Leadership Strategies in Diverse Intake Environments

The case study subjected in this paper was designed to illuminate how school leadership strategies and interventions mediate external demands, in the form of the academic press, for raised outcomes, imposed from the policy environment on a school with a heterogeneous pupil population. The Norwegian...

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Main Authors: Brit Bolken Ballangrud, Jan-Merok Paulsen
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Oslo and Akershus University College of Applied Sciences 2018-11-01
Series:Nordic Journal of Comparative and International Education
Subjects:
Online Access:https://journals.hioa.no/index.php/nordiccie/article/view/2784
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spelling doaj-ce70614734474cd9a2ed73f165b720ab2020-11-25T02:32:44ZengOslo and Akershus University College of Applied SciencesNordic Journal of Comparative and International Education2535-40512018-11-0122-310.7577/njcie.2784Leadership Strategies in Diverse Intake EnvironmentsBrit Bolken Ballangrud0Jan-Merok Paulsenusn The case study subjected in this paper was designed to illuminate how school leadership strategies and interventions mediate external demands, in the form of the academic press, for raised outcomes, imposed from the policy environment on a school with a heterogeneous pupil population. The Norwegian research site is situated in a demographic environment of low pupil socioeconomic status, a group of factors that in other systems predicts 60%—70% of academic achievement. More specifically, the intake environment in which the school is situated is characterized by high ethnic heterogeneity and, for some parts, low scores on parents’ social welfare indicators. Data was collected from a school characterized as low performing, defined by pupil achievement on national tests, yet these outcomes had been progressing over time. Find-ings are based on observations as well as interviews with school leaders, teachers, the superintendent in the municipality, and pupils, together with a pupil survey. The paper analyzes various leadership strategies and interventions as mediating functions between the external academic press from the school district level and the internal cultural context of the school. Specifically, the findings suggest that building a core culture of inclusive ethos for all pupils, paired with pedagogical collaboration, and democratic and servant leadership, are important devices for mastering this form of diversity. The leadership practices and collaborative focus were furthermore anchored in a systemic and more integrative school organization that purposefully com-bined hierarchical structure with horizontal elements in a matrix-like design. https://journals.hioa.no/index.php/nordiccie/article/view/2784leadership strategieslow-performing schoolssystemic school organizationcapacity buildingtrust
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Brit Bolken Ballangrud
Jan-Merok Paulsen
spellingShingle Brit Bolken Ballangrud
Jan-Merok Paulsen
Leadership Strategies in Diverse Intake Environments
Nordic Journal of Comparative and International Education
leadership strategies
low-performing schools
systemic school organization
capacity building
trust
author_facet Brit Bolken Ballangrud
Jan-Merok Paulsen
author_sort Brit Bolken Ballangrud
title Leadership Strategies in Diverse Intake Environments
title_short Leadership Strategies in Diverse Intake Environments
title_full Leadership Strategies in Diverse Intake Environments
title_fullStr Leadership Strategies in Diverse Intake Environments
title_full_unstemmed Leadership Strategies in Diverse Intake Environments
title_sort leadership strategies in diverse intake environments
publisher Oslo and Akershus University College of Applied Sciences
series Nordic Journal of Comparative and International Education
issn 2535-4051
publishDate 2018-11-01
description The case study subjected in this paper was designed to illuminate how school leadership strategies and interventions mediate external demands, in the form of the academic press, for raised outcomes, imposed from the policy environment on a school with a heterogeneous pupil population. The Norwegian research site is situated in a demographic environment of low pupil socioeconomic status, a group of factors that in other systems predicts 60%—70% of academic achievement. More specifically, the intake environment in which the school is situated is characterized by high ethnic heterogeneity and, for some parts, low scores on parents’ social welfare indicators. Data was collected from a school characterized as low performing, defined by pupil achievement on national tests, yet these outcomes had been progressing over time. Find-ings are based on observations as well as interviews with school leaders, teachers, the superintendent in the municipality, and pupils, together with a pupil survey. The paper analyzes various leadership strategies and interventions as mediating functions between the external academic press from the school district level and the internal cultural context of the school. Specifically, the findings suggest that building a core culture of inclusive ethos for all pupils, paired with pedagogical collaboration, and democratic and servant leadership, are important devices for mastering this form of diversity. The leadership practices and collaborative focus were furthermore anchored in a systemic and more integrative school organization that purposefully com-bined hierarchical structure with horizontal elements in a matrix-like design.
topic leadership strategies
low-performing schools
systemic school organization
capacity building
trust
url https://journals.hioa.no/index.php/nordiccie/article/view/2784
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