Friday 29 January 2016

Scaling the mountain to principalship: The barriers and the enablers of a female first time principal’s journey - Chapter Twelve: Discussion

Chapter Twelve: Discussion
I started this research to gain greater insight into the influences on the journey of a woman who has “arrived” at the apex of school leadership in New Zealand.  This investigation has revealed that there are no magic answers into how women can prepare for the position but it does document Janet’s career path and therefore her life journey (Jones & Le Fevre, 2015). My conviction has been strengthened that from very early on in their careers women need to be aware of the barriers that may stop or slow them down on their trek upwards towards principalship especially in New Zealand’s neo-liberal context and learn how to navigate through or around them.  Simultaneously, women must grow the enablers that will support them in any future expeditions.   Individual women do have to take responsibility and champion themselves (Kelsey et al., 2014) but society also needs a political shift to incorporate these ideas (Grogan & Shakeshaft, 2011). 

12.1 Confidence “I didn’t have the confidence, I actually didn’t think that I could do the job” (Janet)
One of the key themes that came through in my interview with Janet was her confidence in her own ability to contemplate principalship.  Men often just take a chance on a promotion whereas women may feel like they need to tick all the boxes before they can confidently apply for a role (Futures Leaders Trust as cited in Tickle, 2015, September, 29).  Society must find ways to develop confidence in female leaders by building up the enablers and minimising or breaking the barriers to guarantee an increase in the number of female principals in schools as well as male principals who do not fit into a constricting masculine construct (Moorosi, 2015). 


12.2 Strengthening enablers
The enablers that guided Janet up the mountain towards principalship and also keep her strong while she stays there include: role models, mentors, networks and professional development.  It is important for other female future leaders that individual women, schools and the Ministry of Education/Government consider how to strengthen these enablers.

12.3 Principals as role models to boost women’s confidence
Principals, including Janet, hold powerful positions and their leadership impacts on large populations of students and staff as they enact expectations about how men and women should behave (Fawver, 2014; Fuller, 2013).  Cultural scripts are immersed and learned across the gender divide reproducing social codes and behaviour (Shah, 2015) and if there are not female principals, such as Janet, in positions of power then power becomes associated only with males (Lumby, 2009).  Of course there shouldn’t be tokenism but as humans vicariously learn women and girls along with men and boys need a range of role models (Fawver, 2014; Neale & Ozkanli, 2011; Painter-Morland, 2011).  By challenging negative perceptions and stereotypes, and specifically showing that being a principal and a mother of young children is compatible (Tickle, 2015, June 2), would-be female leaders will be encouraged to scale the mountain and a wide pool of successful women leaders can be developed (Sanchez & Thornton, 2010; Webster, 2015). 

12.4 Mentors and networks to support women leaders
Mentors helped Janet and continue to assist other women to increase their self-concept, self-belief and confidence levels in their career development and psychosocial roles (Christman & McClellan, 2008; Kelsey et al., Litmanovitz, 2011; 2014; Randell, 2015; Sanchez & Thornton, 2010; Sherman, 2005).  However, mentors need to be reflective and if possible trained (Jones & Le Fevre, 2015; Wilson-Tagoe, 2015).  Alongside this a mentee needs someone she respects and admires (Shoaf & Britt, 2009); someone who owns her values, thoughts and emotions and who “walks the talk” (Gardner, Avolio, Luthans, May & Walumba, 2005; Shamir & Eilam, 2005; Shoaf & Britt, 2009).  If a woman cannot find a mentor or needs extra assistance she could join a network for women leaders to counteract the old boys club (Martin, 2015; Masters, 2015; Wilson-Tagoe, 2015). This network could organise opportunities to shadow female principals (Kelsey et al., 2014; Taukamo, 2011), give encouragement and increase confidence levels. 




12.5 Professional development as an enabler
Janet identified professional development as an enabler in her career path.  She concurs with Patuawa (2006) that experience or “just in time learning” is the most powerful.  However, formal professional learning may boost women further up the mountain as female exceptional candidates may create a more level playing field to compete with males (Shakeshaft et al., 2015; Skinner, 2009). 
The National Aspiring Principals Programme and the University Educational Leadership Programmes are avenues which could specifically support female leaders as advocated by Taukamo (2011) in New Zealand for Māori women, Oplatka and Tamir (2009) in Israel, and Young and McLeod (2001) in the USA.  A proposal of the Pay and Employment Equity Review (Ministry of Education, 2008) was that the National Aspiring Principals Programme should provide specific career development for women but this hasn’t been specified as part of its remit from the Ministry of Education (J. Lunn, National Aspiring Principals Programme, personal communication, October 15, 2015).  Currently, the focus of the National Aspiring Principals Programme is on developing “adaptive, culturally responsive, digitally literate leaders through inquiry learning, and building their understanding of the research base around leadership” which are all vitally important skills especially relationship building and conflict resolution (Duncan, 2013).  Regrettably, as women like Janet, already have some of these skills through their pastoral responsibilities in school (Coleman, 2009) this remit may limit them because they need to develop the “hard skills” for their neo-liberal principal tool kit.  Janet specifically discussed her lack of financial skills that she needs now as a principal. 

12.6 Pulling down barriers
Gender is a common theme in Janet’s identified barriers and women’s choices can be encumbered by society’s expectations of them (Hansen, 2014). Janet did not verbalise that becoming a wife or a mother was a barrier (with all the negative connotations associated with the word barrier itself) in her career path towards principalship.  Nevertheless, as shown above, gender barriers still do exist for women (and some men) and that individual female leaders in schools, schools themselves and the Ministry of Education/Government should consider how to pull them down.

12.7 Conscious raising - with the whole school community
One way to pull down the gender barriers is through consciousness raising with the whole school community.  Leadership is still defined in masculine terms and women are “systematically and systemically” (Reilly, Bauer, McNee & Reed, 2015) subordinated through the construction of masculinities (Hansen, 2014).  Prestigious positions are seen as male only by both men and women (Fitzgerald & Wilkinson, 2010; Kelsey et al., 2014; Lyman et al., 2012) and female leaders, like Janet, as well as men, who might not display the masculine attributes associated with principalship (Fawver, 2014) will continue to find their journey difficult until these stereotypes are destroyed.  New Zealand needs authentic leaders who can walk the talk and are trusted by the whole school community if it is to advance social justice outcomes (Gardner et al., 2005; Lyman et al., 2012) and authentic leaders come in all shapes and sizes, ethnicities and genders.

To challenge the stereotypes of educational leaders (Hansen, 2014) society needs to have macro-institutional change driven at a micro-institutional level in this case schools as they are developmental institutions (Morrison, Blood & Thorsborne, 2005).  However, before teachers can develop students they need to be given many opportunities to discuss social justice concerns where stereotypes of gender and leadership are explored (Grogan & Shakeshaft, 2011) and reflect why they believe what they do (Coleman, 2009; Gardner et al., 2005; Lyman et al., 2012; Raffo & Gunter, 2008). 

Once this has happened teachers can use ako (3) (Ka Hikitia, 2008) by collaborating with our young people to build an understanding of social justice issues and equity including: what leadership is, their perceptions of who leaders can be, as well as build their (students and teachers) own capacity and confidence to see themselves as leaders (Blackmore, 2009; Kelsey et al., 2014).  By doing this schools can mould culturally and ecologically conscious whānau (and communities) who are capable of caring for and contributing to the well-being of others (Taysum & Gunter, 2008). 

12.8 Gender mainstreaming and offering a pluralistic approach
A second way to break down gender inequity and to build a “gender positive culture” is by schools putting gender back on their agendas (National Council of Women of New Zealand, 2015, p. 37).  To do this they could utilise gender mainstreaming which is a “gender-political instrument” (Bauer, 2015) to assess the different implications for women and men of any planned policy action, including processes, policies and programmes in all areas and levels. When applied in the right way gender mainstreaming creates new chances and resources for an organisation to achieve gender equity for both sexes by offering a pluralistic approach that values the diversity among both women and men (Bauer, 2015). It places a “gender lens” (Bauer, 2015; Ministry of Education, 2008; Robinson & Shakeshaft, 2015) on different circumstances and investigates the interests of women and men on a regular basis in all development plans since there is “no gender-neutral reality” (Gruber, 2015, p. 45). 

12.9 Being a wife and a mother - keeping women “on ramp”
For New Zealand society to have the best people, like Janet, as principals it is important that policies in schools are implemented to abolish the barriers that stop mothers from becoming leaders if they choose to.  Schools need to keep women “on ramp” by understanding the complexities of women’s non-linear careers and by being prepared to support not punish this (Hewlett, Luce, Schiller & Southwell, 2005). Men (and women) need to be taught to “wait for” women on maternity leave and nurture them to gain or retain positions of leadership when or if they return (Fuller, 2015) perhaps by providing onsite childcare. 
Most studies pinpointed a supportive spouse and a delay of career until children are older, which I also found in my study with Janet, as the factors that make the time commitment to a principal role more bearable (Kelsey et al., 2014) but this is not the case for all women.  Some women don’t have a supportive spouse or desire to become a principal when their children are younger.  Therefore schools have to support all women if they choose the very time consuming, multi-layered and multi-faceted position of principal (Duncan, 2013; Fuller, 2013). 
12.10 The role of fathers
As well as breaking down the barriers for mothers there also needs to be a change in the attitudes and values towards fathers’ roles including the stigma for men attached to parental leave.  In the UK less than 10% of men are taking more than their two weeks statutory leave as research by law firm Slater and Gordon revealed that they are too embarrassed to ask for more (2014, as cited in Jenkin, 2015).  In New Zealand paid and unpaid parental leave can be transferred to fathers (Ministry of Business, 2011) but the majority of men in New Zealand do not take more than the minimum (Gibson, 2013, July 17). "[A]s at 30 June 2014, there were 659 employees (1.4% of the workforce) on parental leave, 643 of whom were female and 16 male (2013 figures were 617 total, 603 female and 14 males)" (State Services Commission, 2014, March 12). To counteract this in Sweden the Government insists that from 2016 men must take 3 months of the 16 months of parental leave (France-Presse, 2015, May 28).

12.11 My reflection
I have touched on the barriers and enablers in the climb to principalship for one female, New Zealand European principal who is over the age of fifty.  Women are not a homogenous or collective group (Fitzgerald & Wilkinson, 2010) and each woman leads with her intersecting identities (O’Brien & Shea, 2010) and has different enablers and barriers.  However, I have to agree that it is easier to say: “let’s fix the women problem” (Smooth, 2010) by itself as social relations of gender and its intersection with other socio-cultural categories such as race, ethnicity and socio-economic status are much more complex (Fitzgerald & Wilkinson, 2010; Lyman et al., 2012).  I am also the first to admit that I need to have more understanding about how socio-cultural characteristics influence not only career paths but lives generally (Fitzgerald & Wilkinson, 2010;  Grogan & Sherman Newcomb, 2015) and have a greater appreciation that they cannot be examined separately from one another (Grogan & Sherman Newcomb, 2015).
Janet has given me many insights into the principal role and her career path has thrown up new thoughts and revelations to myself and hopefully others.  Society needs to build the confidence of future women leaders to believe that they can be effective, authentic principals as themselves and do not have to try become “one of them” (Webster, 2015) and join the old boys club, albeit as an honorary member.  It is essential that New Zealand society encourages and advocates for principals who have similar values to Janet as these principals have passion for their communities and don’t want to see “any more kids falling through the cracks.”  They are prepared to find creative ways to reconcile social justice aspirations with neo-liberal market constraints (Stevenson, 2007) to create equitable outcomes for all students to escape from “exploitation, economic marginalisation and deprivation” (Taysum & Gunter, 2008, p. 197). 

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