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School Leadership

School leadership and special education: challenges, dilemmas and opportunities from an Australian context

First published: 06 December 2013
Cited by: 1
CorrespondencePhilip GarnerSchool of EducationThe University of NorthamptonPark CampusBoughton Green RoadNorthampton NN2 7ALEmail: Philip.Garner@northampton.ac.uk

Abstract

This article examines the personal and professional attributes of school leaders in relation to special educational needs and disability (SEND) and assesses the extent to which these might be sufficient to give such professionals the confidence necessary to be role models for their staff. Data were collected via a survey of a randomly selected set of Australian school leaders, in both special and mainstream schools. This included principals from all sectors of the Australian school system. The study was based on the premise that school principals place as much importance on the need to be instructional leaders as they do on being managers. The study was informed by an assumption that in order to be successful as a school leader in respect of SEND, a school principal requires a deep pedagogical knowledge and a clear understanding of children's developmental milestones. The study found that school leaders expressed a need to develop further understanding of how to differentiate the taught curriculum in order to identify and support school‐wide quality teaching and learning processes for students with SEND.

Number of times cited: 1

  • , A typology for a social justice approach to assessment: learning from universal design and culturally sustaining pedagogy, Teaching in Higher Education, 10.1080/13562517.2018.1465405, 24, 1, (98-114), (2018).