Abstract

This article examines the leadership of school principals who, based on the narrative case of the Blueberry School, discuss how they as principals would have responded to a similar problematic situation regarding a school change process. The study is grounded in the context of the Norwegian National School Leadership Programme. Theoretically, the study is informed by cultural–historical activity theory. The findings exemplify how the principals’ responses encompass various viewpoints and arguments through which tensions inherent in the context of the change process are provoked and displayed. This study has three implications for school leadership and change. First, when principals experience problematic change processes at their school, they should take time to identify the tensions, discuss how to understand them and think through their implications for leadership. Second, leading these types of tension-laden change processes in schools requires analytic and reflective skills and training; thus, steps to strengthen these skills should be included in leadership programmes. Finally, there is a need for research focussing on how to conduct informed analysis to reveal tensions when problematic situations occur in school change processes. This is because informed analysis may lay the groundwork for how school leaders can utilise tensions as productive driving forces in change processes.

Highlights

  • Leadership is required to manage and sustain school changes to improve educational outcomes (Aas, 2009; Bush, 2018; Fullan, 2015; Hargreaves and Shirley, 2012; Vennebo, 2015)

  • School improvement research (Vennebo, 2015) has demonstrated leadership challenges related to dealing with problematic situations that might emanate from school change processes (Aas et al, 2016; Hargreaves and O’Connor, 2018)

  • We explain the tensions we have identified in light of the Blueberry School case situated in the Norwegian school context

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Summary

Introduction

Leadership is required to manage and sustain school changes to improve educational outcomes (Aas, 2009; Bush, 2018; Fullan, 2015; Hargreaves and Shirley, 2012; Vennebo, 2015). Change processes cannot be accomplished without active support from leaders at all levels (Harris, 2019; Mulford and Silins, 2003; Stoll et al, 2006) This insight is supported by research and is reflected. School improvement research (Vennebo, 2015) has demonstrated leadership challenges related to dealing with problematic situations that might emanate from school change processes (Aas et al, 2016; Hargreaves and O’Connor, 2018). Little is known about possible emerging constraints within processes of change and how school leaders respond to such constraints

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