Tackling Complexity Together: Rising Team for Schools in Action

The Challenge

For many principals, leading in today’s environment feels like carrying a mountain on their shoulders. Issues like disengaged students, teacher burnout, or cultural divisions don’t come with clear answers. Yet too often, these burdens fall disproportionately on school leaders, leaving them feeling isolated.

At Warakirri College, a senior leader reflected that while their team was committed and skilled, they often found themselves “firefighting” problems rather than working strategically. Conversations were fragmented, and adaptive challenges felt too big to hold collectively.

The Leadership Response

The Rising Team for Schools (RT4S) platform was designed precisely for this context. Structured “kits” provide school leadership teams with a guided process to reflect, build trust, and co-create solutions. Unlike compliance-driven frameworks, Rising Team sessions create space for the relational and adaptive dimensions of leadership.

At Warakirri, the team used the kits to work on issues ranging from student engagement strategies to staff wellbeing initiatives. The tools helped surface assumptions and unspoken frustrations, while also aligning the team around shared purpose.

Complexity Leadership in Action

This was complexity leadership in practice:

  • Symbiotic leadership as the team moved from hierarchical problem-solving to relational co-creation.
  • Collective efficacy as the group developed belief in their shared capacity to act.
  • Strategic planning as learning as they treated the kits not as a fixed plan, but a cycle of reflection and adaptation.

One principal summed it up powerfully:
“It was the first time our team felt like we were addressing complexity together, not carrying it alone.”

Results and Insights

The immediate outcome was a stronger sense of shared ownership. Staff described feeling more confident in tackling complex issues, knowing they had collective backing. Early evaluations also suggested that teams using Rising Team had greater clarity in decision-making and improved relational trust.

Implications for Schools

This case demonstrates a key lesson: complex challenges demand collective solutions. By providing a scaffold for shared leadership, Rising Team reduces the isolation of principals and empowers whole teams to lead adaptively.

“Complexity is too heavy to carry alone. Rising Team showed us how to share the load.”

At the Menzies Leadership Foundation, we believe leadership is not about hierarchy — it’s about humanity. It lives in classrooms, corridors, and communities where people choose to lead together through uncertainty.

In the Menzies School Leadership Incubator, we see leadership that learns, adapts, and shares responsibility. When school leaders collaborate across boundaries, capacity multiplies — and education becomes a collective act of care.

Through partnerships with schools, researchers, and system leaders, we’re helping shape a new story of leadership in education: one grounded in trust, curiosity, and courage.

Join us as we continue to explore how complexity leadership can strengthen schools, empower communities, and build leadership for the greater good.

Natasha Eskinja

Digital Communications Coordinator

Natasha is driven by a profound passion for both creativity and analytics, a synergy that fosters authentic storytelling in the digital realm with both innovation and integrity. 

Throughout her career, she has consistently integrated the overarching marketing and communications narrative with the emotional connections of audiences. She is currently pursuing a Certificate in Society and the Individual from Flinders University, furthering her exploration of human behaviour and the critical importance of connectedness between organisations, individuals, and communities.

LinkedIn | natasha.eskinja@menziesfoundation.org.au

Sarah Jenkins

Strategic Communications Manager

Sarah has more than 18 years’ experience in communications and marketing leadership across a range of sectors.

Communications strategy and organisational growth is a continuing theme in Sarah’s career. Most recently, she leads the development of a Leadership Movement, evaluated by Menzies Viral Co-efficient Model; a contribution to the NFP. 

Sarah’s early career centred around best practice in marketing and communications which later culminated into the establishment of her very own agency. This work extensively spanned across PR, traditional media, event management, strategy, digital marketing, graphic design and business development consultancy. 

In 2019, Sarah joined the lean and robust team at the Menzies Foundation. She has since crafted the Foundation’s narrative and communication strategy. The development of this strategic communications platform is essential for ‘movement building’ and requires a strong strategic, management and communication skills set. Sarah has brought so much to this important work, which sits at the forefront of communication practice. 

Sarah continues to contribute to the NFP sector through her commitment to Purpose; as she reflects on her own leadership, builds her own leadership capability and contributes to the greater good. 

LinkedIn | sarah.jenkins@menziesfoundation.org.au | 0401 880 071

Rohan Martyres

Director, Strategy and Partnerships

Rohan has 15 years’ experience in facilitating cross-sector collaborations to address complex social and health challenges.  He has worked with the World Economic Forum in Australia, led an international conflict resolution field team in Nepal, and directed a 10-year £40m initiative to reduce health inequity in London.

Most recently, Rohan was Major Grants Development Manager at the Ian Potter Foundation.  He refined the foundation’s major grants strategy, and co-developed a series of large scale initiatives, including joint philanthropic-government funding for a new national organization to support place-based approaches across Australia.

Rohan has held several non-executive roles, including with an international NGO and with London Funders, the peak body of independent foundations in London.  He holds several qualifications including a graduate degree in innovation and strategy from the Judge Business School, University of Cambridge.

When Rohan isn’t exploring Melbourne’s creeks with his partner and 6yo daughter, he’s working on his currently weak Australian accent (after 15 years in the UK).

LinkedIn | rohan.martyres@menziesfoundation.org.au | 0404 505 954

Trudy Morrison

Operations Manager

A marketing and communications specialist with over 20 years experience in government, corporate and consumer marketing, Trudy brings her adaptive and organisational project management skills to the Menzies Foundation team. 

With a BA degree in Public Relations, Trudy began her career with the City of Melbourne and in magazine publishing, before moving into marketing communications consulting. She has worked in strategic marketing leadership roles with retail brands and enjoys juggling many projects and tasks simultaneously. Her skills were further enhanced when managing her own communications business representing industries across private education, financial services, aviation, government and the health industry. 

Trudy is passionate about leadership and all people being encouraged to reach their full potential through research and educational initiatives and opportunities throughout Australia. A skilled and accomplished writer and editor Trudy is enthusiastic about bringing her variety of skills to the Menzies Foundation team. 

LinkedIn | trudy.morrison@menziesfoundation.org.au | 0402 361 878

Liz Gillies

Chief Executive Officer

Liz Gillies has had over 25 years experience in a range of fields focused on initiatives for social impact. She has held roles in multiple sectors and academia.

In 2018, Liz was appointed CEO of the Menzies Foundation which aspires to build a leadership movement that supports Australians to pivot to purpose, build their leadership capability and contribute to the ‘greater good’.

Liz joined the Melbourne Business School in 2009 and was instrumental in establishing the Asia Pacific Social Impact Centre (APSIC) and The Centre for Ethical Leadership. In November 2011 she was appointed as research fellow to lead a partnership focused on strategic philanthropy which culminated in the release of the reports: Philanthropy: Towards a Better Practice Model (2018) and the Philanthropy: The Continued Journey to Real Impact and better Practice (2021).

Liz has extensive governance experience, having served on the Board of the Publish Galleries Association of Victoria, Social Firms Australia, Uniting Care Community Options, United Way Australia and the Development Committee of the Towards a Just Society Foundation. She is currently on the Philanthropy Reference Group of Barmal Bijiril and a Director of Philanthropy Australia.

LinkedIn | liz.gillies@menziesfoundation.org.au | 0416 112 703

Natasha Eskinja

Digital Communications Coordinator

Natasha is driven by a profound passion for both creativity and analytics, a synergy that fosters authentic storytelling in the digital realm with both innovation and integrity. 

Throughout her career, she has consistently integrated the overarching marketing and communications narrative with the emotional connections of audiences. She is currently pursuing a Certificate in Society and the Individual from Flinders University, furthering her exploration of human behaviour and the critical importance of connectedness between organisations, individuals, and communities.