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School Leadership & Management
Formerly School Organisation
Volume 37, 2017 - Issue 5
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Articles

Distributed leadership in South Africa: yet another passing fad or a robust theoretical tool for investigating school leadership practice?

Pages 457-475 | Received 08 Aug 2016, Accepted 22 Jul 2017, Published online: 02 Aug 2017
 

ABSTRACT

Distributed leadership, while an established concept in the international literature on education leadership, is slowly gaining prominence in post-apartheid South Africa. This is primarily due to its normative and representational appeal. However, of concern is that the concept has become a catch-all phrase to describe any form of devolved or shared leadership and is being espoused as ‘the answer’ to the country’s educational leadership woes. Drawing on a South African publications-based doctoral study of distributed teacher leadership (Grant 2010. “Distributed Teacher Leadership: Troubling the Terrain.” Unpublished PhD diss., University of KwaZulu-Natal, Pietermaritzburg) for its evidence, this article argues for a theoretically robust form of distributed leadership conceptualised as socio-cultural practice and framed as a product of the joint interactions of school leaders, followers and aspects of their situation (Gronn 2000. “Distributed Properties: A New Architecture for Leadership.” Educational Management and Administration 28 (3): 317–338; Spillane, Halverson and Diamond 2004. “Towards a Theory of Leadership Practice: A Distributed Perspective.” Journal of Curriculum Studies 36 (1): 3–34; Spillane 2006. Distributed Leadership. San Francisco: Jossey-Bass). It endorses a sequential distributed leadership framing for the South African context and calls for further empirical studies which interrogate the complex practices of distributed school leadership. For without this theoretically robust work, the article argues, distributed leadership is likely to be relegated to the large pile of redundant leadership theories and become a passing fad.

Disclosure statement

No potential conflict of interest was reported by the author.

Notes

1 Mainstream schools (Christie, Butler, and Potterton Citation2007) are those schools which constitute the numeric norm in South Africa. Making up 85% of the country’s schools, these schools are socially and economically disadvantaged and are plagued by poverty, illiteracy, HIV/AIDS, violence and substance abuse.

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