Leadership for curriculum change : implementation of resource-based learning in Green Bay integrated school district

Quite often change initiatives fail to produce desired outcomes. Subsequently, educational leaders must look closely at past change efforts in order to uncover reasons for success or failure. In addition, leaders who wish to be successful at change need to be current in their thinking and find ways...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Rose, Alfred Paul
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: Memorial University of Newfoundland 1998
Subjects:
Online Access:https://research.library.mun.ca/1088/
https://research.library.mun.ca/1088/1/Rose_AlfredPaul.pdf
https://research.library.mun.ca/1088/3/Rose_AlfredPaul.pdf
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Summary:Quite often change initiatives fail to produce desired outcomes. Subsequently, educational leaders must look closely at past change efforts in order to uncover reasons for success or failure. In addition, leaders who wish to be successful at change need to be current in their thinking and find ways to practice the theories they espouse. -- Indeed, there exist a gulf between espoused theory and theory in practice. Leaders in today's ever changing field of education must gain an understanding of this 'gap' and find ways to connect current thinking with practice. In the words of Senge (1990), there needs to be a "shift of mind" within leaders, a shift from traditional top-down models of leadership to more current practices; a move towards building learning organizations. -- This paper folio provides a better understanding of this "shift of mind" through an examination of the literature in relation to principles and practices employed in the field. This is accomplished through an examination of the implementation of the Learning to Learn policy, in 1991 by the Newfoundland and Labrador Department of Education, and a detailed account of the former Green Bay District's implementation of this policy. -- Chapter one provides an overview of the paper folio, outlining its purpose and contributions to the field of leadership for change. It also speaks to the uniqueness of Green Bay District's employment of itinerant teachers as teacher leaders in the change process. This was a new role for itinerants, one that was unique to Green Bay District's implementation of the Learning to Learn policy. -- Chapter two exposes the leader's role in the change process as it pertains to the implementation of change in a school setting. A case study approach is employed to help leaders see the pitfalls of inadequate leadership and the highs of success. This approach is a valued tool in educational studies (Ashbaugh and Kasten, 1991; Gorton and Snowden, 1993). It provides leaders with real-life problems of which current thinking can be ...