Access the full text.
Sign up today, get DeepDyve free for 14 days.
Melissa Hawkins, C. James (2018)
Developing a perspective on schools as complex, evolving, loosely linking systemsEducational Management Administration & Leadership, 46
K. Morrison (2010)
Complexity Theory, School Leadership and Management: Questions for Theory and PracticeEducational Management Administration & Leadership, 38
L. Horvath, Éva Verderber, T. Baráth (2017)
Managing the Complex Adaptive Learning Organization
Tuncer Fidan, A. Balcı (2017)
Managing schools as complex adaptive systems: A strategic perspectiveInternational Electronic Journal of Elementary Education, 10
D. Mifsud (2017)
Distributed leadership in a Maltese college: the voices of those among whom leadership is ‘distributed’ and who concurrently narrate themselves as leadership ‘distributors’International Journal of Leadership in Education, 20
Jeff Clark (2008)
Philosophy, understanding and the consultation: a fusion of horizons.The British journal of general practice : the journal of the Royal College of General Practitioners, 58 546
J. Mingers (1991)
The cognitive theories of Maturana and VarelaSystems practice, 4
R. Flood, N. Romm (2018)
A systemic approach to processes of power in learning organizations: Part I – literature, theory, and methodology of triple loop learningThe Learning Organization, 25
Cynthia Larson (2016)
Evidence of Shared Aspects of Complexity Science and Quantum PhenomenaCosmos and history: the journal of natural and social philosophy, 12
T. Dick, P. Pilowsky (2010)
ForewordRespiratory Physiology & Neurobiology, 174
S. Glouberman (2002)
Complicated and Complex Systems: What Would Successful Reform of Medicare Look Like?
Mark Rowbotham (2021)
The Viable Systems Model
P. Barnard (2020)
Secondary school structure, organisational learning capacity and learning organisations: a systemic contributionInternational Journal of Educational Management, 34
T. Fenwick (2000)
Expanding Conceptions of Experiential Learning: A Review of the Five Contemporary Perspectives on CognitionAdult Education Quarterly, 50
I. Prigogine
Exploring Complexity
C. Bason (2010)
Organising for innovation
W. Bennis (1999)
The leadership advantageLeader To Leader, 1999
Stuart Kauffman, Sönke Johnsen (1991)
Coevolution to the edge of chaos: coupled fitness landscapes, poised states, and coevolutionary avalanches.Journal of theoretical biology, 149 4
Kaisu Mälkki, Larry Green (2014)
Navigational AidsNature, 183
S. Cummings, T. Bridgman, KG Brown (2016)
Unfreezing change as three steps: Rethinking Kurt Lewin’s legacy for change managementHuman Relations, 69
S. McGee, R. Edson (2014)
Challenges of Governance in Complex Adaptive Systems: A Case Study of U.S. Public Education
Joseph Murphy (2020)
The Five Essential Reasons for the Failure of School ReformsJournal of Human Resource and Sustainability Studies
R. Vanderstraeten (2002)
The autopoiesis of educational organizations: the impact of the organizational setting on educational interactionSystems Research and Behavioral Science, 19
Meredith Honig (2004)
Where’s the “Up” in Bottom-Up Reform?Educational Policy, 18
B. Flyvbjerg (2004)
Phronetic planning research: theoretical and methodological reflectionsPlanning Theory & Practice, 5
L. Cuban (2019)
Challenging the grammar of schooling (Part 3)
David Tyack, W. Tobin (1994)
The “Grammar” of Schooling: Why Has it Been so Hard to Change?, 31
E. Schein (1996)
Kurt Lewin's change theory in the field and in the classroom: Notes toward a model of managed learningSystems practice, 9
Holland (2014)
10.1093/actrade/9780199662548.001.0001
Peter Gronn (2002)
Distributed leadership as a unit of analysisLeadership Quarterly, 13
A. Badalamenti, R. Langs (1991)
An empirical investigation of human dyadic systems in the time and frequency domains.Behavioral science, 36 2
(2003)
Complexity theory and educational leadership
J. Lumby (2019)
Distributed Leadership and bureaucracyEducational Management Administration & Leadership, 47
J. Mezirow (2003)
Transformative Learning as DiscourseJournal of Transformative Education, 1
N. Keshavarz, D. Nutbeam, L. Rowling, F. Khavarpour (2010)
Schools as social complex adaptive systems: a new way to understand the challenges of introducing the health promoting schools concept.Social science & medicine, 70 10
Glen Sherman (2009)
Martin Heidegger's Concept of Authenticity: A Philosophical Contribution to Student Affairs TheoryJournal of College and Character, 10
J. Pfeffer (1993)
Barriers to the Advance of Organizational Science: Paradigm Development as a Dependent VariableAcademy of Management Review, 18
H. Shaked, Chen Schechter (2020)
Systems thinking leadership: New explorations for school improvementManagement in Education, 34
D. Buchanan (1993)
Outward Bound Goes to the Inner City.Educational Leadership, 50
K. Morrison (2005)
Structuration theory, habitus and complexity theory: elective affinities or old wine in new bottles?British Journal of Sociology of Education, 26
(2016)
Understanding how structure and agency influence education policy implementation and organisational change
R. Poli (2013)
A Note on the Difference Between Complicated and Complex Social Systems, 2
R. Whittington (1994)
Sociological Pluralism, Institutions and Managerial Agency
J. D'Ambrosio, Arun Adiththan, Edwin Ordoukhanian, P. Peranandam, S. Ramesh, A. Madni, P. Sundaram (2019)
An MBSE Approach for Development of Resilient Automated Automotive SystemsSyst., 7
S. Heinrich, R. Kupers (2018)
Complexity as a Big Idea for Secondary Education: Evaluating a Complex Systems CurriculumSystems Research and Behavioral Science
M. Boisot, B. Mckelvey (2016)
Complexity and organisation–environment relations: revisiting Ashby's law of requisite variety
R. Seel (2000)
Culture and Complexity: New Insights on Organisational Change
J. Turner, R. Baker (2019)
Complexity Theory: An Overview with Potential Applications for the Social SciencesSyst., 7
Melissa Hawkins, C. James (2016)
Theorising schools as organisations: Isn’t it all about complexity?
F. Betts (1992)
How Systems Thinking Applies to Education.Educational Leadership, 50
H. Simon (1991)
The Architecture of Complexity, 106
At a time when many education systems are grappling with the issue of school reform, there is a concern that traditional UK secondary schools are organised in a way that makes them unable to respond to increasingly complex environmental demands. This research-based paper uses complexity theory to gauge the organisational differences between (1) the traditional model of schooling based on same-age organisation and (2) a form of organisation based on multi-age tutor groups, one that schools call a vertical tutoring (VT) system. The intention is to highlight the organisational changes made by schools that choose to transition from their same-age iteration to the VT system, and expose organisational assumptions in the dominant same-age structure that may account for the failure of reform.Design/methodology/approachThe author's consultancy and research work spans two decades, and includes around 200 UK secondary schools, and others in China, Japan, South Africa, Australia, Qatar, Germany and Colombia. This conceptual paper draws on the recorded discourse and critical reflections of leadership teams during programmes of transformative learning, the process involved in the transition from one system to another. Using descriptions of school organisation abstracted from the complexity literature, differences in the two models not otherwise apparent, come into sharp focus. These not only reveal a substantive connection between organisation, complexity, and individual and organisational learning, but offer insights into the challenge of school reform.FindingsSame-age organisations act in ways that regulate and restrict the agency of participating actors (staff, students and parents). The effect is to reduce a school’s learning capacity and ability to absorb the value demand on its system. Such a system is closed and non-complex. VT schools construct an open and fluid learning system from the base, deregulating agency. By unfreezing their structure, they intervene in processes of power, necessitating the distribution of leadership to the organisational edge, a process of complexification. The form of organisation chosen by a school explains the failure of reform.Originality/valueInsights from VT schools cast considerable doubt on the viability of traditional same-age structures to serve complex societies and communities, while highlighting the critical role played by complexity theory in organisational praxis. If correct, the current emphasis on teacher “will and skill”, curricular editing, pedagogy and the “what works agenda” will be insufficient to bring about reformational change and more likely to contribute to systemic stasis.
International Journal of Educational Management – Emerald Publishing
Published: Jun 21, 2021
Keywords: Vertical tutoring; Organisation; Complexity; Capacity; Communication; Care
Read and print from thousands of top scholarly journals.
Already have an account? Log in
Bookmark this article. You can see your Bookmarks on your DeepDyve Library.
To save an article, log in first, or sign up for a DeepDyve account if you don’t already have one.
Copy and paste the desired citation format or use the link below to download a file formatted for EndNote
Access the full text.
Sign up today, get DeepDyve free for 14 days.
All DeepDyve websites use cookies to improve your online experience. They were placed on your computer when you launched this website. You can change your cookie settings through your browser.