|
Showing 1 - 8 of
8 matches in All Departments
This book focuses on what school leaders need to know and
understand about leadership for learning, and for learning to read
in particular. It brings together theory, research and practice on
leadership for literacy. The book reports on the findings from six
studies that followed school principals from their involvement in a
professional learning program consisting of five modules on
leadership and the teaching of reading, to implementation action in
their schools. It describes how they applied a range of strategies
to create leadership partnerships with their teachers, pursuing
eight related dimensions from a Leadership for Learning framework
or blueprint. The early chapters of the book feature the use of
practical tools as a focus for leadership activity. These chapters
consider, for example, how principals and teachers can develop
deeper understandings of their schools' contexts; how professional
discussions can be conducted with a process called 'disciplined
dialogue'; and how principals might encourage approaches to shared
leadership with their teachers. The overall findings presented in
this book emphasise five positive positions on leadership for
learning to read: the importance of an agreed moral purpose;
sharing leadership for improvement; understanding what learning to
read involves; implementing and evaluating reading interventions;
and recognising the need for support for leaders' learning
on-the-job.
This book presents the outcomes of research and practical endeavour
in some of the diverse contexts in which learning takes place:
classrooms, schools, professional development settings, community
projects and service sector agencies. It invites the reader to
engage with two related questions of contemporary concern in the
leadership field: "What can we learn about the important influence
of different contexts on leadership practice and how are people
brought together as collective human agents in different patterns
of distributive leadership?" In doing so, this collection
emphasises three of the critical concepts at play when leadership
is viewed, not as position, but as activity. The three concepts are
purpose, context and human agency. When this view of leadership is
understood, it is always about achieving shared goals with people
power, no matter the circumstances in which they are gathered
together.
Leading schools is becoming almost daily a more complex and
demanding job. Connecting Leadership and Learning reassesses the
purpose of schools, the nature of learning and the qualities of
leadership that make schools authentic places of learning. Starting
with a review of what we can claim to know - and not know - about
learning, leadership and their inter-relationship, this book
explores what it means to lead schools that place learning at the
centre. Drawing on research from seven different country projects -
including the United States, Australia and five European countries
- the authors offer five key principles for practice: a focus of
learning an environment for learning a learning dialogue shared
leadership accountability; internal and external. These key
principles have been tested by teachers, senior leaders and school
students and found to be applicable across cultural and linguistic
boundaries. The challenges faced by in inner city schools, whether
in London or New Jersey, prove a stern test for the five principles
yet, as these schools testify, they bring a new sense of hope and
resolve that learning is for everyone. Based on rigorous research
yet thoroughly grounded in practice, this book aims to challenge
the reader with big ideas about learning and leadership, and to
break new ground in thinking about where leadership and learning
meet so that practitioners can see how it works in school and
classroom practice. It should be of interest to all school leaders
and those aspiring to the role.
Leading schools is becoming almost daily a more complex and
demanding job. Connecting Leadership and Learning reassesses the
purpose of schools, the nature of learning and the qualities of
leadership that make schools authentic places of learning. Starting
with a review of what we can claim to know - and not know - about
learning, leadership and their inter-relationship, this book
explores what it means to lead schools that place learning at the
centre. Drawing on research from seven different country projects -
including the United States, Australia and five European countries
- the authors offer five key principles for practice: a focus of
learning an environment for learning a learning dialogue shared
leadership accountability; internal and external. These key
principles have been tested by teachers, senior leaders and school
students and found to be applicable across cultural and linguistic
boundaries. The challenges faced by in inner city schools, whether
in London or New Jersey, prove a stern test for the five principles
yet, as these schools testify, they bring a new sense of hope and
resolve that learning is for everyone. Based on rigorous research
yet thoroughly grounded in practice, this book aims to challenge
the reader with big ideas about learning and leadership, and to
break new ground in thinking about where leadership and learning
meet so that practitioners can see how it works in school and
classroom practice. It should be of interest to all school leaders
and those aspiring to the role.
This book presents the outcomes of research and practical endeavour
in some of the diverse contexts in which learning takes place:
classrooms, schools, professional development settings, community
projects and service sector agencies. It invites the reader to
engage with two related questions of contemporary concern in the
leadership field: "What can we learn about the important influence
of different contexts on leadership practice and how are people
brought together as collective human agents in different patterns
of distributive leadership?" In doing so, this collection
emphasises three of the critical concepts at play when leadership
is viewed, not as position, but as activity. The three concepts are
purpose, context and human agency. When this view of leadership is
understood, it is always about achieving shared goals with people
power, no matter the circumstances in which they are gathered
together.
This book focuses on what school leaders need to know and
understand about leadership for learning, and for learning to read
in particular. It brings together theory, research and practice on
leadership for literacy. The book reports on the findings from six
studies that followed school principals from their involvement in a
professional learning program consisting of five modules on
leadership and the teaching of reading, to implementation action in
their schools. It describes how they applied a range of strategies
to create leadership partnerships with their teachers, pursuing
eight related dimensions from a Leadership for Learning framework
or blueprint. The early chapters of the book feature the use of
practical tools as a focus for leadership activity. These chapters
consider, for example, how principals and teachers can develop
deeper understandings of their schools' contexts; how professional
discussions can be conducted with a process called 'disciplined
dialogue'; and how principals might encourage approaches to shared
leadership with their teachers. The overall findings presented in
this book emphasise five positive positions on leadership for
learning to read: the importance of an agreed moral purpose;
sharing leadership for improvement; understanding what learning to
read involves; implementing and evaluating reading interventions;
and recognising the need for support for leaders' learning
on-the-job.
Examining a decade of research and practice, this book makes the
case for a radical reappraisal of leadership, learning, and their
interrelationship in educational policy. Discussing whether policy
direction is progressively constraining the professionalism and
initiative of teachers and school leaders, it challenges
conventional understanding and argues the case for thinking
differently about the way to lead learning. Based on the Leadership
for Learning (LfL) Project, the book clarifies, extends, and
refines LfL principles and practices, and their contribution to
ameliorating some of the difficult conditions encountered in the
contemporary educational policy environment. It starts by
discussing the direction and influence of current education policy
and its subsequent consequences; chapters then move on to explore
the framing values informing the LfL Projects, particularly
focusing on what they imply for commitments to social justice,
children's rights and breadth in student learning, and considering
how to create favourable conditions for learning. Identifying a
disconnect between seminal principles and the nature of day-to-day
practice, Strengthening the Connections between Leadership and
Learning challenges school policy and practice at national and
local levels. It is an essential read for postgraduate students,
especially those studying leadership in education, as well as for
teachers and policymakers in schools.
Examining a decade of research and practice, this book makes the
case for a radical reappraisal of leadership, learning, and their
interrelationship in educational policy. Discussing whether policy
direction is progressively constraining the professionalism and
initiative of teachers and school leaders, it challenges
conventional understanding and argues the case for thinking
differently about the way to lead learning. Based on the Leadership
for Learning (LfL) Project, the book clarifies, extends, and
refines LfL principles and practices, and their contribution to
ameliorating some of the difficult conditions encountered in the
contemporary educational policy environment. It starts by
discussing the direction and influence of current education policy
and its subsequent consequences; chapters then move on to explore
the framing values informing the LfL Projects, particularly
focusing on what they imply for commitments to social justice,
children's rights and breadth in student learning, and considering
how to create favourable conditions for learning. Identifying a
disconnect between seminal principles and the nature of day-to-day
practice, Strengthening the Connections between Leadership and
Learning challenges school policy and practice at national and
local levels. It is an essential read for postgraduate students,
especially those studying leadership in education, as well as for
teachers and policymakers in schools.
|
You may like...
The Creator
John David Washington, Gemma Chan, …
DVD
R354
Discovery Miles 3 540
|