What is it about?

This paper develops a construct of teacher system leadership and examines how teachers can lead from below. Three different meanings of the term are identified: interschool leadership; a systemic leadership orientation and identity; and leadership of the school system as a whole. s. Professional development networks and school collaborations provide a range of distinct contexts for interschool leadership by teacher leaders and these are identified. . The model of teacher activist professional identity provides a starting point for analysing teacher system leadership identity. Teacher leaders can and do influence system-wide change and, to conceptualize this, the concept of system leadership from below is introduced.

Featured Image

Why is it important?

The increasing importance of educational collaborations and networks that blur organizational boundaries requires conceptual developments in leadership theory. One approach to both theorizing and promoting such phenomena is through the idea of system leadership. Previous descriptions of system leadership, and policy initiatives related to it, have focused on headteachers and senior leaders. However, teacher leaders may also exercise system leadership in relation to all three meaning This extends existing theories of teacher and distributed leadership. Further, it is proposed that teacher leaders can, like headteachers, have a systemic leadership practice orientation that is informed by moral purposes In making this argument a number of issues and methodological tools are identified that are important in researching both headteacher and teacher system leadership in relation to the three meanings of system leadership.

Read the Original

This page is a summary of: Deepening system leadership, Educational Management Administration & Leadership, October 2013, SAGE Publications,
DOI: 10.1177/1741143213501314.
You can read the full text:

Read

Contributors

The following have contributed to this page