Disrupting Injustice: Principals Narrate the Strategies They Use to Improve Their Schools and Advance Social Justice

2010 ◽  
Vol 112 (1) ◽  
pp. 331-373 ◽  
Author(s):  
George Theoharis

Background/Context A group of educators have demonstrated success not only with White middle-class and affluent students but also with students from varied racial, socioeconomic, linguistic, ability, and cultural backgrounds. A reoccurring theme from these schools and from the literature on school change is that exemplary leadership helps create the necessity for change and helps make the realities of change happen. More specifically, leaders at these schools where students traditionally marginalized are thriving come to administration with a commitment, or larger “call,” to focus their leadership on issues of equity and justice. Purpose Scholars and administrators alike have called for “constructive models” of this kind of leadership. This article provides examples of these accomplishments in practice. It also provides insight into the realities of leading for social justice by revealing what principals sought to accomplish and how they approached that work. Participants This article focuses on 6 principals—2 elementary, 2 middle, and 2 high school—who (1) led a public school, (2) possessed a belief that promoting social justice is a driving force behind what brought them to their leadership position, (3) advocated, led, and kept at the center of their practice/vision issues of race, class, gender, disability, sexual orientation, and/or other historically marginalizing conditions, and (4) had evidence to show that their work has produced a more just school. Research Design The qualitative study in which these analyses are grounded used a positioned subject approach. The method of data collection took place over one school year and included in-depth interviews with the principals, a review of documents and materials, site visits, discussions/interviews with school staff, a detailed field log, and a group meeting of the principal participants. This article is a focused discussion of aspects of a larger study, using the principals’ voices to illustrate key themes. Findings These leaders narrate the strategies they used to disrupt four kinds of school injustice: (1) school structures that marginalize, segregate, and impede achievement, such as pullout programs; (2) a deprofessionalized teaching staff who could benefit from focused staff development; (3) a school climate that needed to be more welcoming to marginalized families and the community; and (4) disparate student achievement levels. Recommendations A series of lessons emerged from this research: that social justice in schools is more than rhetoric—indeed, it can be achieved; that inclusive schooling is a necessary and enriching component to enacting justice; that increasing staff capacity is essential to carry out a comprehensive agenda focused on equity; and that creating a climate that deeply values racial, cultural, and economic diversity is a key strategy to enacting justice.

2021 ◽  
Vol 49 (2) ◽  
pp. 222-230
Author(s):  
Ronit Elk ◽  
Shena Gazaway

AbstractCultural values influence how people understand illness and dying, and impact their responses to diagnosis and treatment, yet end-of-life care is rooted in white, middle class values. Faith, hope, and belief in God’s healing power are central to most African Americans, yet life-preserving care is considered “aggressive” by the healthcare system, and families are pressured to cease it.


2012 ◽  
Vol 22 (1) ◽  
pp. 79-115 ◽  
Author(s):  
Martin Scanlan

This study creates life history portraits of two White middle-class native-English-speaking principals demonstrating commitments to social justice in their work in public elementary schools serving disproportionately high populations of students who are marginalized by poverty, race, and linguistic heritage. Through self-reported life histories of these principals, I create portraits that illustrate how these practitioners draw motivation, commitment, and sustenance in varied, complicated, and at times contradictory ways.


Author(s):  
Katherine McKnight ◽  
Elizabeth Glennie

Schools routinely face federal and state mandated changes, like the Common Core State Standards or standardized testing requirements. Sometimes districts and schools want to take on new policies and practices of their own, like anti-bullying programs or using technology to deliver instruction. Regardless of the origin of the change, implementation requires them to take on additional work; yet experts estimate that only 30 to 50 percent of major change efforts in organizations will succeed. Failing change efforts result in not only financial losses but also lowered organizational morale, wasted resources, and lost opportunities. For schools where resources are already stretched thin, the consequences of failed change initiatives can be particularly devastating. In this paper, we discuss results of a study, over a school year, of school principals who were working on implementing a new change initiative in their schools. We apply lessons from the change management literature and focus on the importance of assessing readiness for change as a key step in ensuring the success of new initiatives. We share examples of a change readiness rubric to help schools and districts successfully lead change.


2021 ◽  
Vol ahead-of-print (ahead-of-print) ◽  
Author(s):  
Heather Price

PurposeStudies demonstrate the central role of principals in developing and sustaining teacher commitment to their school. Teachers' commitment to their school impacts teaching, learning, innovation and school climate and manifests job satisfaction. Commitment strongly relates to teacher attrition. Attrition is important in the study of school success and failure given its strong predictive link to student learning.Design/methodology/approachThis study thus identifies relational practices of principals who successfully develop and maintain high levels of commitment among their teaching staff compared to those principals who fail to maintain high commitment or fail to raise low commitment among their teachers during the school year. To investigate this process, this study uses longitudinal, within-year school network and climate data for teachers and principals in 15 American charter schools. With these data and theories offered by social-psychology and organizational studies, the interpersonal leadership and school climate conditions set forth by the principal link to the fluctuating levels of commitment among teachers.FindingsDespite the consistently established link between employee commitment and organizational success and failure, this operationalization of changing levels of staff commitment is a novel contribution to the discussion of organizational principal leadership failure. This study clearly tests the questions: Which emotional responses prove volatile to teachers' repeated exchanges with their principals? How do principals' relational practices impact teachers' commitment to teaching? Among the strongest findings is the key practice of principals to maintain trust—interpersonal and schoolwide—to improve commitment among teachers and avoid loss of commitment by the end of the school year.Practical implicationsRelational practices of principals can promote quality relationships that uphold trust and sustain environments conducive to maintaining high organizational commitment. When leaders fail to establish and maintain quality relationships, challenges experienced during a school year become more difficult to overcome.Originality/valueThe opportunity arises to test the time-varying aspect of interpersonal relations in organizations and the subsequent idea about how organizational leaders maintain strong relationships, strengthen poor ones or repair injured relationships. These results evidence teacher commitment is prone to decline at the end of the school year yet the chance and magnitude of the fluctuation directly responds to changes in principals' relational practices. With relational practices, principals can induce affective responses from teachers at the interpersonal and organizational level that improve commitment among teachers and reduce drops in commitment.


EXAMPLES OF TARGETS FOR THE SCHOOL PERSONNEL Input Targets • The proportion of the budget spent on teaching staff salaries will not exceed X per cent. • The proportion of the budget spent on support staff salaries will not exceed X per cent. • The proportion of the teaching staff budget spent on supply teaching will not exceed X per cent. • The average contact time for full-time teaching staff will be . . . per cent. Contact time will be no higher than . . . per cent and no lower than . . . per cent. • The extra non-contact time given to teachers with extra responsibilities will be . . . per cent (according to the responsibility). • The contact time for senior staff (head and deputy) will be no less than . . . per cent. Senior staff will be available to cover for absent colleagues, and will spend no less than . . . per cent, and no more than . . . per cent of school-time on management/ administrative tasks. • The overall teacher–pupil ratio will be no greater than . . . and no less than. . . . • A policy for staff development will ensure that all staff who wish to will be able to leave the school better qualified in experience and/or formal qualifications than when they arrived. • A sum proportionate to X per cent of the staffing budget will be put aside each year to support staff wanting to pursue further qualifications. • The administrator hours per pupil per annum will be not less than X and not more than Y. • The governing body will ensure that the headteacher is provided with the support necessary to enable her/him to meet the National Standards for Headteachers. • The governing body will ensure that subject leaders are provided with the support necessary to enable them to meet the National Standards for Subject Leaders. • The governing body will ensure that the Special Needs Coordinator is provided with the support necessary to enable her/him to meet the National Standards for Special Educational Needs Coordinator.

2002 ◽  
pp. 79-79

2019 ◽  
Vol 3 (1) ◽  
pp. 47
Author(s):  
Fitratul Isma ◽  
Lailatul Munawwaroh

The implementation of School-Based Management is still in a meaningful transition phase. This happened due to the unfamiliarity of school-based education management concepts in the school environment. It is not easy to implement management innovation in a short time, but the phenomenon that shows that the desire to make changes in the management sector of school management has affected the system of managing education towards School-Based Management by leaving conventional management. This study aims to determine the implementation of MBM in MI Ma'arif Gondosuli. Then there is cooperation with and regular meetings with committees every minute or thirty-five days. Meetings with student guardians, namely at the beginning of each new school year, after PTS and PAS, and specifically for sixth graders on Fridays. Evaluating the supervision of academic management carried out by the school principal and school supervisor in a planned manner and learning evaluation carried out by class teachers and subject teachers, The implementation of the development of teaching staff was carried out by the mini Teacher Working Group (KKG) meeting at the school. Planning for the development of educational facilities and infrastructure include: 1) Propose additional facilities and infrastructure, 2) Carry out maintenance on available facilities and infrastructure. Planning for funding and school finance development includes: 1) Preparation of Madrasah Work Plans and Budgets (RKAM) involving school people, 2) Making proposals to increase school operational costs, 3) Making accountability reports on the use of school budgets, 4) Administration of school finance usage.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Thomasna Illahi

Development has a wider reach in efforts to improve and enhance the competencies of the teaching and educational staff. Development is more focused on increasing ability through formal channels with a long period of time, providing learning opportunities that are designed to help the self-development of teaching staff and education where development is directed to prepare teaching / educational staff to hold responsibility for an positions or jobs in the future. the following are strategies for developing educators and education staff. As Educators and Educators, a teacher or school principal must work well and in accordance with the profession they are involved in. An Educator and Education Personnel is a major factor in the development and success of a learning system. If an Educator and Education Worker does not work according to the existing rules, the learning system will not run properly. Therefore, an Educator and Education Personnel are required to be able to show their professionalism, even if necessary the professionalism is increased again, so that Educators and Education Personnel can be said to be qualified and qualified


2021 ◽  
Vol 1 (81) ◽  
Author(s):  
Anna Vinevskaya ◽  
Irina Burshit ◽  
Evgeny Lopatkin

This article focuses on remedial work aimed at developing skills in autistic children to prepare them for school, which involves organizing interactions within the triad: child – parents – teaching staff. The purpose of the study is to determine the effectiveness of interactions with an autistic child as a result of remedial work during the preschool period. The observational method allowed us to map the psychological and pedagogical characteristics of a first-grader, whereas the journal method allowed us to assess remedial work. A social and communication skills assessment showed that 28% of skills partially manifested at the beginning and end of the school year, 36% of skills had a partial manifestation dynamic, and 36% of skills were undeveloped. A hygiene and self-care skills assessment showed the partial manifestation of 38.9% of skills without a dynamic and 61.1% of skills with dynamic. These assessments revealed that 50% of academic skills do not show dynamics, whereas 33.3% do, and 16.7% are undeveloped. An organizational and behavioral skills assessment demonstrated 65.2% undeveloped skills, whereas 34.8% of skills are defined as partially developed. The results obtained confirm the effectiveness of the interactions within the triad after remedial work, since a dynamic was observed in 40.54% of all partially developed skills.


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