Why My Office Door is Closed 5% of the Day (So It Can Be Open 95% of the Time)

There is a myth in school leadership that a “Good Principal” always has an open door. We are told that if the door is closed, we are hiding, we aren’t transparent, or we don’t care.

​I want to challenge that.

​As a young administrator, I realized quickly that if my door was open 100% of the time, I was actually a worse leader. I was drowning in interruptions, which meant my paperwork (504s, discipline reports, IEPs) piled up. Then, when I was with teachers, I was distracted because I was thinking about the unfinished work.

​I developed a new philosophy: My Open Door Policy requires a Closed Door Strategy.

​Here is how I balance being accessible with being effective, and how I communicate that to my staff without hurting the school culture.

​The 5% Rule: When the Door Shuts

​My door is open 95% of the day. If I am in my office, students, parents, and teachers are welcome.

​But there is a specific 5% of my work that requires Undivided Attention.

  • The “Heavy” Paperwork: Legal documentation, 504 plans, and discipline referrals. These aren’t just forms; they are legal records that impact a child’s future. I cannot do them halfway while chatting about the weekend.
  • The “Emotional” Calls: Calling a parent about a suspension or a sensitive issue. I need silence to handle that with care.

​When I am doing this work, I close the door. Not because I am hiding, but because I am working.

​Communication: Clear is Kind

​The problem isn’t the closed door; it’s the mystery. If staff don’t know why the door is closed, they assume the worst (“He’s mad,” “He’s hiding”).

​I stopped letting them guess. I told them explicitly:

“If my door is closed, it means I am handling confidential student matters or legal paperwork. As soon as that task is done—usually in 45 minutes—the door opens back up.”

​Now, when they walk by and see the door shut, they don’t think, “He’s unavailable.” They think, “He’s handling business so he can be available later.”

​The “Open Door” Mindset (It’s not just physical)

​An Open Door Policy isn’t just about the hinges on your doorframe. It’s about your Presence.

​If my door is open, but I am staring at my screen typing while you talk to me, my door is effectively closed.

​My rule is simple: If the door is open, I am open.

  • ​If a teacher walks in, I stop typing.
  • ​I turn my chair.
  • ​I make eye contact.
  • ​I yell “Hello!” to people walking by in the hallway.

​I view administration as a Mission Field of Service. My job is to serve people. By closing my door to crush the paperwork efficiently, I buy myself the freedom to be fully present for the people-work the rest of the day.

​The Takeaway

​Don’t be a martyr who tries to work in a fishbowl 24/7.

It is okay to close the door to do the deep work.

​But when you open it, make sure you are truly open.

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