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Transformative Leadership: A Primer both delivers a complete and
engaging overview of transformative leadership and also clearly
distinguishes it from other popular approaches to leadership.
Hence, this will be the text of choice for many graduate courses in
educational leadership. Carolyn M. Shields shows how the tenets of
transformative leadership interact with one another, and how they
provide a lens for leadership that offers an excellent, inclusive,
equitable, and socially just education for all students. Using
anecdotes and narratives drawn from empirical research, as well as
current data, Dr. Shields establishes how transformative leadership
comprises a comprehensive approach to leadership in highly diverse
contexts, and how it can empower students who are traditionally
marginalized due to race, ethnicity, sexual orientation and gender
identity, home language, or religion. Accepting a mandate for
educational change, reconstructing knowledge frameworks, and
redistributing power in more equitable ways are starting points for
transformative leaders. Changing the structures, cultures,
curricula, and pedagogies of the school to be more democratic and
emancipatory; acknowledging our interconnectedness and
interdependence with global neighbors; and accepting responsibility
for promoting both public and private good are processes that
implement the transformation. Taken together, these changes cannot
be accomplished without considerable collaboration, conversation,
and moral courage. No leader wanting to promote excellence and
equity for all should be without this primer that offers a new way
of thinking about all aspects of schooling, from facilities and
fiscal issues to academic programs and school policy.
Transformative leadership offers a promising and robust theory of
change for all situations and contexts.
The Bakhtin Primer offers a truly new and innovative approach to
leading and reforming schools. It delves into some of Bakhtin's
most salient concepts - chronotope, polyphony and heteroglossia,
dialogue and dialogism, and carnival - and presents them as the
basis for a comprehensive reform agenda - one that focuses on high
levels of student achievement and on socially just and inclusive
educational practice. The primer demonstrates the relevance of
theory to educational practice and presents it in clear, concise
language coupled with numerous illustrative examples to make the
ideas accessible to readers. It elaborates the importance of
thinking about dialogue, not just as talk, but as an ontological
concept that informs how we embrace the diversity inherent in our
world. It explores how dialogue and carnival can disrupt the status
quo and confront inequitable practices and relationships. It argues
that education informed by Bakhtin's concepts would be more open,
more conscious of inquiry, ambiguity, incompleteness, complexity,
and relationships than traditional, more rational approaches. It
would challenge, and teach students to question authoritative views
and traditions and lead them to develop important understandings
about our interconnectedness as well as how to interact with and
learn from differences across time, place, class, and culture.
Today, educators are looking for ways to utilize classroom time
more effectively. Many thoughtful and forward-looking educators
have reorganized the school calendar from the traditional
nine-month model to one which is more balanced, and they have
experienced the effects of calendar modification in the classroom,
school, district, and community. Balancing the School Calendar is a
compilation of perspectives and research reports from those who
have experienced the urgent necessity of reorganizing time to
effectuate better learning situations for students. Chapter authors
have implemented, studied, or contemplated school calendar change
and the results of the change.
Research and Educational Leadership is the first book to directly
address the implications of the National Research Council's (NRC's)
Scientific Research in Education (2002) in the fields of
educational leadership and school administration. This text points
out the strengths and weaknesses of the NRC's recommendations and
specifically identifies areas that are not likely to lead to either
theoretical or practical advances in practice or new knowledge if
the NRC's guidelines become dominant in determining the value of
research. Research and Educational Leadership is an invaluable tool
in rethinking how research is conducted in educational leadership
and how public and private funding agencies should view research
proposals for improving leadership practices in schools. It is also
a key resource for teaching researchers to think more deeply about
school leadership as they engage in dissertation research.
Practitioners will also find the work an important reference in
understanding what kinds of research are likely to promote improved
comprehension of leadership practices and social justice.
Catch a new vision of leadership that fosters school communities
that are socially just and academically excellent with this
accessible guide. It combines promising theoretical perspectives
with stories about practitioners and schools across the United
States, Canada, and in the South Pacific (Fiji, Australia, and New
Zealand) to show how, in many varied contexts, leaders are making a
difference. Good Intentions Are Not Enough, is designed to raise
the awareness of all concerned citizens about how to develop
schools with diverse populations. Comprehensive and research-based,
this book offers theories and practical ideas helpful to both
teachers and administrators.
Today, educators are looking for ways to utilize classroom time
more effectively. Many thoughtful and forward-looking educators
have reorganized the school calendar from the traditional
nine-month model to one which is more balanced, and they have
experienced the effects of calendar modification in the classroom,
school, district, and community. Balancing the School Calendar is a
compilation of perspectives and research reports from those who
have experienced the urgent necessity of reorganizing time to
effectuate better learning situations for students. Chapter authors
have implemented, studied, or contemplated school calendar change
and the results of the change.
Research and Educational Leadership is the first book to directly
address the implications of the National Research Council's (NRC's)
Scientific Research in Education (2002) in the fields of
educational leadership and school administration. This text points
out the strengths and weaknesses of the NRC's recommendations and
specifically identifies areas that are not likely to lead to either
theoretical or practical advances in practice or new knowledge if
the NRC's guidelines become dominant in determining the value of
research. Research and Educational Leadership is an invaluable tool
in rethinking how research is conducted in educational leadership
and how public and private funding agencies should view research
proposals for improving leadership practices in schools. It is also
a key resource for teaching researchers to think more deeply about
school leadership as they engage in dissertation research.
Practitioners will also find the work an important reference in
understanding what kinds of research are likely to promote improved
comprehension of leadership practices and social justice.
Framed by real stories and grounded in research, the second edition
of Transformative Leadership in Education presents an alternative
approach to leadership that is engaged, active, and courageous.
Noted scholar Carolyn M. Shields explores the concept of
transformative leadership and its potential to create learning
environments that are academically excellent, equitable, inclusive,
and socially just, even in the face of the volatile, uncertain,
complex, and ambiguous world of education today. Chapters combine
contemporary research findings with stories of schools, leaders,
students, teachers, and community members to demonstrate that
transformative leadership can promote academic achievement, family
and community empowerment, democratic engagement, and global
citizenship. This exciting text will appeal to all aspiring and
practicing leaders who want to prepare students to be successful,
caring, and engaged citizens of the global community. New in this
edition: Updated end-of-chapter guiding questions to help readers
reflect on their own practice and to apply the concepts in their
own contexts. Enriched discussion of the interrelationships among
the eight tenets of transformative leadership and leading for
social justice. Elaborated discussion of the need for reflection,
grounding, and spiritual connections on the part of transformative
leaders. Expanded discussion of refugee and transgender students.
Supplemental eResources to prompt further dialogue and reflection,
downloadable at www.routledge.com/9781138633773.
This exciting book explores the concept of transformative
leadership and how leaders can create learning environments that
are academically excellent, equitable, inclusive, and socially
just. Grounded in research and real examples, Dr. Carolyn Shields
presents an approach to leadership that is engaged, authentic,
courageous, and effective in addressing the needs of today's
diverse student bodies. Featuring examples from schools and
leaders, questions for reflection, downloadable eResources, and
links to useful websites, Becoming a Transformative Leader is an
invaluable and practical guide for school administrators, teacher
leaders, and district leaders concerned about the uneven
educational playing field for students in our schools.
Educational institutions, and in particular educational leaders,
play critical roles in identifying and rectifying the many
inequities that oppress, marginalize, and exclude individual
students, educational actors, and some minoritized groups in
Canadian education. Leading for Equity and Social Justice provides
a deep look at some of these inequities and injustices and offers
transformative leadership as one way for leaders to stimulate,
support, and foster equitable and socially just practices in
educational institutions. This collection emphasizes the systemic
nature of inequality and supports the necessity of systemic change
to target not only individuals but also structures, policies, and
far-reaching practices. Focusing on various marginalized groups -
including the Indigenous community, LGBTQ2S+ peoples, refugees,
newcomers, and specific groups of teachers - chapters explore
transformative leadership in practice and how to achieve inclusion,
respect, and excellence in schools. Arguing that leadership
involves much more than simply putting policy into practice,
Leading for Equity and Social Justice promotes the need for leaders
to recognize their role as advocates and activists.
This exciting book explores the concept of transformative
leadership and how leaders can create learning environments that
are academically excellent, equitable, inclusive, and socially
just. Grounded in research and real examples, Dr. Carolyn Shields
presents an approach to leadership that is engaged, authentic,
courageous, and effective in addressing the needs of today's
diverse student bodies. Featuring examples from schools and
leaders, questions for reflection, downloadable eResources, and
links to useful websites, Becoming a Transformative Leader is an
invaluable and practical guide for school administrators, teacher
leaders, and district leaders concerned about the uneven
educational playing field for students in our schools.
Framed by real stories and grounded in research, the second edition
of Transformative Leadership in Education presents an alternative
approach to leadership that is engaged, active, and courageous.
Noted scholar Carolyn M. Shields explores the concept of
transformative leadership and its potential to create learning
environments that are academically excellent, equitable, inclusive,
and socially just, even in the face of the volatile, uncertain,
complex, and ambiguous world of education today. Chapters combine
contemporary research findings with stories of schools, leaders,
students, teachers, and community members to demonstrate that
transformative leadership can promote academic achievement, family
and community empowerment, democratic engagement, and global
citizenship. This exciting text will appeal to all aspiring and
practicing leaders who want to prepare students to be successful,
caring, and engaged citizens of the global community. New in this
edition: Updated end-of-chapter guiding questions to help readers
reflect on their own practice and to apply the concepts in their
own contexts. Enriched discussion of the interrelationships among
the eight tenets of transformative leadership and leading for
social justice. Elaborated discussion of the need for reflection,
grounding, and spiritual connections on the part of transformative
leaders. Expanded discussion of refugee and transgender students.
Supplemental eResources to prompt further dialogue and reflection,
downloadable at www.routledge.com/9781138633773.
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