Abstract
To what extent can heads use an inclusive values-led approach to school development in the face of pressures from Ofsted and their Local Authority to focus almost exclusively on attainment outcomes? We explore leadership of school improvement in a qualitative study of 10 head teachers in the English county of ‘Preshire’, who worked with the third edition of the Index for Inclusion, (Booth and Ainscow 2011), a guide to values-led school improvement. We situate the study within a review of conflicting research advice about the characteristics of successful heads and how ‘values’, seen as motives for action, affect the recommendations from research.
We found that the heads were able to use shared inclusive values to accomplish, with their staff, a degree of control over the way their schools are improved. To an extent they were able to resist extreme local pressures to engage in short term strategies to force up attainments. By making their inclusive values explicit they showed courage rather than compliance. To varying degrees they used ‘the Index’ to create inclusive, democratic and sustainable school improvement plans while conforming to Ofsted requirements. We consider the possibilities for more widespread implementation of school development led by inclusive values.
|
Ainscow, M, Booth, T, Dyson, A (2006a) Improving schools, developing inclusion. London: Routledge. Google Scholar | |
|
Ainscow, M, Booth, T, Dyson, A (2006b) Inclusion and the standards agenda: Negotiating policy pressures in England. International Journal of Inclusive Education 10(4–5): 295–308. Google Scholar | Crossref | |
|
Ball, SJ (2013) The Education Debate. 2nd ed. Bristol: Policy. Google Scholar | |
|
Ball, SJ, Maguire, M, Braun, A, Hoskins, K (2011) Policy subjects and policy actors in schools: Some necessary but insufficient analyses. Discourse: Studies in the Cultural Politics of Education 32(4): 611–624. Google Scholar | Crossref | ISI | |
|
Bolden, R (2011) Distributed leadership in organizations: a review of theory and research. International Journal of Management Reviews 13: 251–269. Google Scholar | Crossref | |
|
Booth, T, Ainscow, M (2011) Index for Inclusion: Developing Learning and Participation in Schools. Cambridge: Index for Inclusion Network. Google Scholar | |
|
Booth, T, Ainscow, M (2016) The Index for Inclusion: A Guide to School Development Led by Inclusive Values. Cambridge: Index for Inclusion Network (indexforinclusion.org). Google Scholar | |
|
Boyatzis, R (1998) Transforming Qualitative Information: Thematic Analysis and Code Development. London: SAGE Publications. Google Scholar | |
|
Brinkmann, S, Kvale, S (2015) InterViews: Learning the Craft of Qualitative Research Interviewing. Thousand Oaks: SAGE Publications. Google Scholar | |
|
Cohen, L, Manion, L, Morrison, K (2011) Research Methods in Education. London: Routledge. Google Scholar | |
|
Covell, K, Howe, RB, McNeil, JK (2010) Implementing children’s human rights education in schools. Improving Schools 13(2): 117–132. Google Scholar | SAGE Journals | |
|
Darling-Hammond, L (2000) Reforming teacher preparation and licensing: Debating the evidence. The Teachers College Record 102(1): 28–56. Google Scholar | Crossref | ISI | |
|
El-Sawad, A, Arnold, J, Cohen, L (2004) ‘Doublethink’: The prevalence and function of contradiction in accounts of organizational life. Human Relations 57(9): 1179–1203. Google Scholar | SAGE Journals | ISI | |
|
Firestone, W, Rosenblum, S, Bader, B (1992) Recent trends in state educational reform: Assessment and prospects. The Teachers College Record 94(2): 254–277. Google Scholar | ISI | |
|
Fullan, M (2007) The New Meaning of Educational Change. 4th ed. New York: Teachers College Press. Google Scholar | |
|
Fullan, M, Rincón-Gallardo, S, Hargreaves, A (2015) Professional capital as accountability. Education Policy Analysis Archives 23(15): 1–22. Google Scholar | |
|
Gann, N (2015) Improving School Governance: How Better Governors Make Better Schools. Abingdon: Routledge. Google Scholar | Crossref | |
|
Gosling, J, Bolden, R, Petrov, G (2009) Distributed leadership in higher education: What does it accomplish? Leadership 5(1): 299–310. Google Scholar | SAGE Journals | ISI | |
|
Grint, K (2010) The cuckoo clock syndrome: Addicted to command, allergic to leadership. European Management Journal 28(4): 306–313. Google Scholar | Crossref | ISI | |
|
Gronn, P (2002) Distributed leadership as a unit of analysis. The Leadership Quarterly 13(4): 423–451. Google Scholar | Crossref | ISI | |
|
Gronn, P (2009) From distributed to hybrid leadership practice. In: Harris, A (ed) Distributed Leadership. Vol. 7. Netherlands: Springer, pp.197–217. Google Scholar | Crossref | |
|
Hammersley-Fletcher, L (2015) Value(s)-driven decision-making: The ethics work of English headteachers within discourses of constraint. Educational Management Administration & Leadership 43(2): 198–213. Google Scholar | SAGE Journals | ISI | |
|
Hawkes, N (2003) How to Inspire and Develop Positive Values in Your Classroom. Cambridge: LDA. Google Scholar | |
|
Hillyard, S, Bagley, C (2015) Community strikes back? Belonging and exclusion in rural English villages in networked times. International Journal of Inclusive Education 19(7): 748–758. Google Scholar | Crossref | ISI | |
|
Holmes, T, Blackmore, E, Hawkins, R. (2011) The Common Cause Handbook. Machynlleth: Public Interest Research Centre. Google Scholar | |
|
Leithwood, K, Harris, A, Hopkins, D (2008) Seven strong claims about successful school leadership. School Leadership & Management 28(1): 27–42. Google Scholar | Crossref | |
|
Lusi, SF (1997) The Role of State Departments of Education in Complex School Reform. The Series on School Reform. ERIC. Google Scholar | |
|
MacBeath, J (2008) Stories of compliance and subversion in a prescriptive policy environment. Educational Management Administration & Leadership 36(1): 123–148. Google Scholar | SAGE Journals | |
|
MacBeath, J (2012) Future of Teaching Profession. Cambridge: Education International Research Institute and the University of Cambridge. Available at: https://xa.yimg.com/kq/groups/3564013/942471036/name/Future_Teaching_Prof_2012.pdf, accessed 26 July 2016. Google Scholar | |
|
McIntyre, A (1981) After Virtue. London: Duckworth. Google Scholar | |
|
Sergiovanni, T (2000) The Lifeworld of Leadership: Creating Culture, Community, and Personal Meaning in our Schools. San Francisco, CA: Jossey-Bass. Google Scholar | |
|
Social Mobility & Child Poverty Commission (2014) Cracking the Code: How Schools can Improve Social Mobility. London: Social Mobility & Child Poverty Commission. Available at: https://www.gov.uk/government/uploads/system/uploads/attachment_data/file/360753/Cracking_the_code_Final.pdf, accessed 26 July 2016. Google Scholar | |
|
Thompson, P, Sanders, E (2009) Creativity and whole school change: an investigation of English head teacher practices. Journal of Educational Change 11: 63–83. Google Scholar | Crossref | |
|
Tseng, C-Y (2015) Changing headship, changing schools: How management discourse gives rise to the performative professionalism in England (1980s–2010s). Journal of Education Policy 30(4): 483–499. Google Scholar | Crossref | ISI | |
|
Wilby, P (2010). Is Mossbourne academy’s success down to its traditionalist headteacher? The Guardian, 5 January. Google Scholar | |
|
Woods, P (1986) Inside Schools, Ethnography in Educational Research. London: Routledge and Kegan Paul. Google Scholar |

