What does it entail to be a self-managing school? : evidence from one South African school.
Date
2014
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Abstract
I embarked on this research journey with the aim of understanding in some depth, the work of
a South African primary school through the self-managing lens. The journey was triggered by
an apparent limited understanding in South Africa about what it entails to be a self-managing
school despite the fact that the South African Schools Act, in keeping with developments
worldwide, calls for schools to become more self-managing. In South Africa, the term ‘selfmanaging
school’ has kind of been ‘hijacked’ and become restricted to refer to Section 21
schools that self-manage their finances. But literature unequivocally shows that the notion of
a self-managing school is ‘pregnant’ with meaning, far deeper and richer than financial
wellness. Thus the fundamental questions guiding this study related to how Acme Primary
School fared as a self-managing school and what lessons could be learnt there, regarding
what it may entail to be a self-managing school in the South African context. Couched within
the interpretive research paradigm, the study adopted a single case study research design. A
sample of ten participants comprising of the School Management Team and selected
educators made up the main data source. Data was captured through a blend of four
instruments, namely a transect walk, observation, semi-structured interviews and document
analysis. The study was informed by a two- pronged theoretical framework of the theories of
capital and distributed leadership. Findings provided a complex and intricate web of factors
which pointed to Acme Primary School being on course towards self-managing. The school’s
success as a self-managing institution revolved around its ability to draw on all four forms of
capital: intellectual, financial, social and spiritual. Intellectual capital was to do with
knowledge production and utilization thereof in order to maintain a sense of renewal and
inspiration within the school. Social capital related to the building of relationships and
interactions among stakeholders. Financial capital was to do with the presence of the
resources necessary to meet development needs. Spiritual capital entailed the bond created
through shared beliefs, norms and values all of which developed a culture of self-belief and a
drive to succeed. The school’s success was also informed by leadership that was distributed
across the organization - a case of multiple leaders.
Description
Ph. D. University of KwaZulu-Natal, Durban 2014.
Keywords
School management and organization--South Africa., Education--South Africa--Finance., Management--Employee participation--South Africa., Theses--Education.