Leadership in British Columbia's K to 12 international programs: where are we now?

An international program in a public K to 12 school district in British Columbia is responsible for international students, their education, and life in BC. An international program leader (IPL) is employed by the school district to lead these programs. The IPL has an influence on the lives of stude...

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Main Author: Davis, Jeffrey
Other Authors: Crippen, Carolyn L. (Carolyn Lee)
Language:English
en
Published: 2017
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1828/7734
Davis, J. (2012). Human relationships (ningen kankei), organizational consciousness (dantai ishiki), and continuous improvement (kaizen): Meta-values in Japanese education with motivating force. Journal of Authentic Leadership in Education 2 (3). Retrieved from http://csle.nipissingu.ca/JALE/JALE_Vol2Num3Final.pdf
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spelling ndltd-uvic.ca-oai-dspace.library.uvic.ca-1828-77342017-01-12T17:14:23Z Leadership in British Columbia's K to 12 international programs: where are we now? Davis, Jeffrey Crippen, Carolyn L. (Carolyn Lee) leadership human relations organizational culture values context An international program in a public K to 12 school district in British Columbia is responsible for international students, their education, and life in BC. An international program leader (IPL) is employed by the school district to lead these programs. The IPL has an influence on the lives of students, parents, school district staff, home-stay families, and study-abroad agents. International program leadership is an emerging area of study in educational leadership, with limited research. The purpose of this study was to gain an understanding of leadership in public K to 12 international programs in BC and to reflect on theoretical foundations that may influence practice. In-depth interviews with six IPLs using a multiple-case-study approach (Stake, 2006) uncovered perspectives on leading international programs in a BC context. In the cross-case analysis, three themes emerged: (a) the phenomenon of international program leadership is contextual, (b) professional (human) relationships and networks are key elements of international program leadership, and (c) managing and resolving conflicts over values and culture are key elements of international program leadership. The implications of these findings include: (a) the background of the IPL influences leadership, (b) the context of an international program in a BC school district influences IPL leadership practice, (c) human relationships with five key stakeholders are important for leaders, and (d) the role of the IPL as a mediator of conflicts in three key areas: philosophical disagreements regarding international programs from colleagues in a school district, the management of mental health issues for students, and inappropriate living conditions for students. Graduate 2017-01-10T16:33:44Z 2017-01-10T16:33:44Z 2017 2017-01-10 Thesis http://hdl.handle.net/1828/7734 Davis, J. (2012). Human relationships (ningen kankei), organizational consciousness (dantai ishiki), and continuous improvement (kaizen): Meta-values in Japanese education with motivating force. Journal of Authentic Leadership in Education 2 (3). Retrieved from http://csle.nipissingu.ca/JALE/JALE_Vol2Num3Final.pdf English en Available to the World Wide Web
collection NDLTD
language English
en
sources NDLTD
topic leadership
human relations
organizational culture
values
context
spellingShingle leadership
human relations
organizational culture
values
context
Davis, Jeffrey
Leadership in British Columbia's K to 12 international programs: where are we now?
description An international program in a public K to 12 school district in British Columbia is responsible for international students, their education, and life in BC. An international program leader (IPL) is employed by the school district to lead these programs. The IPL has an influence on the lives of students, parents, school district staff, home-stay families, and study-abroad agents. International program leadership is an emerging area of study in educational leadership, with limited research. The purpose of this study was to gain an understanding of leadership in public K to 12 international programs in BC and to reflect on theoretical foundations that may influence practice. In-depth interviews with six IPLs using a multiple-case-study approach (Stake, 2006) uncovered perspectives on leading international programs in a BC context. In the cross-case analysis, three themes emerged: (a) the phenomenon of international program leadership is contextual, (b) professional (human) relationships and networks are key elements of international program leadership, and (c) managing and resolving conflicts over values and culture are key elements of international program leadership. The implications of these findings include: (a) the background of the IPL influences leadership, (b) the context of an international program in a BC school district influences IPL leadership practice, (c) human relationships with five key stakeholders are important for leaders, and (d) the role of the IPL as a mediator of conflicts in three key areas: philosophical disagreements regarding international programs from colleagues in a school district, the management of mental health issues for students, and inappropriate living conditions for students. === Graduate
author2 Crippen, Carolyn L. (Carolyn Lee)
author_facet Crippen, Carolyn L. (Carolyn Lee)
Davis, Jeffrey
author Davis, Jeffrey
author_sort Davis, Jeffrey
title Leadership in British Columbia's K to 12 international programs: where are we now?
title_short Leadership in British Columbia's K to 12 international programs: where are we now?
title_full Leadership in British Columbia's K to 12 international programs: where are we now?
title_fullStr Leadership in British Columbia's K to 12 international programs: where are we now?
title_full_unstemmed Leadership in British Columbia's K to 12 international programs: where are we now?
title_sort leadership in british columbia's k to 12 international programs: where are we now?
publishDate 2017
url http://hdl.handle.net/1828/7734
Davis, J. (2012). Human relationships (ningen kankei), organizational consciousness (dantai ishiki), and continuous improvement (kaizen): Meta-values in Japanese education with motivating force. Journal of Authentic Leadership in Education 2 (3). Retrieved from http://csle.nipissingu.ca/JALE/JALE_Vol2Num3Final.pdf
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