Principal Kafele is, without a doubt, one of the most prominent voices in educational leadership today. A former teacher and principal, Baruti Kafele is now an independent consultant who travels around the country helping all kinds of schools improve their systems and practices to increase student academic achievement.
Principal Kafele is a frequent collaborator of ASCD (the Association for Supervision and Curriculum Development), one of the educational leadership association with the largest membership in the world. He is also very active in Social Media (he has his own website and a dedicated youtube channel, and he is found in twitter and facebook), where he is currently (May - Aug 2020) offering a FREE Leadership Academy for Aspiring Assistant Principals. This Academy supports this book, which is an excellent guide to those who are aspiring Assistant Principals, or who are already in the job (and even Principals) so they can understand their role better.
Unfortunately, in the words of Principal Kafele, the A.P. is the most misunderstood role in education. And he is right. An A.P. should NOT be the dean of students. He/She should NOT be the disciplinarian. He/She should NOT be the cafeteria supervisor. An Assistant Principal, in essence, is in a school building to ASSIST the Principal in INCREASING ACADEMIC ACHIEVEMENT. Therefore, he is instructional leader #2 (behind the Principal). An effective Assistant Principal belongs in the classroom supervising teachers, so he/she can build teacher capacity and make an ACADEMIC difference in students.
I have read The Aspiring Principal 50, and I appreciate Principal Kafele knowledge and expertise in the subject. His style is direct and based on inquiry, meaning, he poses 50 questions (thus the title) for you to reflect on your role as an Assistant Principal, with the goal of increasing academic achievement and, ultimately, making a difference in the school you lead. I would encourage anybody in the business of educational leadership to read his books. I also appreciate he does not sell you fluff. You may be thinking his books are 'short.' But you shall never judge a book by its cover! It is my experience that most books are 250 pages, out of which 150 are fluff. I rather read Kafele's books because in every page, in every line, I find truth!
Peace!