Professional Standards for Primary Principals
CULTURE
Provide professional leadership that focuses the school culture on enhancing learning and teaching.
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Culture: "What we value around here"
Principals who focus the school culture on enhancing learning and teaching:
- have the skills to develop and implement shared goals and vision
- develop targets which set an expectation that all students will experience success in learning
- create a culture in which teamwork is expected and valued, and in which teachers are enabled to take on appropriate leadership roles
- build distributed leadership networks that secure commitment and responsibility for continued improvement through all levels of the school
- challenge and modify values and traditions which are not in students’ best interests
- lead and create opportunities to celebrate progress and success.
A school’s culture consists of the customs, rituals, and stories that are evident and valued throughout the whole school. An effective school culture is one in which the customs and values foster success for all; and where clear boundaries are set, known and agreed to by everyone (Stoll et al, 2003). In developing a positive culture, effective principals ensure that educational practices are inclusive. They make certain that students and their families do not feel alienated either from their own culture or from the culture of the school.
A school’s culture is also reflected in how, as an organisation, it solves the problems it faces. Effective school leadership ensures that the culture of the school is one that is safe and well organised, allowing teachers to focus on their teaching, and students on their learning (Robinson, 2007).
The Treaty of Waitangi provides a rationale for building a school culture that acknowledges kaupapa Māori, and promotes te reo Māori and tikanga Māori. New Zealand research indicates that student achievement is affected by the degree to which a student’s culture is respected by the school, and by the degree to which there is a connection between the culture of the community and whānau and the values of the school (Bishop et al, 2007).
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