Mentoring Narratives ON-LINE:Teaching the Principalship

The need to develop new models for preparation of school administrators has been a prominent concern in educational discourse in the last decade. Having been criticized for the inadequate preparation of the school leadership cadre, academic departments responsible for training future school administ...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Allison I. Griffith, Svitlana Taraban
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Arizona State University 2002-05-01
Series:Education Policy Analysis Archives
Online Access:http://epaa.asu.edu/ojs/article/view/306
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spelling doaj-5cbb435fa4dc4ea58f8272ffde205e4f2020-11-25T03:50:43ZengArizona State UniversityEducation Policy Analysis Archives1068-23412002-05-011027Mentoring Narratives ON-LINE:Teaching the PrincipalshipAllison I. GriffithSvitlana TarabanThe need to develop new models for preparation of school administrators has been a prominent concern in educational discourse in the last decade. Having been criticized for the inadequate preparation of the school leadership cadre, academic departments responsible for training future school administrators have had to revisit their approaches and to reframe their teaching philosophies to ensure the readiness of their graduates for the challenges and complexities of school leadership. This article reports on the new model of principals' training that has been used in York University's Principals' Qualification Program (PQP) from the late 1990s onward. One component of the program brings traditional case methodology into a computer-mediated/on-line environment. The on-line cases are narratives from the everyday lives of the Ontario school administrators who serve as mentors in the on-line environment. Situating our discussion within the context of the rapidly changing educational landscape of Ontario, we focus on the PQP model to explore experientially generated case narratives as one method for teaching and learning the work of the local school administrator. We focus particularly on the teaching and learning embedded in computer-mediated or on-line case narratives used in training teachers for school leadership. We argue that the complexities of school leadership—the social, cultural, relational, ethical and moral context of school leadership—can be taught effectively through the reflective processes of on-line case narratives. We seek to contribute to the ongoing dialogue on the potential of new pedagogies and new technologies to help prepare the competent and responsible leaders for tomorrow's schools. http://epaa.asu.edu/ojs/article/view/306
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
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author Allison I. Griffith
Svitlana Taraban
spellingShingle Allison I. Griffith
Svitlana Taraban
Mentoring Narratives ON-LINE:Teaching the Principalship
Education Policy Analysis Archives
author_facet Allison I. Griffith
Svitlana Taraban
author_sort Allison I. Griffith
title Mentoring Narratives ON-LINE:Teaching the Principalship
title_short Mentoring Narratives ON-LINE:Teaching the Principalship
title_full Mentoring Narratives ON-LINE:Teaching the Principalship
title_fullStr Mentoring Narratives ON-LINE:Teaching the Principalship
title_full_unstemmed Mentoring Narratives ON-LINE:Teaching the Principalship
title_sort mentoring narratives on-line:teaching the principalship
publisher Arizona State University
series Education Policy Analysis Archives
issn 1068-2341
publishDate 2002-05-01
description The need to develop new models for preparation of school administrators has been a prominent concern in educational discourse in the last decade. Having been criticized for the inadequate preparation of the school leadership cadre, academic departments responsible for training future school administrators have had to revisit their approaches and to reframe their teaching philosophies to ensure the readiness of their graduates for the challenges and complexities of school leadership. This article reports on the new model of principals' training that has been used in York University's Principals' Qualification Program (PQP) from the late 1990s onward. One component of the program brings traditional case methodology into a computer-mediated/on-line environment. The on-line cases are narratives from the everyday lives of the Ontario school administrators who serve as mentors in the on-line environment. Situating our discussion within the context of the rapidly changing educational landscape of Ontario, we focus on the PQP model to explore experientially generated case narratives as one method for teaching and learning the work of the local school administrator. We focus particularly on the teaching and learning embedded in computer-mediated or on-line case narratives used in training teachers for school leadership. We argue that the complexities of school leadership—the social, cultural, relational, ethical and moral context of school leadership—can be taught effectively through the reflective processes of on-line case narratives. We seek to contribute to the ongoing dialogue on the potential of new pedagogies and new technologies to help prepare the competent and responsible leaders for tomorrow's schools.
url http://epaa.asu.edu/ojs/article/view/306
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