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Articles

Vol. 1 No. 2 (2014): The Equity and Social Justice Issue

Why Distributed Leadership Matters

  • Jeanne Sesky
Submitted
May 15, 2014
Published
2014-10-12

Abstract

This paper explores key findings from a study that examined how distributed leadership affected school turnaround at an underperforming urban high school. The study considers the presence of leadership as a distributive process, which is bound by action and not by role. How leadership was distributed across all tiers of the school’s leadership structure was examined, ultimately
resulting in dramatic turnaround. Additionally, the settings by which teachers, administrators, and support staff learned and thrived were examined; practices that these stakeholders believed
made a difference for their students were also explored. Key to the site’s shift was the collective foci on students. Each interviewee built to create a collective voice, celebrating their teamwork
and their freedoms, from the district level down to the classroom level. No one setting or practice was touted as the fix for school change. Rather, study participants recognized the power of multiple settings and spoke of the necessity of each. They highlighted their personal connections, both at the site and within the community, stating its impact on school growth. Thus, this paper considers the impact of leadership when it is spread across many capable members of a school site.

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