Educational leadership, school commercialism, and neoliberal policy : understanding elementary school principals’ decision-making

This study explores how school principals in elementary settings are positioned within an education context heavily influenced by the discourses and policies of neoliberalism. By targeting principals’ decision-making on school commercialism, I analyze the impact market ideologies are having in shap...

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Main Author: Issel, Bradley
Language:English
Published: University of British Columbia 2010
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2429/25770
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spelling ndltd-UBC-oai-circle.library.ubc.ca-2429-257702018-01-05T17:24:21Z Educational leadership, school commercialism, and neoliberal policy : understanding elementary school principals’ decision-making Issel, Bradley This study explores how school principals in elementary settings are positioned within an education context heavily influenced by the discourses and policies of neoliberalism. By targeting principals’ decision-making on school commercialism, I analyze the impact market ideologies are having in shaping principals’ understandings of their roles and identities in public education. Using a qualitative research design, I interviewed seven elementary school principals in a school district in British Columbia, Canada. The key results of this study indicate that principals are in states of “cognitive dissonance” (Festinger, 1957) as they struggle to clarify the possible or actual impacts of school commercialism on pedagogy and the management of schools. Principals express a need for stringent regulatory district policy to monitor and control partnerships between schools and corporations. In addition, principals’ positioning towards dominant neoliberal consumer discourses is diverse as they enact and describe their decision-making on school commercialism. Thus, principals cannot be positioned as fully resistant to, or reproducing of, neoliberal consumer discourses. The majority of principals seek to make compromises between their philosophy of education and any perceived consequences with corporate involvement in their schools. I conclude that notions of critical leadership may be the impetus needed to resist discursive power contexts associated with market ideologies and neoliberal policies. I have used pseudonyms to protect the identity of the people and places involved in this study. Education, Faculty of Educational Studies (EDST), Department of Graduate 2010-06-15T18:45:08Z 2010-06-15T18:45:08Z 2010 2010-11 Text Thesis/Dissertation http://hdl.handle.net/2429/25770 eng Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/ University of British Columbia
collection NDLTD
language English
sources NDLTD
description This study explores how school principals in elementary settings are positioned within an education context heavily influenced by the discourses and policies of neoliberalism. By targeting principals’ decision-making on school commercialism, I analyze the impact market ideologies are having in shaping principals’ understandings of their roles and identities in public education. Using a qualitative research design, I interviewed seven elementary school principals in a school district in British Columbia, Canada. The key results of this study indicate that principals are in states of “cognitive dissonance” (Festinger, 1957) as they struggle to clarify the possible or actual impacts of school commercialism on pedagogy and the management of schools. Principals express a need for stringent regulatory district policy to monitor and control partnerships between schools and corporations. In addition, principals’ positioning towards dominant neoliberal consumer discourses is diverse as they enact and describe their decision-making on school commercialism. Thus, principals cannot be positioned as fully resistant to, or reproducing of, neoliberal consumer discourses. The majority of principals seek to make compromises between their philosophy of education and any perceived consequences with corporate involvement in their schools. I conclude that notions of critical leadership may be the impetus needed to resist discursive power contexts associated with market ideologies and neoliberal policies. I have used pseudonyms to protect the identity of the people and places involved in this study. === Education, Faculty of === Educational Studies (EDST), Department of === Graduate
author Issel, Bradley
spellingShingle Issel, Bradley
Educational leadership, school commercialism, and neoliberal policy : understanding elementary school principals’ decision-making
author_facet Issel, Bradley
author_sort Issel, Bradley
title Educational leadership, school commercialism, and neoliberal policy : understanding elementary school principals’ decision-making
title_short Educational leadership, school commercialism, and neoliberal policy : understanding elementary school principals’ decision-making
title_full Educational leadership, school commercialism, and neoliberal policy : understanding elementary school principals’ decision-making
title_fullStr Educational leadership, school commercialism, and neoliberal policy : understanding elementary school principals’ decision-making
title_full_unstemmed Educational leadership, school commercialism, and neoliberal policy : understanding elementary school principals’ decision-making
title_sort educational leadership, school commercialism, and neoliberal policy : understanding elementary school principals’ decision-making
publisher University of British Columbia
publishDate 2010
url http://hdl.handle.net/2429/25770
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