Murdoch University
Library

 

 

Murdoch University Digital Theses Program

Browse: A - D E - H I - M N - R S - Z Search:

School Governance: Phases, Participation and Paradoxes

Author Information Thesis Files
Last Name Payne
Other Names Lesley Irene
Title Doctor
E-mail l.payne@central.murdoch.edu.au
Division Arts
School Education
Degree Program PhD
01Front.pdf 151k
02Whole.pdf 4818k
Thesis Document Information
Thesis Type PhD Doctorate
Title School Governance: Phases, Participation and Paradoxes
Date 2004
Abstract This research analyses the governance structures and processes of thirteen independent primary schools in Perth, and one state primary school in Western Australia termed an ‘alternative’ or ‘lighthouse’ school. More in-depth case studies were undertaken at five sites with participants from different time periods. All the schools had a school council or board since their foundations and notably all schools had their origins in the period of the alternative school and community empowerment movement of the 1970s and 1980s.
 
In an era of market reform and the corporatisation of schools, the critical areas of focus for this research were: how community expectations and school identity were maintained within council-governed schools; how democratic imperatives compete with professionalism and school improvement issues; and how schools confront dilemmas of governance. Three frameworks, Phases of Development, Community Empowerment and Dilemmas, were employed as useful means to discuss school governance. The results revealed changes in governance over time. Schools began to envisage themselves less as communities and more as businesses. The emphasis was away from parent involvement and towards efficiency and commercial practices. Tensions and dilemmas arose out of these changes.
 
The thesis concluded that it was not the structures or individuals that were crucial in governance processes but the playing out of particular tensions and dilemmas. Principals and councils have to acknowledge the dilemmas that arise from competing values systems and make choices based on a clear understanding of these dilemmas.
Committee Information
Supervisor Dr James Bell
Email j.bell@murdoch.edu.au

Murdoch University Australian Digital Theses Research and Development
Research and Development

The ADT Program participants acknowledge the work done by Virginia Polytechnic Institute. This national pilot project utilises and adapts the concepts and deposit process software first developed at Virginia Polytechnic Institute.