Embrace diversity and ditch the outdated ‘alpha’ leaders
Kausor Amin-Ali FRSA FCCT
School Principal | Co-Chair Ajman Principals Collaborative | Author | Chair of Governors | Founder of 'All Children Read' | PhD candidate
If we want the best school leaders to emerge we need to give opportunities to all types of people, which means appointing based on merit, not stereotypes
Diversity has become a popular term in recent years driven by wider societal challenges, particularly in Western societies.
A focus on appointing more people from BAME (Black, Asian and minority ethnic) backgrounds, especially in leadership and management roles in organisations, has become discussed extensively across the employment sectors.
Yet key characteristics remain under-represented among school leadership teams in England, especially in headship.
A recent Department for Education school census shows that while more than 28 per cent children are of BAME heritage, only around 10 per cent of teachers and about three per cent of headteachers are BAME, making teaching one of the most under-represented occupations in England behind only to the judiciary and the military.
In the international schools arena, however, the term BAME should be inverted - a term known as BGM (Black and global majority) - as among the student population, this group is not in a minority when compared to local and regional demographics.
However, despite the majority of students being BGM, many school leadership teams in international schools lack diversity in their teams - especially in terms of ethnicity.
In some of these schools, a racial hierarchy is apparent, where the schools’ workforces have a large proportion of BGM staff in what could be argued are lower ranked administration and operational roles but they are seldom found in middle or senior leadership.
In British Schools Overseas-accredited international schools in the Middle East, for example, the large majority of headteachers are ethnically White.
Cultural literacy to support multinational communities
Why is this an issue? Modern, future-focused international schools need to reflect and provide role models in leadership for the communities they serve.
Having a homogeneous leadership team can lead to cultural illiteracy which then risks presenting a very narrow world view in schools where there are students of a multitude of nationalities, including many “third-culture kids” (those who were raised in a culture other than that of their parents) and those of mixed heritage.
Global citizenry would be more enhanced with leaders from different heritages being able to contribute and bring something to the leadership dialogue.
The days of schools serving as a national outpost overseas for the children of the staff of a particular country’s embassy are a distant memory.
A lack of diversity at the top risks trapping a school in a yesteryear view of what values and cultural milestones the student body should learn about. This can have real and damaging impacts.
I have, for example, had experiences where a school leader has “promoted” a particular event for a minority of students while barely acknowledging another event where there is a larger pupil body in attendance.
Authentic leaders
Such situations are tricky to resolve, as cultural literacy cannot be taught on a training course.
We can all learn to be more culturally aware and sensitive but contributions from authentic diverse voices with lived experiences are always more genuine and are much needed in leadership teams.
Yet simply placing a person of colour in a position of authority is not the solution if they merely extend the policies of their elite backers, and behave and reflect the values of the homogeneous leadership team rather than removing barriers that students and staff may face who are ethnically from the BGM community.
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What is more positive is where BGM leaders have been able to secure the top roles in headship and principalship and, in doing so, build and ensure diversity in teams to create a leadership body that is more reflective of the community it serves.
Similarly, progression in ensuring strength in diverse leadership teams can be found where senior appointments have had a genuine meritocratic framework, and experience, track record and qualifications have been considered rather than appointing someone because of familiarity and prior association or affiliation.
The former often leads to a well-balanced team with a range of skill sets and backgrounds whereas the latter is indicative of nepotism and bias in the recruitment process.
On an institutional level, the more progressive schools are able to tackle discrimination with courageous leadership that promotes social justice.
This includes active programmes and curriculum reform to address racism, combat discrimination and promote tolerance.
The result is that everyone feels not only included but empowered. They feel represented and that they have a voice.
Such reforms do take time but the intent should be there to ensure that the current generation of middle leaders do not face the barriers to progression into senior leadership that their predecessors faced.
They also provide a living testimony to the children that schools practise what they preach; that there is a world in which students can achieve equity and justice without having to compromise their authenticity.
Diversity by personality and leadership styles
Diversity in other areas is vital for a vibrant and cohesive school leadership team, too.
In 2016, the Harvard Business Review published research analysing different types of school leaders and found five styles of leadership, which it termed: surgeon, soldier, accountant, philosopher and the most successful yet most under-recognised style, architect.
The research explains how the outmoded “alpha” (and usually male) aggressive leaders, surrounded by “yes” people - the soldiers and accountants - might deliver short-term success but often lack the cohesiveness that a long-term strategy for sustained school improvement or maintaining outstanding outcomes demands - and it is the architect-type leaders who do this best.
During my own 15 years’ experience of school leadership, including four headships, it became apparent that diversity of thinking (lateral as well as linear), personality (introvert and extrovert), and a breadth and depth of skills (verbal reasoners, numerically gifted and socially competent) were all needed, too.
People from all walks of life can possess these skills so we need to ensure that all types of individuals have the chance to reach the top so they can establish effective leadership teams that deliver for the benefit of all pupils they serve.
Kausor Amin-Ali is a secondary school headteacher at GEMS Founders School Al Mizhar in Dubai. He is also chair of governors at Robert Miles Infant School in Bingham, Nottinghamshire, and the author of A-Z of School Leadership: A guide for new school leaders.
This article has been updated from the originally published article in TES with the most recent Department for Education Pupil Characteristics data. 36% of all pupils in State Schools in England are identified as non-White British.
Founder and Director: Learning & Projects I Leading with Emotional Intelligence, Intercultural Competency and Business Communications
10 个月This is a very interesting reality to explore, Kausor. And I have heard it highlighted before. I would like to suggest that expanding the breadth and capacity for real diversity requires some fundamental efforts in improving self-awareness, both personal and broader cultural. Particularly so, for those in decision-making roles who have the ability to include and improve the participation of those whose representation is missing. And those people missing may actually already be sitting at the table. I contend they aren't seen or heard often because of the bias and assumptions of others. I don't really fit the typical BAME profile. Yet, as an Australian, I know that if I'm in a meeting that my opinion won't hold as much value, if ever it is asked for, as my British and American colleagues. I was actually reminded of that by a British colleague, in front of others, on one occasion. And secondly, I have too many other anecdotal stories from others like me, to think this isn't the case in international education as much as in corporate life. BAME is an issue in the UK, especially. I believe bias should be cross-checked on a far broader basis, however.
Future of Work | Organisation Architecture | HR Automation |
10 个月Kausor Amin-Ali FRSA FCCT, one of the concerns i have is that there's so little people data and thus close to zero scrutiny around workforce diversity (and many other things) because its not being measured. I know i bang this drum a lot, but schools must professionalise talent management. That means hiring HR professionals who are at an appropriately senior level to both understand how to manage diversity, AND to have the professional gravitas to push back to the Principal. In what other profession of the standing of education, do we see CEOs at conferences pontificating about culture and people management, and not a HR voice in sight......the reality is, it doesnt happen in any other sector - and education really does have a structural' issue where principals have think they have to know and do it all, despite having zero formal knowledge of talent management practice or understanding of people analytics. People data, and measurement of diversity has to show a problem exists, before a problem is understood and action taken - yet today, majority of school HR cant even measure turnover correctly, let alone understand why its wrong to post another 'native english speakers (aka white) only' job
Master in political science,B.ed,M.ed
11 个月??
Head of School at Taaleem
11 个月A wonderful read Kausor Amin-Ali FRSA FCCT ????????