Conclusions: Turbulence, Empowerment and Marginalised Groups

Alison Taysum, K. Arar
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Second, how do these senior-level leaders within Education Governance Systems describe and understand the role mentors and/or advocates play to support their navigation through the turbulence? Third, to what extent, do these senior-level leaders of Education Governance Systems believe a cultural change is required to empower them in school and college communities including staff, families, students and community partnerships to Empower Young Societal Innovators for Equity and Renewal (EYSIER)? Finally, what theories of knowledge to action emerge regarding how these senior-level leaders might successfully navigate turbulence to empower marginalised groups for equity and renewal for all in Public Corporate Education Governance Systems? \n \nWe identified in Chapter 1 that the context is one of colonisation between different groups. In Chapter 2, The review of literature focused on turbulence in Education Governance Systems and identified the global distribution of knowledge concerning education from cash-rich countries has had a tremendous impact on what is taught and tested in schools. Nation states that are not cash rich are marginalised in a global politics. International Testing Industries examine the output of national education systems through a global lens. These studies do not shed light on: the socio-economic, or political context that shape the values, primary moral virtues and secondary intellectual virtues and acts of particular legislation; the fair funding formulas that underpin the allocation of funds to the construction of infrastructure; the Education Governance Systems structures and agencies; and the organisation of processes and practices of the education system within the international community. Intellectual and cultural colonisation that may lack what Adler calls moral and ethical frameworks may accelerate the commodification of education. Chapter 3 critically discussed how we implemented the same research design in each case taking a humanistic approach and identified that the research adopts a shared world view and seeks to recognise scientific, intellectual knowledge, and metaphysical moral and empirical knowledge. Chapters 4 through 9 presented the English, Northern Irish, Arab-Israeli, Trinidad and Tobago and the United States cases, and each case identified a clash of values between the professional educational credentialed senior-level leaders with track records for outstanding school improvement, and those in Educational Governance Systems with: no professional credentials; no track record of school improvement; a tendency to promote competition rather than cooperation; a desire for internal succession planning, rather than succession planning to achieve national education goals. The clash of cultures put senior-level leaders into a mode of protectionism with a focus on keeping their post and ‘watching their backs’, rather than building capacity for sustainable instruction within the Education Governance Systems they lead manage and administrate to optimise students’ learning, students’ outcomes and social mobility. \n \nThese senior-level leaders with Professional Credentials, and outstanding track records of school improvement need Education Governance Systems to empower them to do their job and create realistic opportunities to develop networks of professional experts in partnership with the academy to support them navigate any clash of world views. Funding is required for professional learning to ensure ‘old opinion is handed down among them by ancient tradition’ that is rationalised with logic, compared and contrasted with empirical evidence, and synthesised with innovations guided by a moral compass within an ethical infrastructure. 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Success in both these spheres will enable them to break their chains that have kept them dependent on the guidance of others who may seek to exploit them (De Gruy, 2008). \n \nFurther research is recommended to implement the knowledge to action impact strategies that emerge from all five cases.","PeriodicalId":314970,"journal":{"name":"Turbulence, Empowerment and Marginalisation in International Education Governance Systems","volume":"36 1","pages":"0"},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2018-12-03","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Turbulence, Empowerment and Marginalisation in International Education Governance Systems","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.1108/978-1-78754-675-220181013","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"","JCRName":"","Score":null,"Total":0}
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Abstract

Abstract The aim of this book is to set an agenda and address a gap in the literature regarding Turbulence, Empowerment and Marginalisation in International Education Governance Systems and its relationship with narrowing the global phenomena of a Black-White achievement gap. The aims are met by addressing the following quesitions. First, how do senior leaders of Educational Governance Systems who are from and represent marginalised groups in society, describe and understand how School Governance Systems empower or disempower them to develop school communities as societal innovators for equity, and renewal? Second, how do these senior-level leaders within Education Governance Systems describe and understand the role mentors and/or advocates play to support their navigation through the turbulence? Third, to what extent, do these senior-level leaders of Education Governance Systems believe a cultural change is required to empower them in school and college communities including staff, families, students and community partnerships to Empower Young Societal Innovators for Equity and Renewal (EYSIER)? Finally, what theories of knowledge to action emerge regarding how these senior-level leaders might successfully navigate turbulence to empower marginalised groups for equity and renewal for all in Public Corporate Education Governance Systems? We identified in Chapter 1 that the context is one of colonisation between different groups. In Chapter 2, The review of literature focused on turbulence in Education Governance Systems and identified the global distribution of knowledge concerning education from cash-rich countries has had a tremendous impact on what is taught and tested in schools. Nation states that are not cash rich are marginalised in a global politics. International Testing Industries examine the output of national education systems through a global lens. These studies do not shed light on: the socio-economic, or political context that shape the values, primary moral virtues and secondary intellectual virtues and acts of particular legislation; the fair funding formulas that underpin the allocation of funds to the construction of infrastructure; the Education Governance Systems structures and agencies; and the organisation of processes and practices of the education system within the international community. Intellectual and cultural colonisation that may lack what Adler calls moral and ethical frameworks may accelerate the commodification of education. Chapter 3 critically discussed how we implemented the same research design in each case taking a humanistic approach and identified that the research adopts a shared world view and seeks to recognise scientific, intellectual knowledge, and metaphysical moral and empirical knowledge. Chapters 4 through 9 presented the English, Northern Irish, Arab-Israeli, Trinidad and Tobago and the United States cases, and each case identified a clash of values between the professional educational credentialed senior-level leaders with track records for outstanding school improvement, and those in Educational Governance Systems with: no professional credentials; no track record of school improvement; a tendency to promote competition rather than cooperation; a desire for internal succession planning, rather than succession planning to achieve national education goals. The clash of cultures put senior-level leaders into a mode of protectionism with a focus on keeping their post and ‘watching their backs’, rather than building capacity for sustainable instruction within the Education Governance Systems they lead manage and administrate to optimise students’ learning, students’ outcomes and social mobility. These senior-level leaders with Professional Credentials, and outstanding track records of school improvement need Education Governance Systems to empower them to do their job and create realistic opportunities to develop networks of professional experts in partnership with the academy to support them navigate any clash of world views. Funding is required for professional learning to ensure ‘old opinion is handed down among them by ancient tradition’ that is rationalised with logic, compared and contrasted with empirical evidence, and synthesised with innovations guided by a moral compass within an ethical infrastructure. These senior-level leaders need to be empowered to empower their staff as autonomous professionals to empower the parents and the students to gain the thinking tools they need to be lifelong learners with the capability to be self-legislating. This requires a culture change that prioritises the moral virtues of learning how to learn as moral citizens in becoming, above the secondary intellectual virtues demonstrated through success in high stakes tests. Knowledge to action reveals young people need Education Governance Systems that EYSIER and underpin success in student outcomes for social mobility. Success in both these spheres will enable them to break their chains that have kept them dependent on the guidance of others who may seek to exploit them (De Gruy, 2008). Further research is recommended to implement the knowledge to action impact strategies that emerge from all five cases.
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结论:动荡、赋权和边缘化群体
这本书的目的是设定一个议程,并解决关于国际教育治理体系中的动荡、赋权和边缘化的文献差距,以及它与缩小黑人-白人成就差距的全球现象的关系。通过解决以下问题来实现这些目标。首先,来自并代表社会边缘群体的教育治理系统高级领导人如何描述和理解学校治理系统如何赋予或剥夺他们将学校社区发展为公平和更新的社会创新者的权力?其次,这些教育治理系统中的高层领导如何描述和理解导师和/或倡导者在支持他们度过动荡中所扮演的角色?第三,这些教育治理系统的高层领导在多大程度上认为,需要一种文化变革来赋予他们在学校和大学社区中的权力,包括员工、家庭、学生和社区伙伴关系,以赋予青年社会创新者公平和更新(EYSIER)权力?最后,关于这些高层领导人如何成功地驾驭动荡,赋予边缘化群体权力,在公共企业教育治理体系中实现公平和全民更新,出现了哪些从知识到行动的理论?我们在第一章中指出,背景是不同群体之间的殖民化。在第2章中,对文献的回顾侧重于教育治理系统的动荡,并确定了来自现金充裕国家的教育知识的全球分布对学校的教学和考试内容产生了巨大影响。现金不充裕的民族国家在全球政治中被边缘化。国际考试行业通过全球视角检查国家教育系统的产出。这些研究没有阐明:社会经济或政治背景塑造了价值观、主要道德美德和次要智力美德以及特定立法的行为;基础设施建设资金分配的公平筹资公式;教育管治体系的结构和机构;以及在国际社会中组织教育系统的过程和实践。缺乏阿德勒所说的道德和伦理框架的智力和文化殖民可能会加速教育的商品化。第3章批判性地讨论了我们如何在每个案例中采用人文主义方法实施相同的研究设计,并确定研究采用了共享的世界观,并寻求认识科学,知识知识,形而上学的道德和经验知识。第4章至第9章介绍了英国、北爱尔兰、阿拉伯-以色列、特立尼达和多巴哥和美国的案例,每个案例都确定了具有专业教育证书的高级领导与教育治理系统中没有专业证书的高层领导之间的价值观冲突;没有改善学校的记录;竞争倾向:提倡竞争而不是合作的倾向;渴望内部继任计划,而不是继任计划以实现国家教育目标。文化冲突使高层领导人陷入了一种保护主义模式,他们的重点是保住自己的职位和“提防自己”,而不是在他们领导和管理的教育治理系统内建设可持续教学的能力,以优化学生的学习、学生的成果和社会流动性。这些拥有专业资历和卓越的学校改善记录的高级领导需要教育治理系统,使他们能够完成自己的工作,并创造现实的机会,发展与学院合作的专业专家网络,以支持他们应对任何世界观的冲突。专业学习需要资金,以确保“古老的观点通过古老的传统在他们中间流传下来”,这是用逻辑合理化的,与经验证据进行比较和对比,并在伦理基础设施中的道德指南针指导下与创新相结合。这些高层领导需要被授权,让他们的员工成为自主的专业人士,让家长和学生获得他们需要的思考工具,成为终身学习者,拥有自我立法的能力。这需要一种文化变革,优先考虑学习如何成为道德公民的道德美德,而不是通过在高风险考试中取得成功而表现出来的次要智力美德。从知识到行动的转变表明,年轻人需要教育治理体系,这些体系有利于提高学生的学习成绩,为社会流动奠定基础。
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