Disadvantaged School Contexts and Female School Leadership in Zimbabwe

Author(s):  
Zvisinei Moyo ◽  
Juliet Perumal
2017 ◽  
Vol 54 (2) ◽  
pp. 183-215 ◽  
Author(s):  
Elizabethe C. Payne ◽  
Melissa J. Smith

Purpose: The purpose of this article is to provide insight to the multiple ways that school leaders resist, avoid, or block LGBTQ (lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender, queer, and questioning) professional development for their staff and, thus, resist the conversations around school responsibility to these students and families. Research Method: The data presented in this article include interviews and field notes drawn from evaluation studies of the Reduction of Stigma in Schools© professional development program and are related to a single emergent theme. Findings: School leaders who resisted LGBTQ professional development claimed such training was not relevant to their school contexts, the training would attract community backlash, the school board would not approve the training, or school personnel would not be interested in learning about LGBTQ students. Implications: The authors conclude that increasing LGBTQ content in educational leadership training is a necessary step for convincing school leadership that LGBTQ-competence is necessary for creating a positive school climate for all.


2016 ◽  
Vol 46 (1) ◽  
pp. 5-24 ◽  
Author(s):  
Philip Hallinger

Research on educational leadership and management has resulted in the accumulation of increasingly persuasive findings concerning the impact school leadership can have on school performance. Indeed, there is a growing consensus that there exists a generic set of leadership practices (e.g. goal setting, developing people) which must be adapted to meet the needs and constraints that describe different school contexts. However, to date, researchers have yet to develop a theory or report comprehensive findings on this challenge. This paper explores several types of school contexts (institutional, community, socio-cultural, political, economic, school improvement) and what we have learned about how they shape school leadership practice. The analysis leads to several conclusions and recommendations. First, it affirms, elaborates and extends the assertion made by scholars of the importance of examining leadership in context. Second, the need to contextualize leadership highlights deficiencies in modal research methods that focus on mean effects and either ignore context effects or relegate them to the shadows. Finally, the field needs to refine current research methods and explore new approaches that enable us to better study how successful leadership responds and adapts to different contexts.


2021 ◽  
Vol 10 (4) ◽  
pp. 1989-2002
Author(s):  
Fiona King ◽  
Joe Travers ◽  
Jean McGowan

<p style="text-align: justify;">This article contributes to the evidence base on the significance of context in enacting social justice leadership. It draws on data from the International School Leadership Development Network of 20+ countries who adopted a common qualitative approach involving interviews with principals identified as being social justice leaders. The article focuses on four case studies of Irish principals in varying primary elementary school contexts. Findings reveal local contextual features significantly impacted principals' perceptions, actions, and self-efficacy as social justice leaders. While the actions and motivation of the principals is similar, two of the principals, working in school contexts where the values and norms are not consonant with broader society, appear to lack confidence in their practice of social justice leadership. This article extends the existing evidence base by arguing for enhanced critical consciousness of all stakeholders related to the personal, institutional and community contexts in schools. It recommends a more flexible and iterative process of policy development to facilitate a more nuanced understanding of the cultural and ideological struggles in schools. Finally, it calls for governments and policy makers to take responsibility for and support disadvantaged communities as education alone cannot solve the issue of inequity.</p>


2021 ◽  
Vol 29 ◽  
pp. 62
Author(s):  
Catarina Ianni Segatto ◽  
Marina Katurchi Exner ◽  
Fernando Luis Abrucio

Even though students’ socioeconomic background is central to comprehending educational results, there is a consensus in the literature that school managers influence students' learning. They have a central role in instructional coordination and in the relations with external and internal school communities, for instance. Nevertheless, few studies seek to better grasp the features of effective school management in Brazil. This paper aims to contribute to this debate by studying the types of leadership of school managers in sixteen Brazilian schools, seeking to incorporate the debate of school leadership with the literature on street-level managers. We develop four types of ideal-types of school leadership, which guided the quantitative analysis of data collected in in-depth interviews and observation. The analysis shows that school managers are key to changes and adaptations of policies according to specific school contexts. However, the sistemic view and previous experience of school managers had a major effect on schools' positive path, as allowed them to use resources more efficiently and customize solutions to their contexts, central in contexts characterized by institutional fragilities and social inequality.


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