Putting together the pieces of me : an autoethnography of a teaching principal in an exceptionally small rural school
Date
2010-12
Authors
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
ORCID
Type
Degree Level
Masters
Abstract
Two factors—role duality and school size—impact teaching principals’ abilities to fulfill their roles and responsibilities. Principals with significant teaching loads experience “role duality” a situation in which one person fills two distinct roles. Teaching principals experience role tension and conflicts between professional teaching concerns, leadership demands and management issues. Further tensions are created when policymaker’s demands fail to recognize complexities around the roles of a teaching principal working in a unique context (Dunning, 1993; Wilson & McPake, 2000). Specifically, though the tensions of role duality are known to be more challenging in small schools, exceptionally small schools are a different context altogether. My autoethnographic study examined the complexity of my teaching principal’s role in an exceptionally small rural school. It was guided by a central question: How does the context of an exceptionally small, rural school impact upon a teaching principal's role(s)? Sub questions included: (a) How do stakeholder expectations (school staff, community, division, Ministry) impact a teaching principal’s roles and responsibilities in an exceptionally small rural school? and (b) What challenges and opportunities does a teaching principal face in an exceptionally small rural school? Documentation from two daily personal journals and my ‘what I do’ log during the 2009 – 2010 school year provided research data. My analysis focused on three themes: fractured roles, capacity to meet expectations and establishing relationships. This study added to current research rich narratives describing the impact of an exceptionally small school on a teaching principal’s role.
Description
Keywords
Teaching principal, Small school, Relationships, Expectations, Fractured roles
Citation
Degree
Master of Education (M.Ed.)
Department
Educational Administration
Program
Educational Administration