Title: Leadership Matters
1Leadership Matters
- Professor Peter Earley
- London Centre for Leadership in Learning,
Institute of Education, University of London
2Outline
- Concepts of leadership
- Perspectives or theories of leadership
- Leadership styles effective leaders
- School improvement and leadership
- Recent developments e.g. NCSL
31. Conceptions of leadership
- 4 key factors and features associated with
leadership - the relationship between leadership, power and
authority - leadership is about groups, and the interaction
of people in groups - a sense of purpose and confidence that is
engendered in followers - the followers are influenced towards goal or task
achievement (Fidler, 1997).
4A definition
-
- Leadership is a process of influence leading to
the achievement of desired purposes. Successful
leaders develop a vision for their schools based
on their personal and professional values. They
articulate this vision at every opportunity and
influence their staff and other stakeholders to
share the vision. The philosophy, structures and
activities of the school are geared towards the
achievement of this shared vision' (Bush and
Glover, 2003, p8).
5Leadership
-
- Leadership is about direction setting and
inspiring others to make the journey to a new and
improved state in a school - (Davies, 2005)
6Leadership
- School leaders articulate a definition of the
organisations moral purpose. The values that
underpin this moral purpose are linked to the
vision, considering where we want to be and what
sort of organisation we want to be in the future
(Davies and Davies, 2006)
7Leadership needs to be demonstrated at all levels
in an organisation and not just at the top of the
organisational apex.
- If your organisation has only one leader then
it is almost certainly short of leadership
(Eggan, 1993) - There are many leaders, not just one.
Leadership is distributed. It resides not solely
in the individual at the top, but in every
person at every level who, in one way or another,
acts as a leader to a group of followers
wherever in the organisation that person is,
whether shop steward, team head or CEO
(Goleman et al, 2002, pp
xiii-xiv).
8Leadership, management or administration?
- Leadership - formative, proactive and
problem-solving, values, vision and mission - Management - the execution, planning, organising
and deploying of resources, or making things
happen (the implementation of school policies
and the efficient and effective maintenance of
the schools current activities, Bush and
Glover, 2003, p10) - Administration operational matters.
9- Organisations which are over-managed but
under-led eventually lose any sense of spirit or
purpose. Poorly managed organisations with strong
charismatic leaders may soar temporarily only to
crash shortly thereafterThe challenges of
modern organisations require the objective
perspective of the manager as well as the
brilliant flashes of vision and commitment that
wise leadership provides (Bolman and Deal, 1997).
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126 approaches or modelsof school leadership
- Transformational
- Moral
- Participative
- Managerial
- Contingent
- Instructional (learning-centred)
- (Leithwood et al, 1999)
13Learning-centred leadership
- Head as lead learner
- Learning is paramount (pupils, adults)
- Operating through
- Modelling
- Monitoring
- Dialogue (Southworth, 2005)
142. Perspectives or theories of leadership
- Types of explanation of how leaders lead include
- Trait theory (leadership as an attribute of
personality) - Style theory (leadership as management style)
- Contingency theory (leadership as the conjunction
of the person and the situation) - Power/influence theory (a function of power and
how it is exercised) - Trait theory (effective leadership as superior
performance).
153. Leadership styles and effective leaders
- Ineffective leaders demonstrate the following
- Personal qualities
- Lacking dynamism and failing to inspire
- Being insufficiently forceful
- Failing to be at ease with others
- Inability to accept any form of questioning or
perceived criticism
16Managerial qualities
- Being insufficiently decisive
- Failing to delegate sufficiently or leaving staff
too much to their own concerns - Failing to unite the staff, and to build a sense
of a community - Failing to communicate effectively
- Lacking proficiency in managing fellow
professionals - Failing to display interest in and concern for
staff, or to praise and celebrate their
achievements - Being disorganised and insufficiently thorough,
especially as regards administration.
(Bolam et al, 1993).
17- How leaders enact leadership or leadership
styles are important as they impact on how people
feel and are motivated to perform at higher
levels. - Effective leaders use a range of styles
- according to the demands of the situation.
18According to research by Hay-McBer there are 6
leadership styles
- Coercive (main objective immediate compliance)
- Authoritative (providing long term direction and
vision for staff) - Affiliative (creating harmony among staff and
between leaders and staff) - Democratic (building commitment among staff and
generating new ideas) - Pacesetting (accomplishing tasks to high
standards of excellence) - Coaching (main objective long term professional
development of staff).
19Highly effective leaders
- Awareness of environment
- Positive and optimistic
- Certain traits e.g. desire to be the best
willingness to take risks no blame culture
surround themselves with good people self
evaluative and self awareness new ideas.
20Highly effective leaders
- Are modest
- Self-effacing
- Good listeners
- Strong commitment to professional development
- Like people, relate well enjoy seeing them grow
(releasing intellectual capital - Bennis) - Emotional intelligence lots of it!
21- Emotional intelligence - critically important
to - effective leadership and superior performance.
- According to Daniel Goleman (1998) the higher
- an individual rises in an organisation the more
- important emotional intelligence (EQ) becomes.
225 domains of EQ
- self-awareness (ability to recognise own
emotions, strengths/weaknesses, a sense of
self-worth/confidence) - self-regulation (ability to control your emotions
rather than allowing them to control you) - motivation (strength of will needed to meet
goals, drive to improve, initiative, etc) - empathy
- social skills.
23- The first 3 domains relate to an individuals
emotions, whilst empathy and social skills refer
to other peoples emotions, the ability to
recognise them and to nurture relationships or
inspire others. Goleman (1998) claims EQ is (at
least) twice as important as IQ or technical
skills.
243 motivational competences typify outstanding
performance
- achievement drive (striving to improve or meet a
standard of excellence) - commitment (embracing the vision and goals)
- initiative and optimism (mobilising people to
seize opportunities and allowing them to take
setbacks and obstacles in their stride). - Hay-McBer - star performers versus average
performers? Stars have EQ competences.
25- Also claim that leaders can obtain 30 extra from
their people if they are able to light their
blue touch paper. This discretionary effort is
affected by the climate that is personally felt -
up to 70 of that climate is created by the team
leader by way they behave, etc. If leaders and
not only those at the top of the organisational
apex but all those with a leadership role can
ignite that touch paper then it is possible to
obtain that extra performance from team members. - It is stated that for leaders (at all levels) EQ
is 90 of what separates star performers from
others.
264. Successful school leadership and school
improvement
- Leadership has significant effects on student
learning, second only to the effects of the
quality of curriculum and teachers instruction - Currently, heads and teacher leaders provide
most of the leadership in schools, but other
potential sources of leadership exist
27Successful school leadership and school
improvement
- A core set of leadership practices form the
basics of successful leadership and are
valuable in almost all educational contexts
(these basics are setting directions,
developing people, developing the organisation) - Successful school leaders respond productively to
challenges and opportunities created by the
accountability-oriented policy context in which
they work - Successful school leaders respond productively to
the opportunities and challenges of educating
diverse groups of students - (Leithwood Riehl, 2003, pp2-7 cited in NCSL,
2003).
28Three new metaphors are needed for the school
leader
- As educator focusing on teaching and learning
- As community builder working with parents and
members of the school community, with
professional staff and young people and - As moral steward investing heavily in defining
values (Murphy, 2002, p187).
295. Developing school leaders and leadership
capacity
- Recent developments in England include
- The National College for School Leadership (2000)
- The National Professional Qualification for Heads
(NPQH) aspiring heads - Headteacher Support Programme - new heads in
first two years in post - Head for the Future (formerly LPSH) 4 day
programme for heads in post for 4 years - Other College programmes e.g. Leading from the
Middle, Leadership Pathways, Advanced Leaders
30Conclusion
- Leaders are people who lead through developing
new skills, capabilities and understandings. And
they come from many places within the
organisation (Senge, 1990) - Modern notions of leadership, including
distributed leadership, rely heavily on
leadership, alongside effective management, being
successfully demonstrated at the apex of the
organisation. - Leading and managing schools in the 21st Century
will require a recognition that both leadership
and management are crucial - and that all the
resources available to the school need to be
developed.
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32Leadership Matters
- Professor Peter Earley
- London Centre for Leadership in Learning,
Institute of Education, University of London