社论

IF 1.1 Q3 EDUCATION & EDUCATIONAL RESEARCH
Terry Wrigley
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Mette Liljenberg and Ulf Blossing’s paper based on research in Sweden considers the relationship between school strategy aimed at improving the quality of education and the need to satisfy teachers’ professional needs and interests. The research had a particular focus on working in teams. Particular difficulties highlighted in this report include the use of meetings simply to transfer information; too many short-term improvement projects being introduced in response to external policy initiatives; distribution of leadership roles with inadequate clarification of purpose; discontinuity of understandings of the whole school’s development over time. The authors point to the incoherence and lack of direction that occurs when school leadership has too liberal an attitude, allowing teachers to go their own way. 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引用次数: 0

摘要

几十年来,积极参与教育变革的专业需求一直是学校改进文献中的一个问题。本期文章通过在世界不同地区、不同学校系统、各种课程领域和不同学生群体进行的研究,丰富了对这个问题的理解。它提出了一些问题,如成功的分布式领导的条件、组织和关系的认知和情感方面之间的平衡、参与政策制定、课程开发的连贯环境、与学术研究人员的伙伴关系,以及社会工作者等其他专业人员的作用。Mette Liljenberg和Ulf Blossing的论文基于瑞典的研究,考虑了旨在提高教育质量的学校战略与满足教师专业需求和兴趣的需要之间的关系。这项研究特别注重团队合作。本报告强调的特别困难包括利用会议只是为了传递信息;为应对外部政策举措而推出的短期改善项目过多;领导角色的分配,目的说明不充分;随着时间的推移,对整个学校发展的理解不连续。作者指出,当学校领导层的态度过于自由,允许教师走自己的路时,就会出现不连贯和缺乏方向的情况。关键问题是让教师充分参与整个学校发展战略的制定,最大限度地减少个人愿望和整个学校进步之间的紧张关系。教师合作也是澳大利亚学校改进的一个关键问题。乔安妮·凯西(Joanne Casey)、苏珊·西蒙(Susan Simon)和韦恩·格雷厄姆(Wayne Graham)考虑了在复杂的中学环境中与多名同事、学生和家长互动的认知和情感挑战。采取“筒仓”心态来控制自己的处境太容易了。与许多英语国家一样,澳大利亚的中学建立在跨学生社会组织的部门人员配置结构的基础上,这给信息流动造成了障碍。作者们进行了有趣的讨论,并分享了对发展合作有意义的想法。Iman Tohidian和Saeed Ghiasi Nodoshan专注于伊朗学校的英语教师。他们讨论了中央举措可能失败的一些原因。根据国际上关于在许多不同情况下学校改进的研究结果,教师参与课程改革的必要性是显而易见的。文章解释说,尽管现实环境中的沟通技能是一个中心目标,但学校系统是以测试为导向的。尽管政策制定者已经认识到全球化对语言教学的要求,但他们与教师的工作脱节,未能利用教师的知识,特别是他们对年轻人兴趣的认识,以及培养对文化差异敏感性的必要性。作者们呼吁专业人士更加民主地参与政策,而不是集中的自上而下的改革。Krcrystalla Kyritsi和John Davis的第四篇论文探讨了在992882 IMP0010.1177/13654802219992882改进学校编辑编辑编辑2021的背景下,创造一种支持儿童创造力的连贯职业文化的重要性
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Editorial
The need for active professional engagement in educational change has been a constant issue in the school improvement literature for many decades. The articles in this issue provide an enriched understanding of this question, through research developed in different parts of the world, different school systems, a variety of curriculum areas, and for different groups of students. It raises issues such as the conditions for successful distributed leadership, the balance between cognitive and emotional aspects of organisations and relationships, engagement in policy making, coherent environments for curriculum development, partnerships with academic researchers, and the role of other professionals such as social workers. Mette Liljenberg and Ulf Blossing’s paper based on research in Sweden considers the relationship between school strategy aimed at improving the quality of education and the need to satisfy teachers’ professional needs and interests. The research had a particular focus on working in teams. Particular difficulties highlighted in this report include the use of meetings simply to transfer information; too many short-term improvement projects being introduced in response to external policy initiatives; distribution of leadership roles with inadequate clarification of purpose; discontinuity of understandings of the whole school’s development over time. The authors point to the incoherence and lack of direction that occurs when school leadership has too liberal an attitude, allowing teachers to go their own way. The crucial issue is to involve teachers fully in development of the whole school’s development strategy, to minimise the tension between personal desires and whole school improvement. Teacher collaboration is also a key issue for school improvement in Australia. Joanne Casey, Susan Simon and Wayne Graham consider the cognitive and emotional challenges of interacting with multiple colleagues, students and parents in the complex environment of secondary schools. It is too easy to adopt a ‘silo’ mentality to make one’s situation manageable. Australian secondary schools, like many English speaking countries, are based on a departmental staffing structure which cuts across the social organisation of students, creating obstacles to the flow of information. The authors engage in an interesting discussion and share ideas with implications for developing collaboration. Iman Tohidian and Saeed Ghiasi Nodooshan focus on teachers of English in Iranian schools. They discuss some of the reasons why central initiatives may be unsuccessful. In line with international findings about school improvement in many different circumstances, the need for teacher engagement in curriculum reforms is clear. The article explains that, whereas communication skills in realistic settings are a central aim, the school system is oriented to testing. Though policy makers have recognised the demands of globalization on language teaching, they are disconnected from teachers’ work and fail to draw on the knowledge of teachers, in particular their sense of young people’s interests and the need to develop a sensitivity to cultural differences. The writers call for more democratic involvement of professionals in policy, as against centralised top-down reforms. The fourth paper, by Krystallila Kyritsi and John Davis, looks at the importance of creating a coherent professional culture which supports childhood creativity within the context of the 992882 IMP0010.1177/1365480221992882Improving SchoolsEditorial editorial2021
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来源期刊
Improving Schools
Improving Schools EDUCATION & EDUCATIONAL RESEARCH-
CiteScore
5.50
自引率
0.00%
发文量
4
期刊介绍: Improving Schools is for all those engaged in school development, whether improving schools in difficulty or making successful schools even better. The journal includes contributions from across the world with an increasingly international readership including teachers, heads, academics, education authority staff, inspectors and consultants. Improving Schools has created a forum for the exchange of ideas and experiences. Major national policies and initiatives have been evaluated, to share good practice and to highlight problems. The journal also reports on visits to successful schools in diverse contexts, and includes book reviews on a wide range of developmental issues.
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