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- Title
The lives and identities of UK Black and South Asian head teachers.
- Authors
Johnson, Lauri
- Abstract
This article reports on the preliminary findings from a national UK study of the life histories of 28 Black, Asian and Minority Ethnic (BAME) educators who led schools across a 47-year period (1968–2015). BAME head teachers were grouped by generations (i.e. pioneer, experienced, and novice) and questioned about the critical life experiences that influenced their path to leadership, the intersection of their professional and social identities, and their metaphors for leadership. Participants claimed leadership metaphors which included the head teacher as parent, ambassador, moral steward, role model, and community advocate. Pioneer Black and South Asian headteachers narrated more collectivist identities as community leaders and race equality activists, while current BAME headteachers appear more individually focused on raising attainment for students who have been marginalized. A life history approach across generations emphasizes the influence of changing attitudes toward race and the shifting policy context on professional identities.
- Subjects
SCHOOL principals; PROFESSIONAL identity; BLACK educators; SOUTH Asians; METAPHOR; GROUP identity; PRIMARY education; SECONDARY education; SCHOOL children
- Publication
Educational Management Administration & Leadership, 2017, Vol 45, Issue 5, p842
- ISSN
1741-1432
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1177/1741143217717279