in real time: protecting sequence, stabilizing expectations, preserving reentry, and refusing to confuse activity with progress.
Grounded in lived systems leadership rather than abstract theory, Holding the System reframes what effective leadership looks like in public education. It argues that durable improvement is built through stewardship, not theater; through coherence, not constant initiative; through structures that remain open to students whose lives do not follow predictable timelines. Graduation, persistence, trust, and readiness are not accidents. They are the late results of disciplined design.
For superintendents, principals, board members, policymakers, and anyone serious about school improvement, this book offers a harder truth and a better standard:
Not the work that performs in the moment.
The work that remains.


















