女性在中层领导中的经历——障碍和推动者

IF 2.8 Q1 EDUCATION & EDUCATIONAL RESEARCH School Leadership & Management Pub Date : 2023-11-08 DOI:10.1080/13632434.2023.2277187
Pauline Thompson, Helen Stokes
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引用次数: 0

摘要

摘要本文对中学女性中层领导的领导经验进行了研究。之前的研究主要集中在学校高层领导中的女性。在国际上,教师职业往往由妇女主导,但在大多数国家,妇女在高级领导角色中所占的比例并不相称。因此,鉴于中层领导是迈向高层领导的跳板,我们需要进一步识别和理解女性在这一领导阶层中遇到的障碍和推动因素。这项定性研究回答了以下问题:女性进入中层领导职位是否存在障碍?如果有,那是什么?是什么让女性进入中层领导?本研究的数据是通过对澳大利亚33所非政府中学的65位领导者的访谈收集的。对访谈记录的专题分析揭示了女性进入中层领导的几个障碍和推动因素。确定的障碍包括家庭和照顾责任、将妇女排除在外的非正式网络以及他人的假设。促成因素包括高级领导人为促进妇女、指导和相关领导力方案而采取的结构性和战略性行动。关键词:中层领导女性;中层领导;领导障碍;领导能力;女性职业路径披露声明作者未报告潜在的利益冲突。Pauline Thompson博士是墨尔本大学教育学院教育领导力高级讲师。Pauline曾在学校担任教师,副校长和教育顾问。她的研究兴趣包括中层领导、女性领导和教师专业学习。海伦·斯托克斯(Helen Stokes)是墨尔本大学教育学院的教育学教授。她领导着墨尔本教师教育集团。她致力于关注公平和社会正义的项目。在过去的8年里,她对维多利亚州低社会经济地位学校的创伤教育和领导力进行了研究。
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Experiences of women in middle leadership – barriers and enablers
ABSTRACTThis article reports on research regarding the leadership experience of women middle leaders in secondary schools. Previous research has focused on women in senior leadership in schools. Internationally, the teaching profession tends to be dominated by women, and yet in most countries, women do not occupy a commensurate proportion of senior leadership roles. Therefore, given middle leadership is a steppingstone to senior leadership, we need to further identify and understand the barriers and enablers for women navigating this layer of leadership. This qualitative study answers the following questions: Are there barriers for women to access middle leadership? If so, what? What enables women to access middle leadership? The data for this study was collected through 65 interviews with leaders undertaken in 33 non-government Australian secondary schools. A thematic analysis of the transcripts of interviews, revealed several barriers and enablers for women accessing middle leadership. The identified barriers included family and caring responsibilities, informal networking that excluded women and assumptions made by others. Enablers included structural and strategic actions by senior leaders to promote women, mentoring and relevant leadership programmes.KEYWORDS: Women in middle leadershipmiddle leadershipbarriers to leadershipenablers to leadershipcareer pathways for women Disclosure statementNo potential conflict of interest was reported by the author(s).Additional informationNotes on contributorsPauline ThompsonDr Pauline Thompson is a senior lecturer in educational leadership at the Faculty of Education, The University of Melbourne. Pauline has worked in schools as a teacher, assistant principal and as an educational advisor. Her research interests include middle leadership, women in leadership and teacher professional learning.Helen StokesHelen Stokes is a professor of education in the Faculty of Education at the University of Melbourne. She leads the Melbourne Teacher Education Group. She works on projects with a focus on equity and social justice. Over the last 8 years, she has conducted research into Trauma-informed education and leadership in low-SES schools in Victoria.
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来源期刊
School Leadership & Management
School Leadership & Management EDUCATION & EDUCATIONAL RESEARCH-
CiteScore
8.20
自引率
9.60%
发文量
25
期刊介绍: School Leadership & Management welcomes articles on all aspects of educational leadership and management. As a highly cited and internationally known SCOPUS journal, School Leadership and Management is fundamentally concerned with issues of leadership and management in classrooms, schools, and school systems. School Leadership & Management particularly welcomes articles that contribute to the field in the following ways: Scholarly articles that draw upon empirical evidence to provide new insights into leadership and management practices; Scholarly articles that explore alternative, critical, and re-conceptualised views of school leadership and management; Scholarly articles that provide state of the art reviews within an national or international context; Scholarly articles reporting new empirical findings that make an original contribution to the field; Scholarly articles that make a theoretical contribution which extends and deepens our understanding of the key issues associated with leadership, management, and the direct relationship with organisational change and improvement; Scholarly articles that focus primarily upon leadership and management issues but are aimed at academic, policymaking and practitioner audiences; Contributions from policymakers and practitioners, where there is a clear leadership and management focus. School Leadership & Management particularly welcomes: •articles that explore alternative, critical and re-conceptualised views of school leadership and management •articles that are written for academics but are aimed at both a practitioner and academic audience •contributions from practitioners, provided that the relationship between theory and practice is made explicit.
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