Journal of Educational Leadership, Policy and Practice (Jan 2021)

Promotion to leadership, not just merit, but insider knowledge: What do school principals say?

  • Steed Kevin,
  • De Nobile John,
  • Waniganayake Manjula

DOI
https://doi.org/10.21307/jelpp-2021-001
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 36, no. 1
pp. 1 – 21

Abstract

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Whilst extensive research has been undertaken concerning educational leadership and management, there is a paucity of scholarship regarding the merit-selection of school leaders other than principals. This is especially true of principal-led merit selection panels convened to recruit middle-level school leaders, namely deputy principals, assistant principals and head teachers. Meritocratic discourse holds that merit-based selection should, ostensibly be an objective, fair and equitable process enabling applicants to compete on a level playing field via a comparative assessment of their capabilities, talents and attitudes. This paper explores the extent to which government school principals in the state of New South Wales Australia, consider the school-based merit selection process they lead is objective and bias-free. Hence, the findings reported here reveal that despite the New South Wales Department of Education (NSWDE) promulgating the primacy of merit in its school-based selection paradigm, non-merit variables (factors having little to do with merit) exert considerable influence over the appointment decisions made by NSWDE principals when assembling their respective school leadership teams.

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