首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
     


School leadership for equity: lessons from the literature
Authors:Sophie C. Ward  Carl Bagley  Jacky Lumby  Philip Woods  Tom Hamilton  Amanda Roberts
Affiliation:1. School of Education, Durham University, Leazes Road, Durham DH1 1T, UKs.c.ward@durham.ac.uk;3. School of Education, Durham University, Leazes Road, Durham DH1 1T, UK;4. Education School, University of Southampton, Southampton, UK;5. School of Education, University of Hertfordshire, Hatfield, UK;6. The General Teaching Council for Scotland (GTCS), Edinburgh, UK
Abstract:Responding to Thrupp's [2003. “The School Leadership Literature in Managerialist Times: Exploring the Problem of Textual Apologism.” School Leadership & Management: Formerly School Organisation 23 (2): 169] call for writers on school leadership to offer ‘analyses which provide more critical messages about social inequality and neoliberal and managerialist policies’ we use Foucault's [2000. “The Subject and Power.” In Michel Foucault: Power, edited by J. D. Faubion, 326–348. London: Penguin Books] theory of power to ask what lessons we might learn from the literature on school leadership for equity. We begin by offering a definition of neoliberalism; new managerialism; leadership and equity, with the aim of revealing the relationship between the macropolitical discourse of neoliberalism and the actions of school leaders in the micropolitical arena of schools. In so doing, we examine some of the literature on school leadership for equity that post-dates Thrupp's [2003. “The School Leadership Literature in Managerialist Times: Exploring the Problem of Textual Apologism.” School Leadership & Management: Formerly School Organisation 23 (2): 149–172] analysis, seeking evidence of critical engagement with/resistance to neoliberal policy. We identify three approaches to leadership for equity that have been used to enhance equity in schools internationally: (i) critical reflection; (ii) the cultivation of a ‘common vision’ of equity and (iii) ‘transforming dialogue’. We consider if such initiatives avoid the hegemonic trap of neoliberalism, which captures and disarms would be opponents of new managerial policy. We conclude by arguing that, in spite of the dominance of neoliberalism, head teachers have the power to speak up, and speak out, against social injustice.
Keywords:school leadership  equity  neoliberalism  new managerialism
设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号