Educational Administrators’ Perspectives of Democracy and Citizenship Education: Interviews with Educational Leaders.

Little is known about public school educational administrators’ perspectives of democracy and citizenship education and how those perspectives shape the learning that occurs in the schools they lead. This paper presents findings of a qualitative study that used semi-structured interviews of public s...

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Main Author: Jordan Long
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: University of Alberta 2018-12-01
Series:Journal of Contemporary Issues in Education
Online Access:https://journals.library.ualberta.ca/jcie/index.php/JCIE/article/view/29349
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spelling doaj-21782deefc7e4bd78dd93d1282e67f262020-11-25T03:47:16ZengUniversity of AlbertaJournal of Contemporary Issues in Education1718-47702018-12-0113210.20355/jcie2934929349Educational Administrators’ Perspectives of Democracy and Citizenship Education: Interviews with Educational Leaders.Jordan Long0University of British ColumbiaLittle is known about public school educational administrators’ perspectives of democracy and citizenship education and how those perspectives shape the learning that occurs in the schools they lead. This paper presents findings of a qualitative study that used semi-structured interviews of public school educational administrators’ perspectives of democracy and citizenship education in the province of Alberta, Canada. Four participants’ detailed responses were analyzed using an interpretive phenomenological methodology and coded into four themes. While all four participants felt that democratic and citizenship education were important, their conceptualizations varied widely and only one participant was found to lead in a way that encouraged democratically desirable education. Findings suggest that some educational administrators do not necessarily understand their role or responsibility in the education of democracy and citizenship within the schools they lead. Moreover, this study suggests that factors that hinder democratic and citizenship education are: school administrators’ preference to remain obedient to a top-down approach of school management; resource taxing administrative obligations and; a misunderstanding of ‘thick’ democracy. Factors that were found to facilitate democratic and citizenship education include: physical school and learning program design and; democratic school leadership.https://journals.library.ualberta.ca/jcie/index.php/JCIE/article/view/29349
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Jordan Long
spellingShingle Jordan Long
Educational Administrators’ Perspectives of Democracy and Citizenship Education: Interviews with Educational Leaders.
Journal of Contemporary Issues in Education
author_facet Jordan Long
author_sort Jordan Long
title Educational Administrators’ Perspectives of Democracy and Citizenship Education: Interviews with Educational Leaders.
title_short Educational Administrators’ Perspectives of Democracy and Citizenship Education: Interviews with Educational Leaders.
title_full Educational Administrators’ Perspectives of Democracy and Citizenship Education: Interviews with Educational Leaders.
title_fullStr Educational Administrators’ Perspectives of Democracy and Citizenship Education: Interviews with Educational Leaders.
title_full_unstemmed Educational Administrators’ Perspectives of Democracy and Citizenship Education: Interviews with Educational Leaders.
title_sort educational administrators’ perspectives of democracy and citizenship education: interviews with educational leaders.
publisher University of Alberta
series Journal of Contemporary Issues in Education
issn 1718-4770
publishDate 2018-12-01
description Little is known about public school educational administrators’ perspectives of democracy and citizenship education and how those perspectives shape the learning that occurs in the schools they lead. This paper presents findings of a qualitative study that used semi-structured interviews of public school educational administrators’ perspectives of democracy and citizenship education in the province of Alberta, Canada. Four participants’ detailed responses were analyzed using an interpretive phenomenological methodology and coded into four themes. While all four participants felt that democratic and citizenship education were important, their conceptualizations varied widely and only one participant was found to lead in a way that encouraged democratically desirable education. Findings suggest that some educational administrators do not necessarily understand their role or responsibility in the education of democracy and citizenship within the schools they lead. Moreover, this study suggests that factors that hinder democratic and citizenship education are: school administrators’ preference to remain obedient to a top-down approach of school management; resource taxing administrative obligations and; a misunderstanding of ‘thick’ democracy. Factors that were found to facilitate democratic and citizenship education include: physical school and learning program design and; democratic school leadership.
url https://journals.library.ualberta.ca/jcie/index.php/JCIE/article/view/29349
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