SCHOOL IMPROVEMENT - A STUDY OF THE ROLES OF LEADERS AND EXTERNAL CONSULTANTS

Citation
M. Ainscow et G. Southworth, SCHOOL IMPROVEMENT - A STUDY OF THE ROLES OF LEADERS AND EXTERNAL CONSULTANTS, School effectiveness and school improvement, 7(3), 1996, pp. 229-251
Citations number
12
Categorie Soggetti
Education & Educational Research
ISSN journal
09243453
Volume
7
Issue
3
Year of publication
1996
Pages
229 - 251
Database
ISI
SICI code
0924-3453(1996)7:3<229:SI-ASO>2.0.ZU;2-W
Abstract
Initiatives to bring about improvements in schools usually involve cer tain teachers taking on leadership roles. Indeed it can be argued that the tasks undertaken by such individuals are important to the success or otherwise of such developments. What is it, then, that such teache rs do when school improvement is successful? Furthermore, how best can external consultants assist teachers in carrying out these leadership roles? These are the issues addressed in this article. Specifically, the article examines the experiences of a small group of teachers who have taken on leadership roles in schools that have been successful in bringing about improvements in their work. Our engagement with the ex periences of these teachers leads us to examine some of the complexiti es involved in processes of school improvement. In particular their ac counts point to the significant impact of workplace culture on teacher development. As a result we conclude that those involved in leading s uch developments need to be sensitive to the peculiarities of each sch ool. In other words, what is needed is an ongoing search for what work s locally rather than the adoption of what seems to work elsewhere. Th e schools referred to in the article are all involved in a school impr ovement project co-ordinated by a team of tutors at the University of Cambridge Institute of Education. Consequently, before examining the w ork of these teachers we provide a brief outline of the project.