TY - JOUR
T1 - How can both scholars and school leaders engage with educational leadership from a relational perspective?'
AU - Crawford, MP
PY - 2016/9/1
Y1 - 2016/9/1
N2 - In any field, we can get stuck within the same parameters of thinking and doing. As
we build up a research profile, it is sometimes easier to not engage with ideas and
practices that are outside our own comfort zones. Writing this short article has
allowed me to connect with many areas in the field of educational administration that
I had either not considered, or had looked at only briefly. Reading about engaging
with educational leadership relationally has not only allowed me to consider Scott
Eacott’s recent work (2015a; Eacott In press 2016), but also begin to consider where
the field is moving in the next decade, and the gap between theory and practice.
Eacott argues (2015) that administration should engage with educational leadership in
particular. His work focuses on the idea that ‘leadership’ is “not an external knowable
entity, but the product of cognition – a social construction.” (p.4) He claims that
mobilizing a relational approach means that schools can unpick some of the
normative assumptions, which many of us have regarding what ‘leadership’, is, and
its explanatory value for both research and practice. It could be, he argues, that we
should recast our ways of thinking about organizing, in order to make the everyday
experiences of organizational life strange. This paper will ask whether the explanatory
power or descriptive value of relations is a stimulus for new thinking, or a return to
older values and assumptions. Eacott asks scholars to debate whether relational
approaches are at the cutting edge of contemporary thought and analysis, and if they
are, how can we theorise and understand relations in the organising of education and
educational labour?
AB - In any field, we can get stuck within the same parameters of thinking and doing. As
we build up a research profile, it is sometimes easier to not engage with ideas and
practices that are outside our own comfort zones. Writing this short article has
allowed me to connect with many areas in the field of educational administration that
I had either not considered, or had looked at only briefly. Reading about engaging
with educational leadership relationally has not only allowed me to consider Scott
Eacott’s recent work (2015a; Eacott In press 2016), but also begin to consider where
the field is moving in the next decade, and the gap between theory and practice.
Eacott argues (2015) that administration should engage with educational leadership in
particular. His work focuses on the idea that ‘leadership’ is “not an external knowable
entity, but the product of cognition – a social construction.” (p.4) He claims that
mobilizing a relational approach means that schools can unpick some of the
normative assumptions, which many of us have regarding what ‘leadership’, is, and
its explanatory value for both research and practice. It could be, he argues, that we
should recast our ways of thinking about organizing, in order to make the everyday
experiences of organizational life strange. This paper will ask whether the explanatory
power or descriptive value of relations is a stimulus for new thinking, or a return to
older values and assumptions. Eacott asks scholars to debate whether relational
approaches are at the cutting edge of contemporary thought and analysis, and if they
are, how can we theorise and understand relations in the organising of education and
educational labour?
UR - https://pearl.plymouth.ac.uk/context/pioe-research/article/1087/viewcontent/FINAL_20JEAL_20__20Engaging_20with_20_20Educational_20leadership_20relationally_20_20_1_.pdf
M3 - Article
VL - 0
JO - Journal of Educational Administration and Foundations
JF - Journal of Educational Administration and Foundations
IS - 0
ER -