School leadership practices that work in areas of multiple deprivation in South Africa

被引:20
|
作者
Chikoko, Vitallis [1 ]
Naicker, Inbanathan [2 ]
Mthiyane, Siphiwe [2 ]
机构
[1] Univ KwaZulu Natal, Educ Leadership, Sch Educ, ZA-3605 Durban, South Africa
[2] Univ KwaZulu Natal, Educ Leadership Management & Policy, Sch Educ, ZA-3605 Durban, South Africa
关键词
Leadership; assets; inside-out; accountability;
D O I
10.1177/1741143215570186
中图分类号
G40 [教育学];
学科分类号
040101 ; 120403 ;
摘要
This paper reports on evidence from five school principals regarding leadership practices that work in multiple deprived contexts. The South African educational landscape is complex, often described as a cocktail of first and third world institutions. Looking at the schooling system on a continuum, on the one end there are first class schools which can compare favourably with the best in developed countries. On the other extreme there are dysfunctional schools. However, along the scale there are few schools in multiple deprived areas which display high degrees of resilience and perform at levels comparable to first class schools in terms of Matriculation examination results. This paper draws from a study based on the proposition that leadership was the greatest factor to explain such performance. The study was then informed by a quest for knowledge regarding the nature of such leadership. Such knowledge is needed as the country fights to turn around the many dysfunctional schools there are. While there is a corpus of scholarship that speaks' to this matter internationally, there remains need for home-grown insights in that regard. Two theoretical lenses (servant leadership and the asset-based approach) were applied. The study employed a qualitative approach involving individual face-to-face semi-structured interviews with five purposively selected school principals each representing their school. Findings suggest that the schools in question adopted inside-out development approaches involving the philosophy that they were masters of their own destiny. Time, commitment, and accountability were some of their greatest assets, things that did not have to come from outside the schools. Internal success paved the way for stronger and more fruitful synergies with the outside world'. We conclude that schools in areas of multiple-deprivation need leadership that moves them away from notions of victimhood and deficit thinking towards asset-based approaches.
引用
收藏
页码:452 / 467
页数:16
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [41] Nutrition knowledge, attitudes and practices of primary school children in Tshwane Metropole, South Africa
    Mamba, Nomsa P. S.
    Napoles, Lizeka
    Mwaka, Nelly M.
    [J]. AFRICAN JOURNAL OF PRIMARY HEALTH CARE & FAMILY MEDICINE, 2019, 11 (01)
  • [42] A Geographical Profile of Child Deprivation in South Africa
    Barnes, Helen
    Noble, Michael
    Wright, Gemma
    Dawes, Andrew
    [J]. CHILD INDICATORS RESEARCH, 2009, 2 (02) : 181 - 199
  • [43] A Geographical Profile of Child Deprivation in South Africa
    Helen Barnes
    Michael Noble
    Gemma Wright
    Andrew Dawes
    [J]. Child Indicators Research, 2009, 2 : 181 - 199
  • [44] Local school governance and school leadership: practices, processes and pillars
    Leechman, Gareth
    McCulla, Norman
    Field, Laurie
    [J]. INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF EDUCATIONAL MANAGEMENT, 2019, 33 (07) : 1641 - 1652
  • [45] Women Leaving Leadership: Learnings from Female School Principals in Gauteng Province, South Africa
    Zikhali, Joyce Tsungai
    Smit, Brigitte
    [J]. PERTANIKA JOURNAL OF SOCIAL SCIENCE AND HUMANITIES, 2019, 27 (01): : 475 - 489
  • [46] Women in educational leadership: The case of Hope High School in the Eastern Cape Province, South Africa
    Diko, Nolutho
    [J]. EDUCATIONAL MANAGEMENT ADMINISTRATION & LEADERSHIP, 2014, 42 (06) : 825 - 834
  • [47] Pubescence School in South Africa
    Beyer, Gottfried
    [J]. ZEITSCHRIFT FUR ETHNOLOGIE, 1926, 58 (3-4): : 249 - 261
  • [48] School choice in South Africa
    Maile, S
    [J]. EDUCATION AND URBAN SOCIETY, 2004, 37 (01) : 94 - 116
  • [49] School Leadership in the Caribbean: Perceptions, Practices, Paradigms
    James, Freddy
    [J]. EDUCATIONAL REVIEW, 2014, 66 (04) : 514 - 515
  • [50] Instructional leadership practices in challenging school contexts
    Naicker, Inbanathan
    Chikoko, Vitallis
    Mthiyane, Siphiwe Eric
    [J]. EDUCATION AS CHANGE, 2014, 17 : S137 - S150