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An overview of transformation in leadership and management in primary schools after a decade of democracy.

Post apartheid South Africa heralded changes in society and the

educational system as a whole. South African schools have in turn

become sites of phenomenal changes. The recent trends towards greater

decentralization and partial privatization for many schools have placed more responsibility on school managers and leaders. School managers and leaders are faced with situations in which effective and efficient school management requires new and improved skills, knowledge and attitudes to cope with a wide range of new demands and challenges.

During the apartheid era educational managers were subjected to many

forms of suppression, which favored the previous government. The

education system was characterized as being authoritarian, non -

consultative and non-participatory. Educational leadership focuses on technical and bureaucratic functions of the school, and greater emphasis was placed on vertical structures.

Leadership in South Africa today calls for a different mindset. The

challenge is for leaders to recreate school as learning organizations that

focus on results and accountability. There exists a need for schools to

move away from being fixed structures that focus on constraint and control. Real transformation will depend upon the nature and quality of internal management and how principals execute, delegate, consult and participate with all stakeholders. Self-management is accomplished by

an internal distribution of power within the school and in transformational

leadership. School principals need to adopt a new paradigm of leadership in which leaders are intuitive and visionary. Democratic South Africa places emphasis on transformational leadership. A transformational style of leadership is significant as this style of leadership embraces a charismatic, visionary, cultural and empowering concept of leadership. Emphasis is given to higher levels of personal commitment towards accomplishing the goal of organizational learning and the development of

a school climate that is productive and conducive to learning resulting in effective schools.

Principals need to align themselves with the values of the new constitution

bearing in mind democracy, equality, human dignity, freedom and justice.

The challenge and need for leadership are great if education is to be

uplifted and transtormed. One of the main findings of the research was a discrepancy between the principal's perception of his/her style of

leadership and the perception of the staff regarding the principal's style of

leadership. The principal perceived his / her role as a leader as being more

transformational than transactional while members of the staff saw the

principal as being a transactional leader. An extremely interesting finding

was consensus between School Management Teams (SMT) and educators

in respect of the views expressed: 75% of the SMT and educators agree

with the perception that the principal's leadership style was autocratic. / Thesis (M.Ed.) - University of KwaZulu-Natal, Durban, 2007.

Identiferoai:union.ndltd.org:netd.ac.za/oai:union.ndltd.org:ukzn/oai:http://researchspace.ukzn.ac.za:10413/1740
Date January 2007
CreatorsSindhrajh, Pradeep.
ContributorsRamrathan, P.
Source SetsSouth African National ETD Portal
LanguageEnglish
Detected LanguageEnglish
TypeThesis

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