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Teacher leadership and organisational change: a teacher leader's experience in a P-12 school

[Abstract]: Crowther, Hann & McMaster (2001) reported in School Innovation: Pathway to the Knowledge Society that when teacher leaders engage in collective action with theprincipal, they can build a school’s capacity to change. This Autoethnographic Case Study builds upon the findings reported by Cuttance (2001). The study uses a qualitativeinquiry approach to study a Participatory Action Research (PAR) project. The qualitative study was conducted in a P-12 school context in 2003 and contains two related microstudies. The study investigates how a teacher leader, occupying a formal role in an organisation, can contribute to the organisation’s capacity to change.Conducted by a participant observer, the study occurred within a single context, a P-12 school which contained two separate entities, a Primary School and a Secondary School.In the Secondary School, the self researcher occupied a formal position and performed functional tasks while in the Primary School, she exercised teacher leadership without being formally defined by that role. The task of coordinating an innovation to achieve mandated change was distributed to the self researcher by the principal. The self researcher’s efforts to improve her leadership practices while coordinating the innovation forms the basis of the study.The self researcher employed Participatory Action Research as a means to gather data and engaged in reflexive leadership practices to pursue socially just and moral ways ofacting in the social world. The organisational context provided the framework for the analysis of the data and various metaphors were employed to analyse the self researcher’s evolving subjectivities. The stance adopted by the self researcher is informed by criticaltheory, drawing from postmodern and poststructuralist perspectives, and the research question is answered through a narrative.This study found that teacher leadership underpinned by the principles of inclusion, participation and voluntarism is not sustainable in functionalist organisations. The study found that functionalist organisations are imprinted with the discourses of dominance and privilege and the distribution of functions by principals reproduces dominance and oppresses the emergence of teacher leadership.The study found that teacher leadership is emergent not distributed. The study found that when leadership is shared, parallel leadership practices generate organisational-wide leadership and build the collective’s capacity for change. However, the study concludesthat the context is important and for teacher leadership to contribute to an organisation’s capacity to change, the organisation itself has to be reimaged.

Identiferoai:union.ndltd.org:ADTP/191147
Date January 2007
CreatorsFisher, Jenny
PublisherUniversity of Southern Queensland, Faculty of Education
Source SetsAustraliasian Digital Theses Program
LanguageEnglish
Detected LanguageEnglish
Rightshttp://www.usq.edu.au/eprints/terms_conditions.htm, (c) Copyright 2007 Jenny Fisher

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