Improving cross-cultural comparability: does school leadership mean the same in different countries?

2021 ◽  
pp. 1-22
Author(s):  
Nurullah Eryilmaz ◽  
Andres Sandoval Hernandez
Author(s):  
Andrés P. Santamaría ◽  
Melinda Webber ◽  
Lorri J. Santamaría

This chapter leads a critical discourse amongst research and educational leadership communities around the nature of cross-cultural interactions and the role diversity plays in changing the status quo with regard to access, equity and academic achievement. Through this strengths-based qualitative inquiry, the authors bridge Kaupapa Maori (Maori ideology) and critical race theory methodologies with Maori and non-Maori culturally responsive leadership frameworks. Prerequisite conditions for effective cross-collaboration are presented based on the experiences of an international, interdisciplinary research team in collaboration with practicing Maori and non-Maori leaders of primary and secondary schools in Aotearoa New Zealand (NZ). The aim of the partnership is to promote the voices and practices of effective school leaders, through cross-cultural collaboration and research, to continue building critical mass for the important role of informing effective, culturally responsive leadership practices across Aotearoa NZ.


Author(s):  
Andrés P. Santamaría ◽  
Melinda Webber ◽  
Lorri J. Santamaría

This chapter leads a critical discourse amongst research and educational leadership communities around the nature of cross-cultural interactions and the role diversity plays in changing the status quo with regard to access, equity and academic achievement. Through this strengths-based qualitative inquiry, the authors bridge Kaupapa Maori (Maori ideology) and critical race theory methodologies with Maori and non-Maori culturally responsive leadership frameworks. Prerequisite conditions for effective cross-collaboration are presented based on the experiences of an international, interdisciplinary research team in collaboration with practicing Maori and non-Maori leaders of primary and secondary schools in Aotearoa New Zealand (NZ). The aim of the partnership is to promote the voices and practices of effective school leaders, through cross-cultural collaboration and research, to continue building critical mass for the important role of informing effective, culturally responsive leadership practices across Aotearoa NZ.


1999 ◽  
Vol 9 (4) ◽  
pp. 321-348
Author(s):  
Allan Walker ◽  
Cuve Dimmock

Although studies of educational leadership have proliferated over the last decade, they have mostly focused on Western school settings. Leadership in non-Western school settings has largely been ignored, so that little is known about the influence of culture on the beliefs and actions of school leaders across national boundaries. This article builds a case for increasing understanding of educational leadership through adopting a comparative cross-cultural lens. It has three interrelated purposes. First, it presents the argument for strengthening a cultural comparative approach to educational leadership. Second, it suggests a framework for comparing cultural influences on educational leadership across national and cultural boundaries. Finally, it recognizes some of the difficulties of conceptualizing and conducting cross-cultural leadership research. Through achieving these purposes we hope to contribute to the ongoing development of understanding of school leadership.


1993 ◽  
Vol 3 (2) ◽  
pp. 112-120
Author(s):  
J. Malilo Barasa ◽  
Crystal J. Gips ◽  
Richard J. Hazler

This paper arises from a Kenyan headmaster's personal observations of U.S. principals. As a case study, it provides an analysis of U.S. educational leadership by comparing the roles of U.S. principals and Kenyan headmasters. Similarities and differences in roles are noted as they emerge from the values of the two cultures. The impacts of the different approaches to school leadership are considered, especially as they allow for insights into potential alterations in the practices of U.S. principals. The paper concludes with a series of recommended strategies for change in school leadership, which answer the needs identified in the current literature on educational reform.


2005 ◽  
Vol 15 (2) ◽  
pp. 196-214 ◽  
Author(s):  
Charles L. Slater ◽  
Mike Boone ◽  
Linda Muñoz ◽  
Melinda Base ◽  
Leticia Romero Grimaldo ◽  
...  

Levels of cultural understanding can be applied to leadership and research. Intracultural understanding is self-contained within one culture. Cross-cultural understanding extends from one culture to another. Intercultural understanding recognizes implications for one's own culture. Metacultural understanding extends beyond one's own and others’ culture to create entirely new meanings. This study examines an educational administration program in Mexico using researchers from a multicultural team. School directors and those in higher education participated in focus groups to examine the preparation Mexican leaders receive, the challenges they face, and the implications for preparation programs. These issues are significant in Mexico, and have implications for the United States and other countries.


Author(s):  
Roxanne M. Mitchell

Scholars have suggested that the study of school leadership has been dominated by Anglo-American and Western views. This has provoked a call for conceptual and empirical research on school leadership using a cross-cultural perspective. In their 2005 work, Dimmock and Walker provided a comprehensive Framework for the Study of Cross-Cultural School Leadership that responded to the deficit of non-Western views. They, along with others, have argued that principals play a vital role in shaping school culture and that there is a need to expand our conceptualization of culture to include organizational, local, regional, national, and global culture. Hofstede’s Model and the Global Leadership and Organizational Behavior Effectiveness (GLOBE) research program, initiated by Robert House in 1991, are examples of empirical models for the study of cross-cultural leadership. Ylimaki and Jacobson’s (2011) International Study of Successful School Principals (ISSPP) examined the common cross-cultural practices and policy concerns across seven global educational contexts. Their findings pointed to some common policy concerns that involve accountability, principal preparation, and the need for principals who are culturally competent. They stressed the importance of rigorous systematic research studies, reliable and valid instruments, and reconsideration of philosophies about educational administration that incorporate non-Western views and utilize a cross-cultural perspective. Some common practices cross-culturally included having high expectations, engaging in instructional and transformational leadership, shared leadership with teachers, capacity development, heroic leadership that challenged the status quo, and an emphasis on continuous learning and professional development.


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