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How schools can adopt the 4 Disciplines of Execution Model to improve performance

March 20, 20269 mins
Ashford Gikunda. Let students speak through authentic authorship of school drama and film.
Ashford Kimani. He says that the 4 Disciplines of Execution, popularly known as 4DX, is one of the most practical and results-oriented frameworks for achieving goals in any institution

The 4 Disciplines of Execution, popularly known as 4DX, is one of the most practical and results-oriented frameworks for achieving goals in any institution, including schools. Developed by FranklinCovey, it addresses a common problem that affects many organizations: the gap between knowing what to do and actually doing it.

In education, this gap is painfully visible. Schools set ambitious targets, teachers attend workshops, and strategic plans are written and filed, yet performance remains stagnant. The issue is rarely a lack of ideas; it is a failure of execution. 4DX provides a structured way to bridge this gap by focusing attention, driving action, and sustaining accountability.

At its core, 4DX recognizes that people are often overwhelmed by the “whirlwind” of daily responsibilities. Teachers, for instance, are constantly engaged in lesson preparation, marking, administrative duties, and co-curricular activities. In the midst of this whirlwind, even the most important goals are easily neglected. 4DX introduces discipline by forcing individuals and institutions to narrow their focus to a few critical goals, known as wildly important goals.

This is a radical shift from the common tendency to pursue many objectives simultaneously. In a school setting, instead of trying to improve performance in all subjects at once, a department might focus specifically on improving composition writing or reading comprehension. This clarity of focus increases the chances of success because effort is concentrated rather than scattered.

Another key insight of 4DX is the distinction between lead measures and lag measures. Most schools are obsessed with lag measures such as exam results, mean scores, and rankings. While these are important, they are outcomes that cannot be changed directly. By the time results are released, it is often too late to influence them.

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4DX shifts attention to lead measures, which are the daily or weekly actions that drive those results. For example, if a school wants to improve English performance, the lead measures might include the number of compositions written per week, frequency of reading assignments, or quality of teacher feedback. These are activities that teachers and learners can control, and when consistently applied, they inevitably lead to improved outcomes. This shift from results to actions is what makes 4DX both practical and powerful.

Equally important is the role of visibility in sustaining motivation. 4DX emphasizes the need for a compelling scoreboard that clearly shows whether a team is winning or losing. In many schools, performance data is either hidden in files or presented in complex formats that learners and even teachers struggle to interpret. A simple, visible scoreboard transforms this dynamic.

When students can see their progress in composition writing or reading levels displayed in class, it creates a sense of competition and urgency. It also fosters ownership, as learners begin to take responsibility for their own progress. Teachers, too, become more engaged when results are transparent and regularly updated.

However, focus, action, and visibility alone are not enough without accountability. One of the strongest pillars of 4DX is the establishment of a regular cadence of accountability. This involves consistent, short meetings where individuals report on their commitments, review progress, and plan next steps.

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In a school environment, this could take the form of weekly departmental meetings or brief classroom check-ins. The power of these sessions lies in their consistency. They create a culture where commitments are taken seriously, and progress is continuously monitored. Over time, this builds discipline, which is often the missing ingredient in achieving sustained improvement.

What makes 4DX particularly relevant in the Kenyan education context is its simplicity and adaptability. Schools do not need sophisticated technology or large budgets to implement it. A chalkboard can serve as a scoreboard, and a simple notebook can track lead measures. The real requirement is a change in mindset. Teachers and school leaders must move from a culture of intention to a culture of execution. This means prioritizing a few key goals, tracking the right activities, making progress visible, and holding each other accountable.

Ultimately, the power of 4DX lies in its ability to turn ordinary efforts into extraordinary results. It reminds educators that success is not achieved through occasional bursts of hard work, but through consistent, focused action over time. For a teacher, it means deliberately guiding learners through repeated practice.

For a student, it means taking small, consistent steps towards improvement. For a school, it means aligning all efforts towards a few critical objectives and relentlessly pursuing them. In a system where many initiatives start with enthusiasm but fade away due to lack of follow-through, 4DX offers a refreshing and effective approach. It is not just a framework; it is a discipline of doing what matters most, even when the pressures of daily work threaten to distract.

By Ashford Kimani

Ashford teaches English and Literature in Gatundu North Sub-county and serves as Dean of Studies.

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