89
Session
code: 5-3-A203
Title: Primary school principals'
multiple identities in SBM decision-making strategies and effective school
development: Casual links, ethics paradigms, and
Contributer/s: Percy L Y KWOK, Michael C C YUEN
Abstract
: A scrutiny of ethical dimension of principal
leadership (involving three females and two males from five religious and
secular, private and public primary schools) in Hong Kong is carried out to
explore into multiple identities of five primary school principals when
exploring possible causal links between their ethical decision-making
strategies in school-based management (SBM) [based on shared decision making,
organization culture and working expectations of collaborators] and effective
school development [in terms of leadership practices, school goals, purpose, and teacher professional
development].. Under the interpretative research paradigm through
semi-structured interviews, participant observation and documentary analysis,
the study provides a thick depiction of principals' perceptions and practices
of ethical leadership and its implications for SBM in Hong Kong. Qualitative
findings illustrate that the primary principals perceive and practice ethical
leadership in terms of an array of values and beliefs, which can be categorized
into three main domains, namely personal, intellectual and acting. An ethical
perspective of school leadership includes attributing qualities of care,
justice, critique and acting (paradigms of ethics). The quality of ethical
leadership will depend profoundly on how principals treasure these qualities
that inform their behaving and acting on school practices. The distance of
practicing ethical leadership by the five Hong Kong school principals and the
prominence of literature review in the field of educational administration and
principal leadership posits substantial cultural and ideological differences in
school settings, when some Western notions of education theory and practice is
implanted in a differing local Chinese context.