Leading Learning & Managing Change
Leading Learning & Managing Change
Leading Learning & Managing Change
Leading Learning
&
Managing Change
Jan Coleman
2007
Traditional Models of
Leadership
Managerial / Transactional
Transformational
Interpretive
Instructional / Pedagogical.
Quality
Teaching
Leadership
Improved student
outcomes
Principles
How?
Practices
What?
Lessons on change
1. Moral purpose is complex and problematic
Lessons on change
5. Emotional intelligence is anxiety provoking
and anxiety containing live with what cannot
School leadership
+
External leadership
is powerful
IF
The development of internal leadership
is clearly identified and planning for
sustainability is explicit
Care v accountability
Adaptive expert
Innovation
Frustrated
novice
or
c
y
r
o
id
it
l
i
b
a
t
p
a
ad e)
l
a ac
m
ti t sp
p
O rge
Routine expert
(Ta
(total efficiency)
Efficiency
Adapted from Darling-Hammond & Bransford, 2005
Traditional
content
Low risk
New
knowledge
Generic
skills
High risk
Learning to be
(ideal place)
Expect troughs
How do we ensure
the troughs are short
and shallow?
Models of Change
Initiating
Envisioning
Playing
Sustaining
Appreciative inquiry
Barriers to change
Depth
Sustainability
Spread
Ownership
Deep reform takes time, requires
courage and is evidence driven
Evidence of change
Attitude
Teacher knowledge
Pedagogical content knowledge
Teacher practice (observation)
Student achievement
Distributed Leadership
- implications for professional
development in schools
Key Understandings of
Distributed Leadership
Distributed Leadership is not new
There is an increasing advocacy for this
concept in recent times
Essentially, it is a sharing of leadership
A movement from the power of one
to the power of many
Distributed leadership
in action
What exactly is
distributed?
Process
Focus
Content
Roles???
Development of
Distributed Leadership
Leadership teams
Leadership of teams
Teacher-leaders
Support networks
Mentoring
Coaching
Formal change management training.
Issues:
Leadership is a function rather than a
hierarchical position
It supplements the traditional
hierarchical positions rather than
replacing these positions
Not for every school or every issue
Context and timing matter
Issues
Lack of clarity around what matters
most in the role of principal
Easier to think of it as this job
rather than membership of
profession
Time out of the classroom issues of
currency
Multiple demands of the role of
principal
Goals
Identify important & critical goals
Goals are the outcomes of gathering
and evaluating evidence
Model goal setting and development
It does not matter who sets the
goals can be co-constructed or
taken up
Group dynamics
Stages of group performance
Forming
Storming
Norming
Performing
Reforming / mourning
Personalised learning
Individualised
Customised
Programmed
Learner centred
Includes computer assisted
learning
References
Copland, M. (2003) Leadership of inquiry: building and
sustaining capacity for school improvement. Educational
Evaluation and Policy Analysis, 25(4), 375-395.
Spillane, J. P. and Sherer, J. Z. (2004) A distributed perspective
on school leadership: leadership practice stretched over people
and place. Paper presented at the Annual meeting of the
American Educational Research Association (Institute of
Policy Research, North-western University, Evanston, IL,
USA).
Timperley, H. (2005) Distributed leadership: developing
theory from practice. Journal of Curriculum Studies, Vol 37,
No 4, 2005