School leadership in the Canadian North: A case study of school improvement in the South Slave Divisional Education Council

Although decades of concerted efforts and related research are available to us, there remains little in the way of agreed upon definitive conclusions about how to improve schools anywhere, let alone schools as faraway and exceptional as those found in the South Slave region of the Northwest Territor...

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Main Author: Brown, Curtis
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: 2009
Subjects:
Online Access:http://summit.sfu.ca/item/10414
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spelling ftsimonfu:oai:summit.sfu.ca:10414 2023-05-15T17:46:43+02:00 School leadership in the Canadian North: A case study of school improvement in the South Slave Divisional Education Council Brown, Curtis 2009 http://summit.sfu.ca/item/10414 English eng http://summit.sfu.ca/item/10414 Thesis 2009 ftsimonfu 2022-04-07T18:37:05Z Although decades of concerted efforts and related research are available to us, there remains little in the way of agreed upon definitive conclusions about how to improve schools anywhere, let alone schools as faraway and exceptional as those found in the South Slave region of the Northwest Territories (NWT) in northern Canada. The day to day emergencies and demands of the job of teaching children, coordinating programs, supervising staff and administering a school or region tend to consume us to the point that we overlook the factors and strategies that can approach and sustain excellence in our schools. Advocating for a group of eight school principals and seven regional office administrators and program coordinators, this research endeavoured to determine what is really important to school improvement in small and diverse multi-cultural contexts. A participatory action research design and methodology was used to engage these participant practitioners together in the ‘first person’ (I and us) assessment and improvement of their own practices by reviewing and reflecting on school improvement efforts over the past several years. Four key themes emerged from this research in response to the research question: Focus Is Needed, Relationships Matter, Context is Critical, and Servant Leadership Supersedes. As further validated by the participants, a graphic re-conceptualization of how to improve schools is provided. In short, the foundational components of context, relationships and focus underpin the other key strategic elements: servant leadership, multi-level alignment, professional learning communities and assessment. Thesis Northwest Territories Summit - SFU Research Repository (Simon Fraser University) Northwest Territories Canada Faraway ENVELOPE(-28.763,-28.763,-79.200,-79.200) South Slave Region ENVELOPE(-111.891,-111.891,60.003,60.003)
institution Open Polar
collection Summit - SFU Research Repository (Simon Fraser University)
op_collection_id ftsimonfu
language English
description Although decades of concerted efforts and related research are available to us, there remains little in the way of agreed upon definitive conclusions about how to improve schools anywhere, let alone schools as faraway and exceptional as those found in the South Slave region of the Northwest Territories (NWT) in northern Canada. The day to day emergencies and demands of the job of teaching children, coordinating programs, supervising staff and administering a school or region tend to consume us to the point that we overlook the factors and strategies that can approach and sustain excellence in our schools. Advocating for a group of eight school principals and seven regional office administrators and program coordinators, this research endeavoured to determine what is really important to school improvement in small and diverse multi-cultural contexts. A participatory action research design and methodology was used to engage these participant practitioners together in the ‘first person’ (I and us) assessment and improvement of their own practices by reviewing and reflecting on school improvement efforts over the past several years. Four key themes emerged from this research in response to the research question: Focus Is Needed, Relationships Matter, Context is Critical, and Servant Leadership Supersedes. As further validated by the participants, a graphic re-conceptualization of how to improve schools is provided. In short, the foundational components of context, relationships and focus underpin the other key strategic elements: servant leadership, multi-level alignment, professional learning communities and assessment.
format Thesis
author Brown, Curtis
spellingShingle Brown, Curtis
School leadership in the Canadian North: A case study of school improvement in the South Slave Divisional Education Council
author_facet Brown, Curtis
author_sort Brown, Curtis
title School leadership in the Canadian North: A case study of school improvement in the South Slave Divisional Education Council
title_short School leadership in the Canadian North: A case study of school improvement in the South Slave Divisional Education Council
title_full School leadership in the Canadian North: A case study of school improvement in the South Slave Divisional Education Council
title_fullStr School leadership in the Canadian North: A case study of school improvement in the South Slave Divisional Education Council
title_full_unstemmed School leadership in the Canadian North: A case study of school improvement in the South Slave Divisional Education Council
title_sort school leadership in the canadian north: a case study of school improvement in the south slave divisional education council
publishDate 2009
url http://summit.sfu.ca/item/10414
long_lat ENVELOPE(-28.763,-28.763,-79.200,-79.200)
ENVELOPE(-111.891,-111.891,60.003,60.003)
geographic Northwest Territories
Canada
Faraway
South Slave Region
geographic_facet Northwest Territories
Canada
Faraway
South Slave Region
genre Northwest Territories
genre_facet Northwest Territories
op_relation http://summit.sfu.ca/item/10414
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