Abstract

Educational inclusion of foreign pupils has become a priority objective in recent years in many countries worldwide. Attending to the cultural diversity of pupils and providing an inclusive educational response is now a main goal of education systems. In this context, educational leadership is a key factor for school improvement. Management teams face the difficult mission of responding to the diversity of people that make up the educational community in a scenario marked by the expansive increase in migrant families and the scarcity of inclusive and intercultural government programmes. This article explores good management practices for cultural diversity management in six early childhood and primary education centres in Spain and Chile from an inclusive leadership approach. Factors that influence the development of inclusive leadership and the process deployed to carry out diversity management are examined. Through a qualitative methodology, six case studies were carried out using the interview, participant observation, and document analysis as instruments. The main outcomes show the importance of leaders in promoting an inclusive collaborative culture, in classroom practices focused on the knowledge and cultural capital of foreign pupils, the development of organisational and didactic strategies based on the recognition and participation of the educational community, its commitment to social justice, a management of diversity based on collaboration, and a shared concept of educational inclusion. The conclusions show four common dimensions in the good practices of each country: professional development of the community, school participation, inclusive school culture, and positive management of diversity.

Highlights

  • Responding to the diversity of migrant students and building inclusive schools are nowadays essential needs for the different education systems worldwide

  • One of the urgent issues in terms of inclusion is the management of cultural diversity: an inherent element of today’s schools and one which requires edu‐ cational practices that meet the needs of foreign pupils and migrant communities (Essomba, 2006)

  • The management teams from the six schools pro‐ mote the positioning of the professionals involved in the inclusion of foreign pupils

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Summary

Introduction

Responding to the diversity of migrant students and building inclusive schools are nowadays essential needs for the different education systems worldwide. Inclusive education has become an essential issue in the inter‐ national scope (Ainscow, 2020). Goal 4 of the 2030 agenda for sustainable development calls upon us to ensure inclusive and equitable quality education and Social Inclusion, 2021, Volume 9, Issue 4, Pages 69–80 promote lifelong learning opportunities for all (Agenda 2030, 2015). To achieve this aim, school practices based on inclusive values are needed, establishing a clear and common concept of inclusive education for the entire educational community (Booth & Ainscow, 2015). Social and educational policies try to promote attention to diversity from an intercultural perspective, we note that this does not always translate into practices that bring with them the principles and values of intercultur‐ ality and inclusive education

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