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Culture and leadership in educational administration: a historical study of what was and what might have been

Version 2 2024-06-03, 07:45
Version 1 2006-08-01, 00:00
journal contribution
posted on 2024-06-03, 07:45 authored by R Bates
This paper examines the consequences for school leadership of the abandonment of Waller's insights into the school as a social organism and the embracing of the cult of efficiency as the foundation for the analysis of school culture. Tracing the separation of conception from execution, leadership from teaching, administration from education through the cult of professionalism and functionalist sociology, the paper argues that a more appropriate basis for understanding both leadership and the culture of the school can be derived from ethnographies of schooling which show the complex interactions of internal and external cultures in the construction of leadership and the culture of the school. <br>

History

Related Materials

Location

Abingdon, England

Language

eng

Publication classification

C1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal, C Journal article

Copyright notice

2006, Taylor & Francis

Journal

Journal of educational administration and history

Volume

38

Pagination

155-168

ISSN

0022-0620

eISSN

1478-7431

Issue

2

Publisher

Routledge