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“Lazarus” school rising: Finding renewed hope with a “little help from our friends” Cover

“Lazarus” school rising: Finding renewed hope with a “little help from our friends”

Open Access
|Mar 2020

Abstract

This article examines the nature of sudden and sweeping organisational change when a public secondary school facing closure reframed the ideological components of schooling, finding renewed hope and direction for the future. It also attempts to explain how organisational change can take place through university-led action research, activating school community support to become a science, technology, engineering, arts and mathematics (STEAM) school, securing funding sustainability, political and bureaucratic support, and a new regional school and university partnership. Finally, it seeks to understand how teachers and leaders make sense of their new STEAM organisational identity and how they are reflecting upon this in their new work ahead.

This single bounded case study used a “sequential transformative strategy” involving an initial phase of action research reframing schooling purpose as a STEAM school. This was followed by semi-structured teacher and leader interviews hermeneutically analysed, constituting a two part project with a theoretical lens of social science theory. The theoretical perspective of Meighan’s component theory informs the analysis of the two methodologies.

DOI: https://doi.org/10.21307/jelpp-2020-002 | Journal eISSN: 1178-8704 | Journal ISSN: 1178-8690
Language: English
Page range: 65 - 87
Published on: Mar 23, 2020
In partnership with: Paradigm Publishing Services
Publication frequency: 1 issue per year

© 2020 Andrew Bills, Amy Hamilton, Ben Wadham, published by New Zealand Educational Administration and Leadership Society
This work is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 License.