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Educational Leadership and Organization Theories

Educational Leadership and Organization Theories. Activity 1 (10 mins). What traits do you think characterize successful leaders? What are your expectations of a school leader? . Educational Leadership.

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Educational Leadership and Organization Theories

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  1. Educational Leadership and Organization Theories

  2. Activity 1 (10 mins) • What traits do you think characterize successful leaders? • What are your expectations of a school leader?

  3. Educational Leadership “Several thousand empirical studies have been conducted on leader traits, behaviour, power and situational variables as predictors of leadership effectiveness, but most of the results are contradictory and inconclusive.” (Yukl 1998)

  4. Management vs. Leadership What are the differences between a manager/administrator and a leader?

  5. Management vs. Leadership

  6. Management vs. Leadership

  7. Management vs. Leadership • Reflection (10mins): • In schools, we too often see an emphasis on doing things right, at the expense of doing the right things. Discuss.

  8. Management vs. Leadership • Doing things right at the expense of doing the right things • Attaining the IT competence levels becomes substitutes for changes and improvement in teaching practice • Scores on teacher appraisal systems become substitutes good teaching • QAI becomes a substitute for quality education • Improvement plans becomes substitutes for improvement outcomes

  9. Management vs. Leadership • Doing things right at the expense of doing the right things • Discipline plans become substitutes for student control • Public examination results becomes substitutes for students’ learning experience • Congeniality becomes a substitute for collegiality • etc.

  10. Organization Structure Leadership Educational Leadership

  11. Organization Theory

  12. Industrial revolution 1930’s 1960’s 1990’s Classical Theory Division of labour Span of control Hierarchy Goal definition Extrinsic rewards Social System Theory Human relations Informal groups Intrinsic rewards Psychological needs Open System Theory Input-output Event cycles Environmental exchanges Information theory Contemporary Theory Contingency theory TQM Self-organization Dynamical systems Chaos theory The evolution of Organization Theory

  13. School as a Bureaucratic Organization (1) • Bureaucracy: • a model of organizational structure developed from the turn of the 20th Century • originated with • Max Weber, a German sociologist • Henri Fayol, a French industrialist • Frederick Taylor, an American Engineer • Industrial Revolution: mass production, division of labour, high productivity and efficiency, etc.

  14. School as a Bureaucratic Organization (2) • Bureaucracy: • (in Weber’s term) an authority structure based on rational behaviour • Weber defined a set of organizational principles which he thought could be applied UNIVERSALLY • Application of the principles would lead to high productivity

  15. School as a Bureaucratic Organization (3) • Principles of organization • Hierarchical Structure • Specialization (division of labour) • Control by Rules • Impersonal Relationships • Career Orientation

  16. Hierarchical Structure • Authority in an organization is distributed in a pyramidal configuration • each official is responsible for his or her subordinates’ actions and decisions

  17. School Leader Deputy Assistant Deputy Head of Dept. Head of Dept. Head of Dept. Deputy Head Deputy Head Assistant Head Assistant Head Promoted Teacher Promoted Teacher Promoted Teacher Assistant Teacher Assistant Teacher Assistant Teacher Assistant Teacher Assistant Teacher Assistant Teacher Typical school structure in England Deputy Head Assistant Head

  18. School Leader Deputy Head Teacher Teacher Teacher Teacher Teacher Teacher Typical school structure in Denmark

  19. Organizational Structure of HKEd

  20. Specialization • Tasks are too complex for everyone to learn with equal competence • greater efficiency results when tasks are divided into specialty areas with individuals assigned to them according to their training, skills and experience.

  21. Control by Rules • Official decisions and actions are directed by codified rules (Dos and don’ts) : • Assuring • UNIFORMITY; • PREDICTABILITY and • STABILITY

  22. Impersonal Relationships • Control over people and activities can be established more efficiently if purely personal, emotional, and irrational elements are ELIMINATED. • The members are subject to strict and systematic discipline in the conduct and control of their offices

  23. Career Orientation • Employment is based on expertise • Promotion is given according to seniority and/or merit • Salary is tied to rank in the hierarchy • pension and retirement provision exists • On the whole, this promotes the establishment of a STABLEcareer oriented class or staff

  24. School as a Bureaucratic Organization (4) • Leadership • The leader is seen as the ‘HERO’ who stands at the top of a complex pyramid of power • To assess the problems, consider alternatives, and make ‘RATIONAL’ choices • To fend off threats from the environment

  25. Workers Quality Control Pass Customer Raw Materials Process Fail Discard/Rework School as a Factory

  26. Teachers Exams Primary School Leavers Further Education Training Workforce Pass Teaching Fail Resit School as a Factory

  27. School as a Factory • Our schools are, in a sense, factories in which the raw materials (children) are to be shaped and fashioned into products to meet the various demands of life. The specifications for manufacturing come from the demands of the society, the it is the business of the school to build its students according to the specifications laid down. This demands good tools, specialized machinery, continuous measurement of production to see if it is according to specifications, the elimination of waste in manufacture, and a large variety in the output.

  28. Activity 2.1 (15 mins) • Consider the extent to which the classical/bureaucratic model applies in the school where you work or one known to you. Identify its strengths and weaknesses.

  29. Unanticipated Consequences of the Bureaucratic Model (1) • Attempts to incorporate rational procedures in organizations such as schools can lead to unintended consequences that are inefficient and limit the system’s overall operation.

  30. Unanticipated Consequences of the Bureaucratic Model (2) • The limits of rationality • Goal Ambiguity • Deterring the process of change • Anticipating the unexpected • Minimum performance levels • Goal displacement • Coordination collapse • Hyperrationality

  31. The limits to rationality (1) • Decision in schools may be anything but a rational process. The considered choice from among a range of alternatives is the exception rather than the rule in many school situations. • When different people interpret and implement the same rule, the possibility of different courses of action being taken is very real.

  32. The limits to rationality (2) • Three types of constraints to rationality (Herbert Simon): • The skills, habits, and reflexes that are more or less unconscious and that determine automatically an individual’s performance • The motivations, values, loyalties, and vested interests of individuals • The amount of precise information available on the subject

  33. Goal ambiguity • It may not be easy to establish the real goals of the institution as opposed to their formal aims. • It is even more difficult to judge whether these often vague purposes have been achieved. • Example 1 • Example 2

  34. Deterring the process of change (1) • The bureaucratic model is best suited to stable conditions but operate less well in periods of rapid change. • In a hierarchy of 5 levels, for instance, there are at least four people who can veto a good idea coming from the lowest level (which, of course, is nearest to the problem at hand.) • Professional staff have an authority of expertise which may be just as legitimate as the official authority of the head

  35. Deterring the process of change (2) • Good teachers often leave the classroom for administrative positions in order to become a “success” in their profession. • Good teachers may become poor administrators.

  36. Anticipating the unexpected • Bureaucratic and rational perspectives require a measure of predictability. • Constant battering, relentless change, means the need to adapt, respond, react to events rather than measured actions. • Long-term planning gives way to planning one or two years ahead at most, and often less.

  37. Minimum performance levels • Rules provide cues for organizational members about minimum levels of acceptable performance • This type of knowledge can direct the work force of an organization to program its efforts to the minimum acceptable level

  38. Goal displacement • The conformance with regulations in all types of situations results in the goal displacement of the original goals, develops into rigidities and an inability to adjust readily (doing things right at the expense of doing the right things). • Bureaucratic dieases → “trained incapacity”, e.g. incapacity in adopting change in pedagogical practice (teacher-centred → student-centred) Hanson, E.M. (1996)

  39. Coordination collapse • The bureaucratic model implies that supervisors discharge their tasks of coordination by serving as vertical communication channels. • When a problem exists between departments, a decision is delayed until sufficient information on the issue can be passed up the hierarchy to enable a higher-level resolution. • Professional staff have an authority of expertise which may be just as legitimate as the official authority of the head.

  40. Hyperrationality (1) • Policymakers focus their efforts to rationalize the system by prescribing inputs, throughputs and outputs. • The intentions to increase efficiency, effectiveness, and accountability are often imposed on schools without changing existing conditions. The results are often logical and practical inconsistencies.

  41. Hyperrationality (2) • Distinguishing proper and excessive rationalization in education (Arthur Wise 1996): • Does the policy introduce new procedures without altering or deleting old procedures? • Does the policy prescribe output without taking notice of existing input and process prescriptions? • Does the policy imply that a structural problem can be solved by the education of an individual?

  42. Hyperrationality (2) • Distinguishing proper and excessive rationalization in education (Arthur Wise 1996): • Are tentative research findings being used to define the policy? • Are solutions being proposed on the basis of superficial, incomplete, or incorrect analyses of the problem? • Are uniform solutions being proposed for non-uniform solutions?

  43. Activity 2.2 (15 mins) • For each question posed by Wise, identify some of the local educational policies/initiatives that can be used as examples for illustration of excessive rationalization in education.

  44. Sociopolitical Systems The Hawthrone Studies (1927-32) Until late 1930s, the basic assumption was that the chief factors behind employee motivation and morale were wages and physical working conditions.

  45. Sociopolitical Systems The Hawthrone Studies (1927-32) Objective: • to test the effect of illumination on worker productivity Findings: • The production rose or fell without direct relation to the intensity of illumination at the work bench • Workers tend not to act or react as individuals but as members of informal groups (a system of interpersonal relations and norms formed within an organization)

  46. Sociopolitical Systems The Hawthrone Studies (1927-32) Findings: • A worker’s decisions about his or her level of effort depend to a great extent on the expectations and social norms of the informal groups. • For instance, workers were controlling their own productivity because they feared that management would change the piece-work rate if the consistently produced at higher levels.

  47. School as Sociopolitical Systems • Humanistic perspectives • Organizations exist for the purpose of satisfying human needs (people do not exist for the purpose of serving the needs of their organization). • The most satisfying organization would be the most efficient. • Teachers should have a feeling that the school’s goals is worth their effort and take pride in their contributions to them.

  48. School as Sociopolitical Systems • Humanistic perspectives • Mismatch between the needs of individuals and the organization will make one or both suffer. (Either the individual will be exploited, or s/he will try to exploit the organization.) • Informal groups of subordinates could take control of the production (teaching/learning) process, independent of the formal rules and regulations, of centralized power and of established.

  49. School as Sociopolitical Systems • Political perspectives • Organizations are coalitions that consists of a number of individual interest groups. • Individuals and interest groups have different values, preferences, beliefs, information, and perceptions of reality. • The goals and decisions of organizations develop by means of an ongoing process of negotiation and jockeying among individuals and groups. • Because resources are scarce and because there are lasting dissimilarities and differences, power and conflict will always remain central elements in the life of an organization.

  50. School as sociopolitical systems Democratic/ Collegial/ Participative models Political models School as Sociopolitical Systems

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