Pictured here are sailors from different units who made up the ceremonial guard for the supersession of the first sea lord. Royal Navy appoints new First Sea Lord Surrounded by family and watched by those at the head of the UK’s closest allies, Admiral Tony Radakin has taken over from Admiral Sir Philip Jones as Britain’s most senior sailor. The torch of Naval leadership today changed hands as Adm Jones stepped down after three years at the helm as First Sea Lord – and 41 years serving his nation. He formally handed over command of more than 30,000 men and women, more than 90 warships, nuclear submarines and support vessels, the helicopters and jets of the Fleet Air Arm and the elite Naval infantry of the Royal Marines to the man who has been Second Sea Lord since 2018 and before that Chief of Staff of the Joint Forces Command from 2016-2018. During his command, Adm Radakin will oversee HMS Queen Elizabeth deploying for the first time and the next of Britain’s aircraft carriers, HMS Prince of Wales, enter service. He will also lead as the Type 26-class of frigates takes shape along with the new River-class patrol vessels coming into service and the development of the Future Commando Force. Within the submarine service, the new Dreadnought-class boats will begin to take shape while more Astute boats will join the fleet.

Being a storyteller is a core skill for any teacher, particularly primary teachers I would argue. You have to be good at spinning a tale to illustrate a point and bring it to life, even if the story isn’t true.

For any leader though, you have to be a storyteller and spinning a dit (as the armed forces would say) is the most powerful tool in their toolkit. Dits have a direct influence on operational effectiveness.

Stories can be used to make something more intelligible at a classroom lesson level and are vital to contextualising hard to reach concepts.

But they are also needed in the virtual staffroom, real staffroom and training session because they bind people together and help us understand how to progress and improve.

Without a story, meetings can be stale and flat. The same applies to any learning situation too. Dits basically oxygenate a scenario by enlivening and exemplifying.

Andrew St. George (2012) makes this point in his book Royal Navy Way of Leadership. He says that leadership information and stories are exchanged between tiers of management, generations, practices (branches), and social groups in order to foster its culture. Dits can be on any aspect of Naval Life from life on board to runs ashore to everyday life at sea.

A dit could mean telling a tale whereby that tale grows with each telling or they can relate some really key intelligence where it is important not to stretch and distort a tale out of shape. They serve an important professional function (King, 2004).

Andrew St. George refers to the professional value of dits in this article. He points out,

A bust of a long-dead founder in a company’s entrance hall is no substitute for the way the Royal Navy meticulously charts its informal experiences of leadership and broadcasts them throughout leadership training. The experience of a special-forces commander in tackling Somali pirates – and his emphasis on the 40 separate scenarios his team contemplated ahead of the engagement – underlined to everyone listening the Royal Navy’s meticulous attention to detailed and exhaustive planning.

The Navy know how to get the most out of their personnel and even organise Naval Dit Days to spin a few dits!

So, back to teachers or more specifically the Senior Leadership Team (SLT). Without a shadow of a doubt, the SLTs that have happy ships and get everyone working as a team are expert dit spinners or as Brighouse calls them ‘skalds‘.

We can learn plenty from dits because they provide us with opportunities to share the knowledge, skills and attitudes required to do a job well and to a high standard.

Meaning

The term dit seems to be derived from the naval term, ‘ditty-box’. This was a box in which sailors kept personal items. However, the meaning seems to have changed somewhat by the mid-20th century. Contributors to the Globe and Laurel sent their reports from the „ditty box‟ (Globe and Laurel September 1941: 312). The ditty-box here seems to refer to the desk at which correspondents wrote or to a box or bag in which he kept his own notes, from which the report would be compiled. It seems probable that the term dit then became specifically attached to the stories, stored in or sent from the ‘ditty-box (Source – King, 2004)

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