Taking the Lead: Understanding Student Leadership in Atlantic Canadian Secondary Schools

Participation and student voice are important components of childhood and adolescence. Leadership, when described as individuals with specific motives and values mobilizing others towards a common goal, is one form of participation and student voice (Kort, 2008; MacNeil, 2006; Thomson, 2012). Often,...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Myatt, Haley
Other Authors: Department of Child and Youth Studies
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: Brock University 2023
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10464/17793
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spelling ftbrockuniv:oai:dr.library.brocku.ca:10464/17793 2023-07-16T03:59:38+02:00 Taking the Lead: Understanding Student Leadership in Atlantic Canadian Secondary Schools Myatt, Haley Department of Child and Youth Studies 2023-05-10T13:07:26Z http://hdl.handle.net/10464/17793 eng eng Brock University http://hdl.handle.net/10464/17793 student leadership leadership secondary school student government Atlantic Canada Electronic Thesis or Dissertation 2023 ftbrockuniv 2023-06-27T22:10:58Z Participation and student voice are important components of childhood and adolescence. Leadership, when described as individuals with specific motives and values mobilizing others towards a common goal, is one form of participation and student voice (Kort, 2008; MacNeil, 2006; Thomson, 2012). Often, students’ first platforms for leadership opportunities and active participation are through extracurricular activities like student councils; however, there is limited research on youth leadership (Karagianni & Montgomery, 2017). Using the Social Change Model of Leadership, as well as Transformational and Transactional Leadership theories, this research project examines and questions the role that secondary school student councils play in the development of leadership in Atlantic Canada: nineteen secondary school students from Nova Scotia, New Brunswick, Prince Edward Island and Newfoundland and Labrador contributed their leadership perceptions in a thirty-six question, online, qualitative survey. The survey poses questions about social identifiers, experiences in student government, and understandings of leadership and student leadership. What emerges is a spectrum of lived experiences within leadership, the prevalence of binaries in participants’ thinking about quality leadership and identified inequalities within the practice of leadership. Overall, leadership is understood by the participants as being positionally-based and centered within discovering, establishing, and maintaining relations with followers. Participants’’ definitions of what a leader is are incredibly situational. This topic warrants further research and deeper opportunities for young people to directly share their experiences. Thesis Newfoundland Prince Edward Island Brock University Digital Repository Canada Newfoundland
institution Open Polar
collection Brock University Digital Repository
op_collection_id ftbrockuniv
language English
topic student leadership
leadership
secondary school
student government
Atlantic Canada
spellingShingle student leadership
leadership
secondary school
student government
Atlantic Canada
Myatt, Haley
Taking the Lead: Understanding Student Leadership in Atlantic Canadian Secondary Schools
topic_facet student leadership
leadership
secondary school
student government
Atlantic Canada
description Participation and student voice are important components of childhood and adolescence. Leadership, when described as individuals with specific motives and values mobilizing others towards a common goal, is one form of participation and student voice (Kort, 2008; MacNeil, 2006; Thomson, 2012). Often, students’ first platforms for leadership opportunities and active participation are through extracurricular activities like student councils; however, there is limited research on youth leadership (Karagianni & Montgomery, 2017). Using the Social Change Model of Leadership, as well as Transformational and Transactional Leadership theories, this research project examines and questions the role that secondary school student councils play in the development of leadership in Atlantic Canada: nineteen secondary school students from Nova Scotia, New Brunswick, Prince Edward Island and Newfoundland and Labrador contributed their leadership perceptions in a thirty-six question, online, qualitative survey. The survey poses questions about social identifiers, experiences in student government, and understandings of leadership and student leadership. What emerges is a spectrum of lived experiences within leadership, the prevalence of binaries in participants’ thinking about quality leadership and identified inequalities within the practice of leadership. Overall, leadership is understood by the participants as being positionally-based and centered within discovering, establishing, and maintaining relations with followers. Participants’’ definitions of what a leader is are incredibly situational. This topic warrants further research and deeper opportunities for young people to directly share their experiences.
author2 Department of Child and Youth Studies
format Thesis
author Myatt, Haley
author_facet Myatt, Haley
author_sort Myatt, Haley
title Taking the Lead: Understanding Student Leadership in Atlantic Canadian Secondary Schools
title_short Taking the Lead: Understanding Student Leadership in Atlantic Canadian Secondary Schools
title_full Taking the Lead: Understanding Student Leadership in Atlantic Canadian Secondary Schools
title_fullStr Taking the Lead: Understanding Student Leadership in Atlantic Canadian Secondary Schools
title_full_unstemmed Taking the Lead: Understanding Student Leadership in Atlantic Canadian Secondary Schools
title_sort taking the lead: understanding student leadership in atlantic canadian secondary schools
publisher Brock University
publishDate 2023
url http://hdl.handle.net/10464/17793
geographic Canada
Newfoundland
geographic_facet Canada
Newfoundland
genre Newfoundland
Prince Edward Island
genre_facet Newfoundland
Prince Edward Island
op_relation http://hdl.handle.net/10464/17793
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