Covent Garden street performer 2-365
Saw this fella whilst returning a Christmas present in Covent Garden today. Slim fit shirt. Me and slim don’t often meet without falling out. Me and cheese, however, is a different story.
Saw this fella whilst returning a Christmas present in Covent Garden today. Slim fit shirt. Me and slim don’t often meet without falling out. Me and cheese, however, is a different story.
Found this photo in my guitar box. Only one I am aware of when I had long hair many moons ago. Scanned and first of my 365 photos for the year, following Tom Barrett's lead. Happy New Year everyone!
The conference at St Mary’s University College in October was a big event for me. It brought home the significance I felt about embarking on a Masters course and going back to university after fourteen years away. No-one had asked me to do it. I am not certain it will bring financial reward or move me on in my career. I wanted to know more. I was excited to hear Professor Dame Pat Collarbone was presenting the keynote. As one of the fore-runners at the National College of School Leadership, which I had visited in the summer, I anticipated an insight to school leadership national on a national scale. Having worked in many schools, I have evaluated many leaders, in my own way believing I knew enough to judge who was doing a good job. Now I was being invited to evaluate a leader of leaders. Continue reading…
Schools are complicated places pulling together swathes of people, old and young, in an ever-changing stasis. Distributed leadership provides a theoretical framework which aspires to channel this change toward school improvement. It is like a riverbed steering water to its destination, seemingly in charge, and yet shaped by every passing drop. In this critical reflection I will examine the theoretical concept of distributed leadership and analyse evidence both for and against it as a model for schools seeking to improve learning outcomes. I will assess the possibilities and pitfalls, and draw on my own experience to show that good intentions alone are not sufficient to facilitate the implementation of distributed leadership. In conclusion I will argue that, whereas distributed leadership provides schools with a theoretical structure to positively encourage and nurture the professional development of teachers, the evidence does not provide enough guidance as to how it might be successfully applied. It is this point, the lack of analysis of how distributed leadership might be managed, that ultimately renders it a theoretical and descriptive tool rather than a model for implementing good practice in modern schools. Continue reading…
Harris argues that leadership is indirectly linked to learning by influencing the context in which teachers operate. The argument concedes that, if we accept distributed leadership ‘can positively impact on these organisational conditions’ (p44) then we need to examine the evidence about the direct relationship between distributed leadership and learning outcomes. Harris sees this as the root of sustainable school improvement and sets about documenting the evidence. Continue reading…
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