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Successful principalship in Norway: sustainable ethos and incremental changes?

Jorunn Møller (Department of Teacher Education and School Development, University of Oslo, Oslo, Norway)
Gunn Vedøy (Department of Teacher Education and School Development, University of Oslo, Oslo, Norway)
Anne Marie Presthus (Department of Education, University of Agder, Agder, Norway)
Guri Skedsmo (Department of Teacher Education and School Development, University of Oslo, Oslo, Norway)

Journal of Educational Administration

ISSN: 0957-8234

Article publication date: 25 September 2009

1257

Abstract

Purpose

The purpose of this paper is to explore whether and how success has been sustained over time in schools which were identified as being successful five years ago.

Design/methodology/approach

Three schools were selected for a revisit, and the sample included two combined schools (grade 1‐10) and one upper secondary school (grade 11‐13). In two schools the same principals were still in post, and in the third school there had recently been a change in principalship. Interviews with the principal and a group of teachers at each school were the major source of new data. Questions that guided the study: What structural and cultural changes can be identified within the schools compared with five years ago? What factors might help sustain success over time?

Findings

The learning‐centred approach identified earlier had been sustained in the schools during the five years. All principals focused on multiple ways of influencing staff motivation, commitment and working conditions, teamwork was a vital characteristic, and they also reported on their struggle to sustain and promote equity and social justice. For the two schools with principals still in post one could hardly detect any change in preferred strategies, but for the third school with the new principal there was a significant change. Although his ethos was closely connected to that which existed at the school five years ago, his leadership approach and the agenda for school improvement were different. As such, the study provides an example of how principals have the power to set the tone and the agenda for school development even though leadership practice is an interactive process involving many people.

Originality/value

The paper provides knowledge about sustainable leadership in a context where new expectations are raised towards schools, and principals are in particular challenged to respond to new and sometimes contradicting expectations.

Keywords

Citation

Møller, J., Vedøy, G., Presthus, A.M. and Skedsmo, G. (2009), "Successful principalship in Norway: sustainable ethos and incremental changes?", Journal of Educational Administration, Vol. 47 No. 6, pp. 731-741. https://doi.org/10.1108/09578230910993113

Publisher

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Emerald Group Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2009, Emerald Group Publishing Limited

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