Leadsocincarticlerevised 2
Leadsocincarticlerevised 2
Leadsocincarticlerevised 2
INCLUSION
Introduction
While a lot is known about leadership and school effectiveness (e.g. Teddlie &
Reynolds, 2001), there has traditionally been a tendency to try to generalise
findings from effectiveness research across contexts in a way that does not take
into account either issues of social inclusion or the context of schools serving
disadvantaged communities. There are clearly a number of distinctive tasks
related to leading for social inclusion that are different from simply leading an
'effective' school, such as
- Enabling the school to respond to students from diverse backgrounds;
- Connecting school culture to students' home and community cultures;
- Promoting the overall personal and social development of students and
enhancing their life skills and life chances, as well as promoting their academic
development;
- Reconciling the social inclusion agenda with the standards agenda; and
- Managing complex relationships with communities, community agencies, and
employers.
Following the recent rise in interest in social inclusion, there is therefore a need
to develop this research base further. However, in order to do this we must first
develop a clear understanding of what is meant by social inclusion. The concept
of social exclusion has been with us in contemporary social policy for some time
(Byrne, 2005). Although a contested term, at the root of the concept are multi-
dimensional socio-economic processes that exclude particular groups of
individuals, in particular places and in particular ways, from mainstream society.
Details of Methods
(ii) Analysing individual cases. The evidence for each school was analysed in
order to determine possible links between contextual factors, leadership
practices and student outcomes, using a coding system corresponding to
emerging themes (Miles & Huberman, 1994). An audit trail was created in order
that claims about the relationship between practices and outcomes can be
subjected to scrutiny (Schwandt & Halpern, 1988). The trail took the form of an
exploratory account, linking examples of leadership practice to changes in
student presence, participation and achievement.
(iii) Cross-case analysis. We carried out a cross-site analysis of the six accounts
of practice in relation to the overall research questions. A central strategy here
was the use of 'group interpretive processes' as a means of analysing and
interpreting evidence. These involved an engagement with the different
perspectives of team members in ways that are intended to encourage critical
reflection, collaborative learning, and mutual critique (Wasser and Bresler, 1996).
In this way, conclusions were reached that are both valid and relevant.
The sample
It is important to stress that the six schools we investigated were not selected on
the basis of assumed good practice. Rather we saw them as instructive cases,
in that out existing knowledge of the schools suggested that they varied in terms
of the nature of the communities they serve, their stages of development and the
styles of leadership we have noted. What we also knew was that all these
schools had an interest in and commitment to social inclusion, in whatever way it
was defined by them. The districts and 2 schools in each district were chosen to
be representative of different types of socio-economically disadvantaged
contexts common in England (although the schools themselves were all located
in the North West). Both primary and secondary schools were included (0one
each in each district), as were a variety of school types (e.g. comprehensive,
faith schools, academies).
District 2 – A town that has a large enclave in which families of Asian heritage
live. Schools are noticeably segregated on ethnic lines and there are selective
schools at the secondary stage.
District 3 – An inner city area that houses a complex and diverse population,
where there are high levels of crime. There is a range of school ‘choices’ at the
secondary stage, including faith schools and an Academy. Attendance and
disciplinary exclusions are areas of considerable concern.
Findings
What became clear from the case studies was that the schools, though all were
concerned with social inclusion, differed substantively as to what they feel is
meant by this concept. In essence for the case study schools social inclusion
was differentiated around three main concerns:
1. Improving achievement and qualifications for all social and ethnic groups
2. Overcoming barriers to learning that exist within particular groups
3. Enhancing other capacities and skills of children from disadvantaged
groups
It is clear that schools will not focus solely on one of these three areas.
Achievement in particular was a focus for all the schools in this sample, as any
school neglecting this aspect would soon find itself in serious weaknesses.
Similarly, in our sample no school totally ignored attempts to overcome barriers
to learning. However, what we did find is that schools differed in the extent to
which they focussed on these different aspects, with some showing a very strong
orientation towards achievement and little attention to enhancing capacities,
while others saw enhancing capacities as almost as central as achievement.
Data from the case study schools was scrutinised to ascertain what aspects of
social inclusion were mentioned by interviewees and in school documents. This
allowed us to establish the relative proportion of mentions of social inclusion that
fell within each of the categories, and schools were then categorised according to
which conception was dominant in the discourse of school staff. This then
allowed us to map each school according to the extent to which they subscribe to
these three poles of social inclusion:
Improving achievement
Schools focussing mainly on achievement are called type I schools in this report.
Those which, in addition to a focus on achievement, take a strong interest in
overcoming barriers to learning are called type II schools, while those which, in
addition to achievement, are oriented towards enhancing other capacities are
type III schools.
Improving achievement
Type I Schools
Type II Schools
In other schools, while achievement remained a key goal, there was a stronger
emphasis on overcoming the disadvantages the specific background of pupils
presented. This was done through collaboration with other agencies that
intervened in health and social problems, and through work with parents to help
them to develop their own skills in supporting their children. In one school, for
example, a senior leader described inclusion as ‘including everyone, regardless
of background, income, disability, being gifted and talented…’. It has, she said to
‘encompass the child’s background and involve other agencies’
Preparing parents to help their children was often a part of the approaches to
social inclusion in these type II (overcoming barriers) schools: ‘There is a lot of
parental involvement. The parents know how they can help right from the word
go. They get a booklet in nursery how they can help, then in reception, year one,
year two and so on. So every year they know how they can help the child and
reinforce the learning at home’ (classroom teacher). This emphasis was evident
in one secondary school serving a white working class community, which works
extensively with outside agencies. There was an emphasis on catering to pupils’
social, emotional and health as well as academic needs, and there was a clear
identification of social inclusion with the pastoral as evidenced by the choice of
interviewees presented to us. The emphasis on overcoming barriers was clear in
this school ‘if they don’t have their basic needs seen to, they are not going to
come to lessons and learn. So we have to meet those basic needs as well.’
(head). The Head therefore feels that with ECM ’we win hands down. Because
we’ve always had to do that’.
While in type I (achievement focus) schools involvement with parents and pupils’
social issues was ad hoc, in these schools it was a key part of school policy. The
standards agenda and Every Child Matters were therefore intertwined.
Interviewees consistently argued that they saw their academic and social
inclusion work as closely inter-related. As one middle manager put it, ‘Without the
social inclusion policy, the academic side of the school would fall apart’.
Type III schools
In type III schools there was a strong emphasis on the socialising role of the
school, where as well as qualifications social inclusion was seen as involving a
lot of work on social skills, attitudes and self-esteem: ‘social inclusion is about
more than just attainment, it’s about how they move out into the wider world and
interact with others around them’ (head). Socialisation was therefore explicitly at
the heart of what this kind of school wants to do.
The main factor impacting on leadership in all these schools was the extreme
pressure schools were under. In these schools, the standards and accountability
agenda combined with the social disadvantage in the area meant that pressure
to perform at adequate levels was unrelenting and high stakes. It also meant that
schools constantly faced dilemmas, such as the tension between the standards
agenda and social inclusion. Solving these dilemmas was therefore a key
leadership task. Leadership was therefore strongly engaged with meaning
making around such issues as:
● What kind of school shall we be?
● How to lead staff under pressure?
Creating a common meaning was therefore something all heads have done in
these schools, through combinations of imposition, staff changes, negotiation
and discussion.
Leadership by the head has clearly been a driving force in encouraging social
inclusion in all the schools studied. In many cases these schools, all serving
disadvantaged communities, were performing poorly when current heads took
over, and heads have had to turn the school around. This means that the
process of change has, initially at least, been driven by the head in the schools
studied. One head, for example, was seen as an inspirational figure by staff ‘He
always seems three or four years ahead of everyone else, we’ll be doing things
and then a few years later it will be on the news as something that schools
should be doing. It’s a lot of new ideas, but always with a bit of enjoyment to
them as well’ (senior manager). The important role of the head is also clear when
it comes to the school’s vision and approaches to social inclusion. The head in all
schools articulated a clear vision on inclusion, which in many schools was
echoed by staff.
This emphasis on the role of the head leads us to two main questions. One is the
extent to which distributed leadership is evident in these schools, the other how
sustainable the approaches taken are in the long-term.
Distributed Leadership?
Pupil Voice
The extent of involvement of pupils and pupil voice likewise differed significantly
between schools. In one of the large secondary school, there was very little
evidence of any use of pupil voice. In other schools this element was far more
strongly developed. In one primary school pupils had their own common room,
with facilities such as computer game consoles and table football. The common
room was an ‘adult-free zone’. Not all pupils can use it at all times, and a rota
system operated that was linked to effort and achievement. Pupils are consulted
on a variety of issues, for example all pupils received a survey on what kind of
books/authors they liked to inform library purchasing decisions. Class rules were
devised by children themselves.
While elements of pupil voice exist in all schools, the extent to which this is
developed does seem to vary with the extent of immediate pressure the school is
under in this sample at least. In this sample, schools that appeared to have fully
executed a turn-around were more likely to have strong pupil voice, while those
that were still under severe pressures, from being undersubscribed, media
scrutiny or area situations tended to be more tokenistic in their approaches.
Motivating staff
A key leadership role that emerged from the case studies was motivating staff,
which was more important than might be the case in more advantaged schools.
As has been found in other studies, staff had to work harder to keep these
schools successful than those working in less challenging contexts (Muijs et al,
2004) One head, for example, saw this importance of motivating staff as a key
difference between leading schools in disadvantaged and middle class areas.
This was all the more the case where the emphasis on social inclusion led
schools to organise a lot of extracurricular activities. ‘It takes real commitment
from all staff. For example, the local football team drew 2-2. Now they’re having
the replay in their cup game. Already, the staff have said we’ll take them. But the
game could finish at half past eight if it goes to extra times and penalties.
Already, staff will have been in school since 7.30, there is a football game after
school, then they are going straight to the game and then back at 7.30 tomorrow
morning. It takes real commitment, above and beyond the call of duty.’ (head)
One way of motivating staff to put in this amount of effort was leading by
example. Heads also relied on the enthusiasm of staff in working with
youngsters, and on enthusiasm generated by success as evidenced by improved
performance, reduced absence (for example going from worst to best in the city
on this measure), and positive Ofsted reports. One head tried to convince staff of
the benefits of extracurricular work, for example the free breakfast that comes
with doing the breakfast club or ‘on Friday they do basketball, and we try and
convince staff that, hey, it’ll keep them fit as well’ (head). In general, embodying
the vision was a key motivating strategy for heads. For example, one head
believed there has been a focus on him as an individual ‘giving emotionally,
interacting with students and staff, celebrating student and staff achievement,
motivating them to believe they have a real contribution to make’. So, while he
does what he calls the ‘standard things’ of management, essentially ‘it’s about
you’.
The implication seems to be that change in a school with a disadvantaged
population is not only about the technicalities of practice, but about changing
attitudes and perceptions to develop aspirations in line with a shared vision of
social inclusion. ‘The principles and philosophy is what drives you forward. The
strategy and tactics you use fit the circumstances of the school,’ and ‘The key is
convincing people that the children are worth investing in…we have then worked
strategically, but you need a gut instinct and emotional intelligence’.
Context clearly matters as well. Some of the less distributed practices, as well as
some of the pure achievement emphases appear to be driven at least in part by
the very severe problems that schools confronted in the past, as well as in some
cases the high profile of the school leading to very strong pressures for fast
improvements in exam results. School size was also a factor. In one small
secondary school, the issue of size was mentioned by interviewees as an
important factor in determining leadership styles and structures. The Deputy
Head Inclusion, for instance, said that both she and the head tried to delegate
because ‘in a small school it’s essential that middle managers do this [i.e. take on
responsibility’. Similarly, the Leader of Learning Transition reported that ‘The
school is small so everyone is busy with multiple issues.’
Community Relations
As was the case with views on inclusion, schools had different attitudes and
relationships with their communities. At one extreme there was the ‘fortress
model’, where the school saw its role as education, and itself as a beacon to, but
also standing somewhat outside, the community. ‘the school here, it is really like
a Cathedral in the middle ages. For our kids it is the most impressive building
and calmest environment they have seen. And that is the atmosphere we want to
keep’ (Deputy Head). A key goal here was not letting the chaos and problems of
the community spill over into the school.
Other schools took a very different approach. In one school, the school was seen
as having a strong role in the community ‘our role is quite varied, really, not just
teachers, but sometimes social workers, adviser, so many different roles… For
parents, it’s like their community centre, I think, not just a school’ (senior
manager). The bond with parents, or more accurately mothers in the Asian
context, was strong ‘it’s like a family, I think’. The concept of the school as a
family came up in quite a few of the interviews. The head saw the school has a
role to play in raising aspirations, but was also seen by the head as being the
centre of the community. ‘It’s got to be a place where everybody feels welcome,
where everybody feels they’ve got a part to play in the education of the children.’
These differences led to very different levels of engagement with the community
and community groups. In the second school cited, which is a type III
(enrichment) school, the school works closely with community groups, such as
local mosques in this predominantly Muslim community. The community
appeared to take pride in the school, and parents interviewed expressed a great
deal of satisfaction with it. In the first school, which is a type I (achievement
orientation) school, tensions were more apparent. Some community members
felt and expressed at community meetings that the school excluded too many
pupils, and was in that way exclusive of the community. School staff denied this,
pointing to statistics showing sharply decreased exclusion rates, and claimed
rumours were being spread by disgruntled members of staff of the school it has
replaced.
The extent to which schools are oriented to their community is connected to their
position in the social exclusion classification discussed earlier. Type I
(achievement focus) schools appear the least community oriented, while type III
(enhancement) schools appear most community oriented.
However, It has to be pointed out that the context in which the schools worked
appears to play an important role here as well as views on social inclusion. The
extent to which communities are internally coherent differed significantly between
schools, and where this was the case it was inevitably easier for the school and
its leadership to engage with that community than where the community was
fractured and conflicted. It is important to point out here that fractured
communities were present in both ethnically homogeneous and ethnically
heterogeneous areas.
That, however, does not mean that there aren’t some clear lessons to be learnt.
In the following section we will draw out the key lessons for policymakers,
practitioners and leadership development.
Leading under pressure involves dealing with dilemmas on a daily basis, the key
one in this instance being that between standards and inclusion. All heads in the
study agree on the importance of standards and have signed up to the standards
agenda. However, how to square this with social inclusion is partly dependent on
their views of what social inclusion is, as well as being another source of
pressure. More sensitive and broader accountability measures, that take into
account social inclusion as well as other goals of education (such as well being),
would be helpful in this respect. It is no longer true that such factors are in any
way unmeasurable. While Ofsted does now take into account a wider range of
outcomes under the Every Child Matters agenda, it remains the case that
published performance data, on which local reputations and recruitment depend
to a large extent, are limited to achievement test scores.
Views of and approaches to social inclusion should also ideally be translated into
different measures and assessment of impact. In schools that focus on
overcoming barriers to learning (type II schools), for example, it might be useful
to assess the extent to which family literacy has improved, or to what extent
specific targeted groups are changing their attitudes to school. In type III
(enrichment) schools, one could assess student’s social skills, or look at the
impact of enrichment activities specifically, in both quantitative and qualitative
ways.
References
Cummings, C., Dyson, A., Papps, I., Pearson, D., Raffo, C., & Todd, L. (2005)
Evaluation of the Full Service Extended Schools Project: End of First Year
Report. Research report RR680. London: Department for Education and Skills
Kendall, L., O’Donnell, L., Golden, S., Ridley, K., Machin, S., Rutt, S., McNally,
S., Schagen, I., Meghir, C., Stoney, S., Morris, M., West, A. & Noden, P. (2005)
Excellence in Cities: The national evaluation of a policy to raise standards in
urban schools 2000-2003. Research report 675A. London: DfES.
Melhuish, E., Belsky, J., & Leyland, A. et al (2005). Early Impacts of SSLPs on
Children and Families. London: DfES.
Middleton, S., Perren, K., Maguire, S., Rennison, J., Battistin, E., Emmerson, C.
& Fitzsimons E (2005.). Evaluation of Education Maintenance Pilots: Young
People Aged 16 to 19 Years. Final Report of the Quantitative Evaluation.
Nottingham: Department for Education and Skills, DfES RR678.
Muijs, D., Harris, A., Chapman, C., Stoll, L. & Russ, J. (2004). Improving Schools
in Socio-Economically Disadvantaged Areas: An Overview of Research. School
Effectiveness and School Improvement 15(2), 149-176.