Remote Educational Leadership: What’s Different?

John Guenther, Steve Corrie, Robyn Ober, Sam Osborne

Research output: Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceedingChapterpeer-review

1 Citation (Scopus)

Abstract

In Australia, ‘remote’ education is often placed in a different category from ‘rural’ education. For the purpose of this chapter, we consider ‘remote’ to be a subset of a broader ‘rural’ description of geographically isolated areas that are distant from larger metropolitan centres. ‘Remote’ schools often cater for mining or agricultural communities and Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander communities. Our concern here is with the latter group. We present three case studies of educational leadership based on research conducted in remote Aboriginal communities and homelands of the Northern Territory and South Australia. While there are some commonalitieswith educational leadership in rural towns and communities, different dynamics come in to play in places where the priorities for learning are sometimes quite different, and where language and culture differences experienced by non-local leaders present a challenge that are not present in predominantly ‘white’ rural towns. In our analysis of the three case studies, we synthesise the key features of rural educational leadership, and offer a summary of how ‘leadership’ might be defined differently in remote Aboriginal communities and homelands.

Original languageEnglish
Title of host publicationSharing Leadership Stories in Rural Education
Subtitle of host publicationLeading Rurally across Australia and the United States
EditorsSimone White, Jayne Downey, Melyssa Fuqua
Place of PublicationSingapore
PublisherSpringer Nature
Chapter9
Pages139-153
Number of pages15
ISBN (Electronic)9789819782932
ISBN (Print)9789819782925
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2024

Keywords

  • Ethical relationships
  • First Nations communities
  • Homeland education
  • Place-based knowledge and culture
  • Red Dirt thinking
  • Remote school leaderships

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