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Research Article

Principal Leadership and Proximal Processes in Creating STEM Ecosystems: An Australian Case Study

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ABSTRACT

Improving learning through interdisciplinary STEM has come to the forefront of educational discourse, as schools attempt to attract more students to STEM study. However, little is known about how successful STEM curricula are established and sustained. This study details the establishment and sustaining of an exemplary STEM learning ecosystem in a girls’ comprehensive secondary college. Results highlight exemplary STEM ecosystems demand multidimensional principal leadership, that over time, can develop effective generative proximal processes and levels of relational trust needed to implement the disruptive reforms associated with establishing interdisciplinary STEM curricula. Findings identify principals’ ongoing engagement in the environment and dispositional and developmental assets are critical to successful school change supporting STEM innovation.

Authors’ Contributions

All authors who have contributed to this manuscript are acknowledged.

Availability Of Supporting Data

Supporting data are included in the Tables.

Disclosure Statement

No potential conflict of interest was reported by the author(s).

Research Ethics

The Principals as STEM Leaders project was granted ethics approval from the University of Tasmania Human Ethics Research Committee Network (approval #H0017470).

Notes

Additional information

Funding

This study was part of the larger professional learning, curriculum development and research project, Principals as STEM Leaders (PASL), funded by the Australian Department of Education, Skills and Employment (project: ED17/045432).

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