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Cultural and social issues in rural education: Exploring teacher’s innovative leadership roles in small rural schools P. Koulouris, [email protected] Ellinogermaniki.

Dec 31, 2015

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Page 1: Cultural and social issues in rural education: Exploring teacher’s innovative leadership roles in small rural schools P. Koulouris, pkoulouris@ea.gr Ellinogermaniki.
Page 2: Cultural and social issues in rural education: Exploring teacher’s innovative leadership roles in small rural schools P. Koulouris, pkoulouris@ea.gr Ellinogermaniki.

Cultural and social issues in rural education:

Exploring teacher’s innovative leadership roles

in small rural schools

P. Koulouris, [email protected] Ellinogermaniki Agogi

Athens, Greece

MUltigradeSchoolteacherTraining2007Rodos, Greece, 23 July 2007

Page 3: Cultural and social issues in rural education: Exploring teacher’s innovative leadership roles in small rural schools P. Koulouris, pkoulouris@ea.gr Ellinogermaniki.

Remote small rural schools in Greece: valuable service to the

nation • Abundance of remote and

less accessible mountainous and insular areas

• Small rural schools fulfilling a crucial function:– Providing the children of these

areas with the access to education which all children of Greece are entitled to.

– Thus keeping small remote and aging communities ‘alive’.

Page 4: Cultural and social issues in rural education: Exploring teacher’s innovative leadership roles in small rural schools P. Koulouris, pkoulouris@ea.gr Ellinogermaniki.

Facing problems and dangers

• Consequences of a widening rural-urban divide:– urbanisation tendencies– abandonment of the countryside by

younger generations (brain drain)– digital divide, disadvantage in the

access to services and opportunities of the contemporary Information Society

Page 5: Cultural and social issues in rural education: Exploring teacher’s innovative leadership roles in small rural schools P. Koulouris, pkoulouris@ea.gr Ellinogermaniki.

Multigrade schools: additional challenges

• Significant challenges of the multigrade classroom

• Insufficient initial professional training

• Inexperienced, newly-appointed teachers (typically)

Page 6: Cultural and social issues in rural education: Exploring teacher’s innovative leadership roles in small rural schools P. Koulouris, pkoulouris@ea.gr Ellinogermaniki.

Teachers’ need for professional development

• To acquire knowledge and skills

• To develop personal competences falling beyond the established teacher training curricula.

Page 7: Cultural and social issues in rural education: Exploring teacher’s innovative leadership roles in small rural schools P. Koulouris, pkoulouris@ea.gr Ellinogermaniki.

Teachers’ need for professional development

• Not easy to offer conventional professional development provision (in-service training seminars):– Distance– Costs– Lack of substitute teachers– …

Page 8: Cultural and social issues in rural education: Exploring teacher’s innovative leadership roles in small rural schools P. Koulouris, pkoulouris@ea.gr Ellinogermaniki.

Our background

• Projects addressing the needs of the small rural schools, tackling their isolation and bridging the digital divide

Page 9: Cultural and social issues in rural education: Exploring teacher’s innovative leadership roles in small rural schools P. Koulouris, pkoulouris@ea.gr Ellinogermaniki.

Our response to the challenges

• Efforts to alleviate the isolation of teachers

• Our main tool: – Provision of distance training,

support and networking through ICT

Page 10: Cultural and social issues in rural education: Exploring teacher’s innovative leadership roles in small rural schools P. Koulouris, pkoulouris@ea.gr Ellinogermaniki.

Our focus here

• New leadership roles teachers can take in such schools, as investigated in the projects NEMED and RURAL WINGS

Page 11: Cultural and social issues in rural education: Exploring teacher’s innovative leadership roles in small rural schools P. Koulouris, pkoulouris@ea.gr Ellinogermaniki.

Inviting the teacher to work with, and for, the local

community

Page 12: Cultural and social issues in rural education: Exploring teacher’s innovative leadership roles in small rural schools P. Koulouris, pkoulouris@ea.gr Ellinogermaniki.

Linkages between the community and the school

• Miller (1995):– We should build and sustain strong

linkages between the community and the school

– Rural communities may have a head start in developing these linkages: •schools have traditionally played a

central role in the life of the communities

Page 13: Cultural and social issues in rural education: Exploring teacher’s innovative leadership roles in small rural schools P. Koulouris, pkoulouris@ea.gr Ellinogermaniki.

Rural schools promoting personal and community

development• Potentially positive aspects in

this form of education– A skilful and devoted teacher

may turn them into an advantage for:• the students•the teacher himself/herself•the school•the wider local community.

Page 14: Cultural and social issues in rural education: Exploring teacher’s innovative leadership roles in small rural schools P. Koulouris, pkoulouris@ea.gr Ellinogermaniki.

Rural schools promoting personal and community

development

•Diverse roles that the remote rural school can play–recorded in the literature

Page 15: Cultural and social issues in rural education: Exploring teacher’s innovative leadership roles in small rural schools P. Koulouris, pkoulouris@ea.gr Ellinogermaniki.

Diverse school roles

Salant & Waller (1998):• non-educational impact of schools

on rural communities• multi-faceted school-community

relationship– positive economic and social impacts– a resource for community development– offering a delivery point for social

services.

Page 16: Cultural and social issues in rural education: Exploring teacher’s innovative leadership roles in small rural schools P. Koulouris, pkoulouris@ea.gr Ellinogermaniki.

Links between education and rural development

• Educational attainment is seen as a rural development strategy through which a better educated rural population leads to greater economic growth

Barkley, Henry, & Haizhen, 2005; Beaulieu & Gibbs, 2005

Page 17: Cultural and social issues in rural education: Exploring teacher’s innovative leadership roles in small rural schools P. Koulouris, pkoulouris@ea.gr Ellinogermaniki.

Links between education and rural development

• Recent studies in the USA:

– more rapid earnings and income growth in rural counties with high educational levels

– improving local schools can reverse the tendency of loss of young adults through outmigration (‘rural brain drain’)

Page 18: Cultural and social issues in rural education: Exploring teacher’s innovative leadership roles in small rural schools P. Koulouris, pkoulouris@ea.gr Ellinogermaniki.

Community development: not only economic

•Economic well-being•Social well-being•Environmental well-being

Community Development

Page 19: Cultural and social issues in rural education: Exploring teacher’s innovative leadership roles in small rural schools P. Koulouris, pkoulouris@ea.gr Ellinogermaniki.

Social capital: a crucial concept

•‘Social capital’:– social organization and

resources embedded in the social structure of the rural communities, which can facilitate coordination and cooperation for mutual benefit, and thus community development.

Page 20: Cultural and social issues in rural education: Exploring teacher’s innovative leadership roles in small rural schools P. Koulouris, pkoulouris@ea.gr Ellinogermaniki.

Social capital: a crucial concept

• Woodhouse (2006):• Social capital exerts a positive

causal influence on economic development.

Page 21: Cultural and social issues in rural education: Exploring teacher’s innovative leadership roles in small rural schools P. Koulouris, pkoulouris@ea.gr Ellinogermaniki.

Social capital: a crucial concept

•Miller, 1995: –The school is an important element in the creation of community’s social capital.

Page 22: Cultural and social issues in rural education: Exploring teacher’s innovative leadership roles in small rural schools P. Koulouris, pkoulouris@ea.gr Ellinogermaniki.

This remains a challenge

• A strong school-community partnership remains a major challenge:

– this is not generally viewed as a traditional element of schooling

• Approaches are needed that cross the boundaries traditionally separating the community as a place of learning from the school

Page 23: Cultural and social issues in rural education: Exploring teacher’s innovative leadership roles in small rural schools P. Koulouris, pkoulouris@ea.gr Ellinogermaniki.

Community-based learning

• Miller (1995):– Teachers working in partnership

with local leaders and residents– Giving students meaningful

opportunities to engage in community-based learning that serves the needs of both the community and the students.

Page 24: Cultural and social issues in rural education: Exploring teacher’s innovative leadership roles in small rural schools P. Koulouris, pkoulouris@ea.gr Ellinogermaniki.

Three approaches (Miller,

1995)

•The school as a community centre

•The community as curriculum

•School-based enterprise

Page 25: Cultural and social issues in rural education: Exploring teacher’s innovative leadership roles in small rural schools P. Koulouris, pkoulouris@ea.gr Ellinogermaniki.

Three approaches (Miller,

1995)

1) The school as a community centre– a resource for lifelong learning– a vehicle for the delivery of a

wide range of services– school resources (facilities,

technology, well-educated staff) can provide educational and retraining opportunities for the community.

Page 26: Cultural and social issues in rural education: Exploring teacher’s innovative leadership roles in small rural schools P. Koulouris, pkoulouris@ea.gr Ellinogermaniki.

Three approaches (Miller,

1995)

2) The community as curriculum– Study of the community in its various

dimensions. – Students generate information for

community development:• conducting needs assessments• studying and monitoring environmental and

land-use patterns• documenting local history through interviews

and photo essays.

Page 27: Cultural and social issues in rural education: Exploring teacher’s innovative leadership roles in small rural schools P. Koulouris, pkoulouris@ea.gr Ellinogermaniki.

Three approaches (Miller,

1995)

3) School-based enterprise– Developing entrepreneurial skills– Students not only identify

potential service needs in their rural communities, but actually establish a business to address those needs.

Page 28: Cultural and social issues in rural education: Exploring teacher’s innovative leadership roles in small rural schools P. Koulouris, pkoulouris@ea.gr Ellinogermaniki.

Inviting the teacher to become a change agent in

the community• He/she will catalyse innovation and development

in the school and the local community

• He/she will turn the declining school into a lively node supporting lifelong learning for everyone

• The rural school will become more responsive to the growth and survival needs of its community

• Education will develop responsible citizens and create opportunities for tomorrow's rural leaders to emerge

Page 29: Cultural and social issues in rural education: Exploring teacher’s innovative leadership roles in small rural schools P. Koulouris, pkoulouris@ea.gr Ellinogermaniki.

Being inspiredConvincing and leading the

others

Page 30: Cultural and social issues in rural education: Exploring teacher’s innovative leadership roles in small rural schools P. Koulouris, pkoulouris@ea.gr Ellinogermaniki.

The change agent:

• Challenges the status quo by comparing it to an ideal or a vision of change

• Accepts, communicates and defends the need for change

• Defines and initiates change• Translates the vision into the context of

a specific change initiative• Causes crisis in order to support

dramatic actions and change efforts • Leads and manages change• Understands the cultural dynamics

Page 31: Cultural and social issues in rural education: Exploring teacher’s innovative leadership roles in small rural schools P. Koulouris, pkoulouris@ea.gr Ellinogermaniki.

The case of satellite broadband

internet• Satellite broadband

connectivity is made available to the school

• The teacher is encouraged to: – turn it into advantage and

opportunity for all– promote the development

of a new culture among local citizens

Page 33: Cultural and social issues in rural education: Exploring teacher’s innovative leadership roles in small rural schools P. Koulouris, pkoulouris@ea.gr Ellinogermaniki.

Teacher’s multiple roles

• Typically, the teacher is already:

– acting as the head of the small school

– considered a prominent member of the isolated community

Page 34: Cultural and social issues in rural education: Exploring teacher’s innovative leadership roles in small rural schools P. Koulouris, pkoulouris@ea.gr Ellinogermaniki.

Additional leadership roles

•Manager of change in an informal local ‘reform’

Page 35: Cultural and social issues in rural education: Exploring teacher’s innovative leadership roles in small rural schools P. Koulouris, pkoulouris@ea.gr Ellinogermaniki.

Additional leadership roles

•Instructional leader exploring new ways to improve the quality of teaching and learning

Page 36: Cultural and social issues in rural education: Exploring teacher’s innovative leadership roles in small rural schools P. Koulouris, pkoulouris@ea.gr Ellinogermaniki.

Additional leadership roles

•Developer of links and synergies between the school, the community and other schools in the area

Page 37: Cultural and social issues in rural education: Exploring teacher’s innovative leadership roles in small rural schools P. Koulouris, pkoulouris@ea.gr Ellinogermaniki.

Additional leadership roles

•Facilitator of communities of learning in, around, and outside, the school

Page 38: Cultural and social issues in rural education: Exploring teacher’s innovative leadership roles in small rural schools P. Koulouris, pkoulouris@ea.gr Ellinogermaniki.

Additional leadership roles

•Former and implementer of innovation matching local needs

Page 39: Cultural and social issues in rural education: Exploring teacher’s innovative leadership roles in small rural schools P. Koulouris, pkoulouris@ea.gr Ellinogermaniki.

Questions arising

• Obvious need for corresponding professional development:– Which form? – What content precisely? – Which competences?

Page 40: Cultural and social issues in rural education: Exploring teacher’s innovative leadership roles in small rural schools P. Koulouris, pkoulouris@ea.gr Ellinogermaniki.

Possible professional development content

• Pedagogies specifically adaptable to the ‘unusual’ settings of the small rural school

• Solutions and opportunities of the Information Society

• Innovation

• Change management

• Local and rural community development, etc.

Page 41: Cultural and social issues in rural education: Exploring teacher’s innovative leadership roles in small rural schools P. Koulouris, pkoulouris@ea.gr Ellinogermaniki.

Questions arising

• Possible conflicts within a highly centralized educational system

Page 42: Cultural and social issues in rural education: Exploring teacher’s innovative leadership roles in small rural schools P. Koulouris, pkoulouris@ea.gr Ellinogermaniki.

Possible conflicts

• The teacher in this context is encouraged to initiate and implement an informal local ‘educational reform’

• Little decentralisation and autonomy of school units is encouraged by the system

• This discrepancy may be a source of interpersonal and interinstitutional tension

• Even in the intrapersonal level:– internal conflicts between the teacher’s

formal/recognised and informal/self-initiated leadership roles.

Page 43: Cultural and social issues in rural education: Exploring teacher’s innovative leadership roles in small rural schools P. Koulouris, pkoulouris@ea.gr Ellinogermaniki.

Possible conflicts

• Even in the intrapersonal level:– internal conflicts between:

•the teacher’s formal/recognised roles

and •informal/self-initiated leadership

roles.

Page 44: Cultural and social issues in rural education: Exploring teacher’s innovative leadership roles in small rural schools P. Koulouris, pkoulouris@ea.gr Ellinogermaniki.

• Barkley, D, Henry, M, & L Haizhen (2005). “Does Human Capital Affect Rural Growth? Evidence from the South”. In Beaulieu, L J, & R Gibbs (eds), The Role of Education: Promoting the Economic and Social Vitality of Rural America. Southern Rural Development Center and USDA, Economic Research Service.

• Beaulieu, L J, & R Gibbs (eds) (2005). The Role of Education: Promoting the Economic and Social Vitality of Rural America. Southern Rural Development Center and USDA, Economic Research Service.

• Miller, B (1995). “The role of rural schools in community development: Policy issues and implications”. Journal of Research in Rural Education, 11, 3, 163-172.

• Salant, P, & A Waller (1998). What Difference Do Local Schools Make? A Literature Review and Bibliography. Annenberg Rural Challenge Policy Program, The Rural School and Community Trust.

• Woodhouse, A (2006). “Social capital and economic development in regional Australia: A case study”. Journal of Rural Studies, 22, 83–94.

Page 45: Cultural and social issues in rural education: Exploring teacher’s innovative leadership roles in small rural schools P. Koulouris, pkoulouris@ea.gr Ellinogermaniki.

Cultural and social issues in rural education:

Dealing with cultural diversity in small rural schools

P. Koulouris, [email protected] Ellinogermaniki Agogi

Athens, Greece

MUltigradeSchoolteacherTraining2007Rodos, Greece, 23 July 2007