A Case Study of Educational Leadership Doctoral Students: Developing Culturally Competent School Leadership Through Study Abroad

Q2 Social Sciences International Journal of Doctoral Studies Pub Date : 2020-10-02 DOI:10.28945/4642
J. Richardson, Marsha L. Carr, J. Watts
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Through pre-post surveys and follow-up interviews, the researchers explored how the international experience impacted cultural competencies.\n\nContribution: The primary goal of this experience was to improve self-efficacy for culturally responsive school leadership. The doctoral students were either aspiring school leaders or were currently serving as a building leader of a P-12 school. It is from these students that we can learn how a short-term international experience might impact school leaders, and in return, the students and staff they serve. This study adds to the limited literature about the benefits of study abroad programs for educational leadership students in doctoral programs.\n\nFindings: The doctoral students in this case study gained knowledge and skills because of this study abroad. Knowledge was gained about educational systems and self-awareness. Skills learned included relationship skills, travel skills, and skills related to empowering teachers. Attitudes about diversity shifted to be more encompassing. Further, the behaviors of doctoral students changed because of this trip. The results from the pre-test and post-test on cultural competence indicated a significant improvement in cultural competence for the group.\n\nRecommendations for Practitioners: The knowledge, skills, attitudes, and behavioral shifts captured in this study spoke to profound growth around cultural competencies. It is through preparing these doctoral students before the international sojourn, guiding them during the experience, and following up with them upon return that we were able to create a supportive, meaningful, and impactful study abroad experience for future school leaders. Thus, these experiences will likely impact their collective leadership in the future.\n\nRecommendation for Researchers: Though research about the benefits of study abroad programs for graduate students is limited, several studies are about the benefits of study abroad and international programs in undergraduate education. There is all but a lack of literature focused on doctoral educational leadership students and study abroad. Nevertheless, for many students who choose to study overseas, it may be the first opportunity they have to explore a new country and to be fully immersed in a culture that is different from their own. Through these experiences, many development opportunities can affect how students view their professional work. \n\nImpact on Society: Through exposure to others, by experiencing diverse ways of thinking and doing, and through critical conversation, institutions of higher education can develop school leaders to be culturally competent, culturally responsive, and socially just. As demonstrated in this study, international experiences are one decisive way to start this conversation.\n\nFuture Research: Research has shown that it is possible to increase students’ cultural competence through study abroad. As such, in the current study, the researchers took a mixed methods approach to understand how cultural competencies around knowledge, skills, attitudes, and behaviors shifted. As a result, we found that each doctoral student increased their cultural awareness in significant ways. Students gained knowledge by comparing the cultures within education systems and gained self-awareness about their own cultural awareness issues. More research needs to be done to better understand the impact of study abroad experiences on graduate students in educational leadership programs. These experiences could be short experiences (i.e., one to two weeks) or longer experiences (i.e., more than two weeks). Further, focusing on developing cultural competency before, during, and after a trip in different educational fields other than educational leadership (e.g., literacy, curriculum & instruction) could have significant school-level effects. Lastly, extending study abroad experiences into locations where English is not the first or primary language could provide opportunities for developing language skills while enhancing patience, cross-cultural communication, and problem-solving skills that could be beneficial personally and professionally.\n\n","PeriodicalId":53524,"journal":{"name":"International Journal of Doctoral Studies","volume":"19 1","pages":""},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2020-10-02","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"1","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"International Journal of Doctoral Studies","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.28945/4642","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"Q2","JCRName":"Social Sciences","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 1

Abstract

Aim/Purpose: This study focuses on how a short-term international study abroad program to England impacted doctoral students’ cultural competencies. Background: The case study captures the experiences of six school leadership doctoral students who traveled abroad to East London, England. The overarching goal of this experience was to improve their self-efficacy for culturally competent school leadership. Methodology: Through this case study of six doctoral students in an educational leadership doctoral program, the researchers sought to answer the following question: How do knowledge, attitudes, skills, and behaviors around cultural competencies of U.S. school leaders shift because they participated in an international internship? Through pre-post surveys and follow-up interviews, the researchers explored how the international experience impacted cultural competencies. Contribution: The primary goal of this experience was to improve self-efficacy for culturally responsive school leadership. The doctoral students were either aspiring school leaders or were currently serving as a building leader of a P-12 school. It is from these students that we can learn how a short-term international experience might impact school leaders, and in return, the students and staff they serve. This study adds to the limited literature about the benefits of study abroad programs for educational leadership students in doctoral programs. Findings: The doctoral students in this case study gained knowledge and skills because of this study abroad. Knowledge was gained about educational systems and self-awareness. Skills learned included relationship skills, travel skills, and skills related to empowering teachers. Attitudes about diversity shifted to be more encompassing. Further, the behaviors of doctoral students changed because of this trip. The results from the pre-test and post-test on cultural competence indicated a significant improvement in cultural competence for the group. Recommendations for Practitioners: The knowledge, skills, attitudes, and behavioral shifts captured in this study spoke to profound growth around cultural competencies. It is through preparing these doctoral students before the international sojourn, guiding them during the experience, and following up with them upon return that we were able to create a supportive, meaningful, and impactful study abroad experience for future school leaders. Thus, these experiences will likely impact their collective leadership in the future. Recommendation for Researchers: Though research about the benefits of study abroad programs for graduate students is limited, several studies are about the benefits of study abroad and international programs in undergraduate education. There is all but a lack of literature focused on doctoral educational leadership students and study abroad. Nevertheless, for many students who choose to study overseas, it may be the first opportunity they have to explore a new country and to be fully immersed in a culture that is different from their own. Through these experiences, many development opportunities can affect how students view their professional work. Impact on Society: Through exposure to others, by experiencing diverse ways of thinking and doing, and through critical conversation, institutions of higher education can develop school leaders to be culturally competent, culturally responsive, and socially just. As demonstrated in this study, international experiences are one decisive way to start this conversation. Future Research: Research has shown that it is possible to increase students’ cultural competence through study abroad. As such, in the current study, the researchers took a mixed methods approach to understand how cultural competencies around knowledge, skills, attitudes, and behaviors shifted. As a result, we found that each doctoral student increased their cultural awareness in significant ways. Students gained knowledge by comparing the cultures within education systems and gained self-awareness about their own cultural awareness issues. More research needs to be done to better understand the impact of study abroad experiences on graduate students in educational leadership programs. These experiences could be short experiences (i.e., one to two weeks) or longer experiences (i.e., more than two weeks). Further, focusing on developing cultural competency before, during, and after a trip in different educational fields other than educational leadership (e.g., literacy, curriculum & instruction) could have significant school-level effects. Lastly, extending study abroad experiences into locations where English is not the first or primary language could provide opportunities for developing language skills while enhancing patience, cross-cultural communication, and problem-solving skills that could be beneficial personally and professionally.
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教育领导博士研究生个案研究:透过海外学习发展文化胜任型学校领导
目的:本研究的重点是英国短期国际留学项目对博士生文化能力的影响。背景:本案例研究记录了六名到英国东伦敦旅行的学校领导博士生的经历。这次经历的首要目标是提高他们对文化主管学校领导的自我效能感。研究方法:通过对教育领导力博士项目中六名博士生的案例研究,研究人员试图回答以下问题:美国学校领导在参加国际实习后,他们在文化能力方面的知识、态度、技能和行为是如何发生变化的?通过前后调查和随访访谈,研究人员探讨了国际经验对文化能力的影响。贡献:本体验的主要目标是提高文化响应型学校领导的自我效能感。这些博士生要么是有抱负的学校领导,要么是目前在P-12学校担任建筑领导。正是从这些学生身上,我们可以了解到短期的国际经验如何影响学校领导,以及他们所服务的学生和员工。本研究补充了关于留学项目对教育领导专业博士生的益处的有限文献。研究发现:本案例的博士生通过出国留学获得了知识和技能。获得了有关教育制度和自我意识的知识。学习的技能包括人际关系技巧、旅行技巧以及与赋予教师权力相关的技能。人们对多样性的态度变得更加包容。此外,博士生的行为也因为这次旅行而发生了变化。文化能力前测和后测结果显示,实验组的文化能力有显著提高。对从业者的建议:本研究中捕获的知识、技能、态度和行为转变说明了围绕文化能力的深刻增长。正是通过在这些博士生出国留学前的准备,在他们的经历中指导他们,并在他们回国后跟进他们,我们能够为未来的学校领导创造一个支持性的,有意义的,有影响力的留学经历。因此,这些经验可能会影响他们未来的集体领导。给研究人员的建议:尽管关于出国留学项目对研究生的好处的研究有限,但有几项研究是关于出国留学和国际项目对本科教育的好处的。关于博士教育领导学生和海外留学的文献几乎都是缺乏的。然而,对于许多选择出国留学的学生来说,这可能是他们第一次有机会探索一个新的国家,并完全沉浸在一种与自己不同的文化中。通过这些经历,许多发展机会可以影响学生如何看待他们的专业工作。对社会的影响:通过与他人的接触,通过体验不同的思维和行为方式,通过批判性的对话,高等教育机构可以培养具有文化能力、文化反应能力和社会公正的学校领导。正如本研究所表明的,国际经验是开启这一对话的一个决定性方式。未来研究:研究表明,通过出国留学可以提高学生的文化能力。因此,在当前的研究中,研究人员采用了混合方法来了解围绕知识、技能、态度和行为的文化能力是如何变化的。结果,我们发现每个博士生都以显著的方式提高了他们的文化意识。学生通过比较教育系统内的文化获得知识,并对自己的文化意识问题有了自我意识。需要做更多的研究来更好地了解留学经历对教育领导项目研究生的影响。这些体验可以是短期体验(例如,一到两周),也可以是较长的体验(例如,超过两周)。此外,在旅行前、旅行中和旅行后,除了教育领导之外,在不同的教育领域(如识字、课程和教学)关注文化能力的发展,可能会产生显著的学校层面效果。最后,将留学经历扩展到英语不是第一语言或主要语言的地方,可以提供发展语言技能的机会,同时增强耐心,跨文化沟通和解决问题的能力,这对个人和职业都有好处。
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来源期刊
International Journal of Doctoral Studies
International Journal of Doctoral Studies Social Sciences-Education
CiteScore
4.10
自引率
0.00%
发文量
16
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