Session Information
15 SES 06, Building Trust in International Governance Systems Part 1
Symposium to be continued in 15 SES 07
Contribution
This chapter explores the topic of supporting young people to become innovators for societal change in terms of equity and renewal from the perspective of school principals in Northern Ireland, a post-conflict society. We examine how school principals can be empowered in their role in providing this support and the challenges and turbulence that they face in their work. The chapter provides contextual information about education in what is still largely a divided society in Northern Ireland. The principals who were interviewed as part of this research were working within school partnerships as part of ‘shared education’ projects. In Northern Ireland, the Shared Education Act (2016) provides a legislative basis for two or more local schools from different educational sectors to work in partnership to provide opportunity for sustained shared learning activities with the aim of improving both educational and reconciliation outcomes for young people. The challenges for school leadership of working in partnership in societies emerging from conflict has not been given the attention it deserves in the literature, so this work is significant in that it brings together a focus on school leadership in a ‘shared education’ context, drawing on theories of collaboration and turbulence to examine how principals can best be empowered to be agents of change, so that pupils in Northern Ireland can also become empowered to make society there more equitable and peaceful. While the focus is on Northern Ireland, the learnings from this study will be of wider interest and significance as similar challenges are faced by school leaders internationally.
References
Bates, J. O’Connor Bones, U. and Milliken, M., 2017. Community audit: views on education provision in Augher, Clogher and Fivemiletown, Co Tyrone. Belfast, Integrated Education Fund. Blase, J., 1997. The fire is back!: Principals sharing school governance. Corwin Pr. Commission for Victims and Survivors, 2016. Children and Young People Engagement Project. Research Report March 2016. Creese, M. and Earley, P., 1999. Improving schools and governing bodies: making a difference. Psychology Press. Department of Education, NI, 2016. Shared Education. https://www.education-ni.gov.uk/articles/what-shared-education Department of Education, NI, 2017. Governor Guide 2017. Gross, S. J., 2014. Using Turbulence Theory to Guide Actions, in: Branson & Gross (eds) Handbook of Ethical Educational Leadership, Routledge, pp 246-262. McGuinness, S. J., 2012. Education Policy in Northern Ireland: a Review. Italian Journal of Sociology 1: 224 O’Connor, U., Beattie, K. and Niens, U., 2009. An evaluation of the introduction of Local and Global Citizenship to the Northern Ireland Curriculum. Belfast, CCEA. Roulston, S., Hansson, U., Cook, S. and McKenzie, P. (2016) If you are not one of them you feel out of place: understanding divisions in a Northern Irish town. Children's Geographies, 15 (4): 452-465.
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