Publication | Open Access
CHANGE FORCES: IMPLEMENTING CHANGE IN A SECONDARY SCHOOL FOR THE COMMON GOOD
24
Citations
20
References
2012
Year
Unknown Venue
Professional LearningThe Common GoodEducationChange ForcesAdministrative LeadershipElementary EducationTeacher LeadershipBureaucracyTeacher EducationManagementEducational AdministrationTeacher DevelopmentSchool FunctioningPublic PolicyEducational LeadershipLeadershipCurriculumCase Study MethodologyTeachingSecondary EducationProfessional DevelopmentEducation ReformFoundations Of EducationStudent Affairs
In this article, we investigate the change forces that act on administrators, subject department chairpersons and teachers as they seek to implement a change in a Canadian secondary school. Using a case study methodology, our analysis of the data uses Sergiovanni’s (1998) six change forces: bureaucratic, personal, market, professional, cultural, and democratic forces. Our interpretation supports the importance of the principal and administrators, working together with teachers, in implementing change. The analysis points to the chairperson of subject departments having a crucial, but often overlooked, role in the implementation of change. Three key co-requisites that allow chairpersons to play this critical role are: the existence of a school-level democratic commitment to the common good that guides the work of professional learning; the location of professional learning within departments to operationalise the common good; and, the capacity of the chairperson to fulfil their role as an instructional leader in the fullest sense of the term.
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