Juggling Educational Ends: Non-Indigenous Yukon Principals and the Policy Challenges That They Face

Authors

  • Simon Blakesley University of British Columbia

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.22230/ijepl.2012v7n3a353

Keywords:

Educational leadership, policy, principals, northern Canada, Indigenous education, critical ethnography, Yukon

Abstract

This article reports on a 2008 study of non-indigenous principals working in Indigenous Yukon contexts. It examines the policy contexts in which Yukon principals are embedded, giving specific attention to how they address the tensions that exist as a result of operating at the intersections of micro, meso, and macro policy levels. The application of critical ethnography generates the opportunity to reveal and examine the tensions, distinctions, and contradictions underpinning their praxis, exposing the multifaceted and conflictual power structures in which they are embedded. The principals identify fragmented curricular policy; the competition between instructional time, mandated external curricula, and locally developed curricula; and field trip and hiring policies as being problematic. The principals also describe how they cope with the challenges and tensions that arise as a result of being responsible and accountable to balance competing educational ends to the satisfaction of multiple external levels of control.

Author Biography

Simon Blakesley, University of British Columbia

Simon Blakesley is a school administrator with the Yukon Department of Education. He is a graduate from the University of British Columbia's PhD (Educational Studies) program

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Published

2012-05-21

How to Cite

Blakesley, S. (2012). Juggling Educational Ends: Non-Indigenous Yukon Principals and the Policy Challenges That They Face. International Journal of Education Policy and Leadership, 7(3). https://doi.org/10.22230/ijepl.2012v7n3a353