Title: Facilitating curriculum changes in school
1Facilitating curriculum changes in school
- Whole school development
- the role of school principal
2Group discussion
- In your school, what are the major difficulties
you have encountered in curriculum improvement? - How does the school authority tackle them?
- Time 20 minutes
3Values and beliefs
- People uphold different values and beliefs
- aims and goals of education
- means of education
- willingness to involve
- etc.
- This variation not only the societal level
- also in school
- (see for example, Finnan Levin, 2000)
4Reflection
- Many researches indicate the existence of school
culture (Hargreaves, Sarason etc.) - At the school level, it is not difficult to
identify some distinctive cultural traits,
particularly in well-established schools - But do teachers all agree with the values and
beliefs of the dominant school culture? - What is your observation?
5- Such differences among sub-groups in school can
also be found in societal level. - Chinese culture
- do all the chinese uphold the same values and
beliefs in all areas?
6- The concept of culture, whether used to describe
schools or larger societies is not easy to
define. It is something that surrounds us, gives
meaning to our world and is constantly being
constructed both through our interactions with
others and through our reflections on life and
our world. Culture is so implicit in what we do
that it dulls our knowledge that it is there. - (Finnan Levin, 2000, p.88)
7- The seemingly contradictory fact that culture is
both conservative and ever changing. On the one
hand, culture is essentially conservative,
protecting people from that unknown, providing
answers to what would otherwise be unanswerable.
On the other hand, culture is also ever changing.
It adapts to influences from other cultures and
from changes in the physical, social and - political environment.
-
- (Finnan Levin, 2000, p.88)
8- At the societal, school culture is more
appropriately termed the culture of schooling. It
is at this level that culture appears to be most
conservative and resistant to change, because it
exists primarily at an abstract, generalized
level. The culture of schooling creates and
perpetuates the image members of our society call
forth when they think of education, schools and
schooling. - (Finnan Levin, 2000, p.89)
9- The shared culture of schooling is responsible
for the stability is the size and design of
classrooms, in the persistence of school
activities and practices that have characterized
schooling since the beginning of the twentieth
century and in the egg crate structure vividly
described by Lortie. The culture of schooling
perpetuates a view of schooling in which teachers
are responsible for the transmission of knowledge
and culture and for shaping the minds of
children. For this reason, the public is most
comfortable when the teachinglearning process is
dominated by a teacher and textbooks. Many people
assume that learning can occur only when the
teacher orchestrates it from the front of the
class. - (Finnan Levin, 2000, p.89)
10- We use the term school culture to describe the
unique culture of each school this is culture at
the local level. A schools culture accounts for
why it feels, looks, sounds and smells different
from any other school. - (Finnan Levin, 2000, p.89-90)
11- Unlike the culture of schooling, school culture
is constantly changing. It accommodates a
continuous influx of new people (administrators,
faculty, students, parents), new directives from
the district and from state and federal agencies,
and new directions recommended by professional
organizations, institutions of higher education
and unions. School cultures may not change in the
ways external change agents want, but they do
change. - (Finnan Levin, 2000, p.90)
12- Teachers and administrators working in schools
serving at-risk children often feel inferior to
their colleagues in more affluent school. - (Finnan Levin, 2000, p.91)
13- In many schools, the culture allows for
considerable variation among teachers on how and
what to teach. This does not usually arise from a
respect for diverse teaching strategies but from
limited discourse among teachers and a lack of
communication with parents on effective teaching. - (Finnan Levin, 2000, p.92)
14- Teachers and administrators often actively and
passively resist externally imposed change
because the proposed changes do not fit their
school culture, are not well designed or are not
presented in an understandable way. There are
schools, however, that encourage and foster
change and continuous improvement, especially if
the change build on the strengths of the existing
school culture. - (Finnan Levin, 2000, p.92)
15- But individuals who join the school as staff,
parents and students also have personal histories
which reinforce school culture through
self-selection. The involvement of participants
in a school is hardly a random event. Students
from fairly homogeneous and neighborhoods attend
schools that reflect community values,
aspirations and expectation. Even when choosing
public schools outside their neighborhoods and
private schools, families select school
environments that reinforce their beliefs about
what schools should do. School staff to choose
environment and practices that they feel most
attracted to and comfortable with. - (Finnan Levin, 2000, p.92)
16- It is important to acknowledge school culture
explicitly because it has consequences for both
stability and change. We have emphasized the
stability and conserving nature of school
culture, in that it is like a vast web of
intricate and interlocking ideas, values, beliefs
and practices that protect the school from
change. Both societally and locally it protects
participants from external pressures for change
because of its comprehensive and ubiquitous
nature. Pressures for change tend to be piecemeal
can only pierce a small part of this protective
web, while the vast remainder remains intact. In
this respect school culture serves as a barrier
to change and effectively fends off attempts to
transform the school. - (Finnan Levin, 2000, p.93)
17Micropolitics in schools
- So far we have only discussed the problem of
cultural differences. - In reality, politics in school may further
aggravate the problem. - For details, we can look at the work by Ball
(1987), Henderson Hawthorne (2000) also
18Conflicts
- originated from
- ideological differences
- "refer to matters of value and philosophical
commitment." - vested interest
- "refer to the material concerns of teachers as
related to working conditions rewards from work,
career and promotion access to and control of
resources in the school
19Conflicts
- self interest
- "refer to the sense of self or identity claimed
or aspired to by the teacher, the sort of teacher
a person believes themselves to be or want to be
(e.g. subject specialist, educator, pastoralist,
administrator." -
- (Ball, 1987, p.17)
20Key concepts of the micro-political perspective
- power
- goal diversity
- ideological disputation
- conflict
- interests
- political activity
- control
- (Ball, 1987)
21Conflict perspective
- Baldridge (1971) main tenets
- 1. conflict theorists emphasizes the
fragmentation of social systems into interest
gps. each with its own particular goals - 2. conflict theorists study the interaction of
these dif. interest gps. and esp. the conflict
processes by which one gp. tries to gain adv,
over another
22Conflict perspective
- 3. interest gps. cluster around divergent values
and the study of conflicting interests is a key
part of the analysis - 4. the study of change is a central feature of
the conflict approach, for change is to be
expected if the social sys. is fragmented by
divergent values and conflicting interest gps. - (Ball, 1987, p.18)
23School An arena of struggle
- actual or potential conflict between members
- conflicts because of ideological differences,
vested interests, self-interest - maintaining control and resolve the conflicts no
fixed pattern - partly because school peculiar char. (Collins)
- structure loose, poorly coordinated
24Action and decision-making in school
- not an abstract rational process
- involve
- compromise
- negotiations
- trade-offs
- threats
- pressure
- underhand dealing
- (Ball, 1987, p.26)
25How could schools survive?
- If we agree that there are significant
differences among school members, particularly
teachers, - If teachers beliefs contradict, the whole school
may fall apart. - However, most schools have not reached that
level. - Why?
26Goals of education abstract, varied and
diversified
- So many educational decisions are value-laden and
ideological - Differences between depts and among teachers
ideological foundation - "In the normal course of events such differences
are obscured or submerged in the welter of
routine activities and interaction. - also the loose-coupling structure
27Structure of school
- "Anarchic organization"
- "It is anarchic in the sense that the
relationship between goals, members and
technology is not as clearly functional as
conventional organization theory indicates that
it will be." (Bell, 1980, p.187) - (Ball, 1987, p.12)
28- However, at times of crisis or change, or in
moments of reflection (occasional days, staff or
dept. meetings). straightforward points of
contention over practice can quickly lay bare
deep divisions in teaching ideology. - (Ball, 1987, p.14)
-
- "The ideological diversity of schools is
frequently contained by a deliberate policy of
loose-coupling. Depts. or other sub-units... are
left to their own devices. (p.15)
29School principal Important role
30The importance of principal in school success
- Hall et al. (1987) principal crucial to
success - Mortimore et al. (1988) longitudinal study of 50
schools in England - single out 'purposeful leadership of the staff by
the headteacher" key in schools found to be
effective on a variety of academic and
non-academic criteria. - "In short, the school principal more than anyone
else can bring successful school improvement into
sharp focus. - Fullan, 1992, p.96
31The importance of principal in school success
- "We have begun to make the transition fr. the
principal's role in influencing the impl. of
specific innovations to the principal's role in
leading changes in 'the school as an
organization'. The implication is that we have to
look deeper and more holistically at the
principal and the school as an organization." - (Fullan ,1992, p.84-5)
32Role of managers
- Plan deciding what to do how to do it
- Organise arranging resources the best way
- Direct Motivating people to work well
- Control Measuring performance cost
- Which of the above roles are most important?
33Principals Many roles
- change agent
- pressure regulator
- morale booster
- resource supplier
- climate generator
34Principal
- manager of operation
- major concern smooth functioning of the building
- spend more time in their office than in corridors
and classrooms, attend numerous meetings outside
of the building, remove themselves from the daily
concerns of movt. of students and life in
classrooms and establish social distance from the
faculty - Lieberman Miller, 1984, p.55
35Principal
- leader of instruction
- encourage instructional excellence, visit
classroom, talk with teachers about heir teaching
concerns, initiate program review and
revitalization - active participant in the life of the school
-
36Principal's commitment to curr. work
- "... few educational roles are less clearly
defined than that of the principal. He is
continually barraged by a series of uncoordinated
and often contradictory sets of expectations fr.
dif. groups from within and outside his own
school community. - (Ross, 1980, p.219)
- "Research consistently found that a large
percentage of principals (at least one-half) were
preoccupied with adm. work and organizational
maintenance activities. - (Fullan, 1984, p.100)
37Management styles
- Four types
- interpersonal
- managerial
- adversarial
- authoritarian
- (Ball, 1987, p.87)
38- Interpersonal head
- "rely primarily on personal relationships and
face-to- face contact to fulfill their role" - Managerial head
- "have major recourse to committees, memoranda
and formal procedures" - Adversarial head
- "tends to relish argument and confrontation to
maintain control"
39- Authoritarian head
- "avoids and stifles argument in favour of dictat"
- (Ball, 1987, p.87)
- "An understanding of the way that schools change
(or stay the same) and therefore of the practical
limits and possibilities of educational devt.,
must take account of intra-organization process." - (Ball, 1987, p.3)
40Interpersonal
- mobile and visible head
- personal interaction, face to face contact
- individual negotiation and compromises
- informality
- communication does not flow through a formal
hierarchy - staff members are encouraged to think of
themselves as autonomous professionals - set up a sense of mutual obligation, loyalty,
consideration
41Interpersonal
- weaknesses
- the decision-making mechanism comes to be seen as
an elusive and mysterious process as inaccessible
and behind doors - absence of structure, procedures and methods
- the divine right of heads
- to make it successful, headteacher needs to have
excellent social skills - "charisma"
- (Ball, 1987)
42Managerial
- industrial manager
- the head, normally surrounded by a senior
management team - formal structure of meetings and committees
- supported and outlined by written communication
- educational concerns also formally defined
bureaucratic - information and inf. flow thr. the formal
channels and structures
43Adversarial
- rests primarily upon the vehicle of talk
- crucial areas of talk are public rather than
private - emphasis on dialogue and not infrequently on
confrontation - competing interests and ideologies in the school
recognized
44Adversarial
- emphasis is upon persuasion and commitment
- success depends on the ability of the head to
cope with the uncertainties of the relatively
unorganized public debate i.e. to deal with
attacks, to persuade waverers, to provide
reasoned argument etc. - allies must be encouraged, at times rewarded
opponents neutralized or satisfied, as the
occasion demands
45Authoritarian
- assert
- statement
- opposition is avoided, disabled or simply ignored
- to reduce talk to a one-way flow
46Char. of principal's work
- 1. A low no. of self-initiated tasks
- 2. Many activities of short duration
- 3. Discontinuity caused by interruptions
- 4. The superseding of prior plans by the needs of
others in the organization - 5. Face-to-face verbal contacts with one other
person - 6. Variability of tasks
47Char. of principal's work
- 7. An extensive network of individuals and groups
- 8. A hectic and unpredictable flow of work
- 9. Numerous unimpt. decisions and trivial agendas
- 10.Few attempts at written communication
- 11.Interactions predominately with subordinates
- 12.A preference for problems an information that
are specific (rather than general), concrete,
solvable and currently pressing - (Pitner, 1982 Mannasse, 1985, 442)
48Basic dilemma of headteacher
- maintenance of pol. stability within the
organization - achieve control (domination) commitment
(integration) - The 4 leadership styles are all means to this
end. - The stability may be dynamic and radical
(adversorial mode) or static and conservative
(authoritarian mode) - Stability may be emphasized in terms of
community and relationship (interpersonal mode)
or in terms of structures, roles, and procedures - ( Ball, 1987, p.120)
49Teacher's autonomy
- a major compromise between freedom and control
- it may be an illusion of freedom
- as teacher's autonomy is interpreted as limited
to classroom business - this limits the range of concerns over which the
teacher can exercise influence
50Advice from curriculum change theorists
- Hargreaves, 1995
- Hargreaves, 1998
- Glatthorn, 1997
- Henderson Hawthorne, 2000
- Blasé Blasé, 1998
- Sarason, 1996
- Nias et al. 1992
51- But one can use school culture as a vehicle for
effecting and sustaining change, rather than
trying to undermine it directly or get around it
surreptitiously. It is unfortunate that school
culture is viewed only as a conserving force and
not one that might be used for transformation. -
- (Finnan Levin, 2000, p.93)
52- Establish a shared language, a process for
ongoing communication, research and professional
interactions, a highly participatory governance
structure that incorporates all members and the
involvement of significant other parts of the
educational system to support the process of
change. - (Finnan Levin, 2000, p.93)
53Effective middle manager
- need to operate at all modes no single perfect
style - whatever style, should be open, clear and
consistent - should show to have a major concern for achieving
tasks and for fulfilling the soc. and prof. needs
of colleagues - adaptable to match constantly changing situations
- lead by example
- facilitate others to be leaders
- (Earley Fletcher-Campbell, 1990, p.198)
54Team building strategies
- willingness to share information, experience and
expertise - well-organized meetings
- sharing of dept and faculty responsibilities
- regular social events
- existence of dept. and faculty offices.
- (Earley Fletcher-Campbell, 1990, p.198 )