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In the past three decades politicians, journalists, researchers
within the academy, and neo-liberalist critics of state schools
have articulated that educational research is neither meaningful
nor worthwhile. Yet empirical evidence has revealed that research
plays a key role in informing decisions made by educational
leaders. This book explores the tools needed to conduct ethical
educational research, and the contribution postgraduate research
might make to the training and development of educational leaders
and their thinking and practice within educational settings. Recent
debates position the production and use of ethical educational
research as important for Nation States' governments; Alison Taysum
investigates the thinking tools required for such research and
examines what good practice looks and feels like. Supported by
international case studies, the study approaches and engages with
the role evidence informed leadership might play in making the
social justice agendas contained within the policies of a number of
nations become reality. >
This volume acknowledges the need for better understanding in
leadership, management and administration of new knowledge which is
crucial for effective leadership in a period of massive policy
reform and deepening austerity in education. The doctorate is key
to meeting this global challenge as it offers new and valid ways of
enabling innovation and utility in an approach to knowledge
creation and management that embodies meaningful methods for
assuring improvement, effectiveness, efficiency and equity in
education. The chapters in this edited collection emerge from a
British Educational Leadership Management and Administration
Society (BELMAS) funded Seminar Series. The international leading
academics and researching practitioners contributing chapters to
the book focus upon purposes, pedagogies and the impact of the
doctorate on educational leaders and leadership development.
Further, the chapters reveal how doctoral study helps equip leaders
to implement policy and develop strategies to steer their
organizations towards improving policy provision, and practice.
The 17 Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) have been agreed
globally as an unprecedented, ambitious and innovative agenda for
prosperity and peace for people and the planet. Currently
researchers, policymakers and nations are trying to identify clear
routes for achieving these ambitious goals by 2030. This timely
text examines how education policy provides a roadmap to achieving
Sustainable Development Goal 4, achieving inclusive and equitable
quality education and promoting lifelong learning opportunities for
all. Taysum situates the SDGs, and the roadmap to achieving them,
within a historical framework of established philosophy by drawing
upon the ideas of the social contract, moral values and universal
principles. As well as offering a theoretical understanding of
these concepts, this research also offers practical solutions by
demonstrating how university Vice Chancellors, Deans of Faculties
and Schools of Education can work in partnership with the wider
community in order to achieve the SDGs. Supported by a website and
rich bank of practical resources, this book will prove invaluable
for education leaders and those in the fields of higher education
and moral philosophy.
This book investigates how governance at different levels can
improve access to education for excluded communities. It
conceptualises turbulence, empowerment, and marginalisation in
international educational governance systems, and presents a
comparative analysis of five nation states (England, Arabs in
Israel, Northern Ireland, Trinidad and Tobago, and the United
States). From these carefully-selected case studies, readers are
shown how Senior Level Leaders describe turbulence in their systems
- and how they articulate both the kind of support they want, and
the support they actually get at the infrastructural, resources and
agency level. It shows how the Senior Leaders hope to put their
track records in school improvement into action in order to
mobilise school communities for Empowering Young Societal
Innovators for Equity and Renewal. Based on research that is world
leading in terms of originality, significance, and rigour,
Turbulence, Empowerment and Marginalisation in International
Education Governance Systems is both a comprehensive investigation
of the question of how systems empower key agents of change in
school communities, and a practical guide to how these communities
can become societal innovators for equity, peace and renewal.
In the past three decades politicians, journalists, researchers
within the academy, and neo-liberalist critics of state schools
have articulated that educational research is neither meaningful
nor worthwhile. Yet empirical evidence has revealed that research
plays a key role in informing decisions made by educational
leaders. This book explores the tools needed to conduct ethical
educational research, and the contribution postgraduate research
might make to the training and development of educational leaders
and their thinking and practice within educational settings. Recent
debates position the production and use of ethical educational
research as important for Nation States' governments; Alison Taysum
investigates the thinking tools required for such research and
examines what good practice looks and feels like. Supported by
international case studies, the study approaches and engages with
the role evidence informed leadership might play in making the
social justice agendas contained within the policies of a number of
nations become reality. >
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