Building Leadership Capacity: Embracing of Inclusive and Culturally Responsive Practices to Promote Succession and Sustainability of Principals in Arctic Canada

This Dissertation-in-Practice (DiP) aims to explore organizational change frameworks to address the problem of practice in the Tundra Education System (TES, pseudonym), which has resulted in inconsistent implementation of inclusion and culturally relevant policies by principals. TES is situated in a...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Tomoloju, Olusoga Ayodele
Format: Text
Language:unknown
Published: Scholarship@Western 2024
Subjects:
Online Access:https://ir.lib.uwo.ca/oip/410
https://ir.lib.uwo.ca/context/oip/article/1532/viewcontent/Tomoloju_BuildingLeadershipCapacity_202406.pdf
Description
Summary:This Dissertation-in-Practice (DiP) aims to explore organizational change frameworks to address the problem of practice in the Tundra Education System (TES, pseudonym), which has resulted in inconsistent implementation of inclusion and culturally relevant policies by principals. TES is situated in an Indigenous region of Arctic Canada and about eighty percent of principals are non-Indigenous people. To make a change process relevant to the context of TES, the Inuit Qaujimajatuqangit (IQ) principles, upon which education in TES is built, are integral components of the change implementation processes. Furthermore, the DiP addresses the questions “whatâ€, “whyâ€, and “how†of the intended change using both qualitative and quantitative methods of data collection. The leadership theories explored in leading the change are transformational and culturally responsive leadership; Critical theory, however, is the overarching theory that frames the change process because its tenets align with the leadership theories and promote social justice, equity, inclusion, and decolonization. For the desired outcomes to be achieved using a composite solution (e.g., implementation of a newly designed TES leadership framework with a mentorship program component), the DiP embraces Nadler Tushman’s congruence model for gap analysis, Deszca et al.’s change path model for leading the change , an integrated framework (e.g., Hirsch’s framework and Deszca et al.’s model) for the change implementation plan, Haiilo’s framework for change communication plan, and Deming’s PDSA model for monitoring and evaluation of the change process. It is envisaged that effective facilitation of the change process by the change agents, and active engagement of all participants, will lead to improved cultural competence, higher retention rate of principals, and knowledge mobilization across TES.