Management versus Governance Power Contests Facing Principals in Schools: Power Relations

  • Prof. Vimbi Petrus Mahlangu Professor, Department of Educational Leadership and Management, College of Education, University of South Africa, 1Preller Street, Muckleneuk, Pretoria, 0003, Republic of South Africa
Keywords: Distributed Leadership, Governance; Principal; School Governing Body; Transparency

Abstract

The focus of the article is about issues that secondary schools face in terms of the responsibilities of principals and school governing bodies (SGBs) in terms of dispersed leadership rather than one-man role-based leadership. Methods: The study investigates issues of schools surrounding distributed leadership practices using data from research on the connection between the principal and school governing bodies. This research used qualitative and quantitative data collected from secondary school administrators, SGB members, and teachers as part of a design research project. Implications: According to the findings, concentrating on distributed leadership methods may assist overcome some of the drawbacks of providing feedback to a single leader. Findings: In Gauteng secondary schools, opposing ideas and expectations predominate. Where SGBs and principals struggle against one another, ambiguous rules are found. Some principals impose terms on SGBs, while SGBs impose terms on principals. Dysfunctional schools are caused by weak governance and management. In terms of financial problems, there is a lack of transparency in schools. Principals contribute to school problems by refusing or failing to accept their ineptness. They continue to run schools inefficiently; they do not fully engage teachers in school management; they mistreat parents; they impose terms on SGBs; they contribute to dysfunctional schools; school resources are embezzled for purposes not related to the running of schools, and they mix up their work with that of the SGBs. Principals and SGBs should be made aware that cooperation, rather than competition, may be more effective in reducing power struggles in schools.

Author Biography

Prof. Vimbi Petrus Mahlangu, Professor, Department of Educational Leadership and Management, College of Education, University of South Africa, 1Preller Street, Muckleneuk, Pretoria, 0003, Republic of South Africa

Prof. Dr. Vimbi Petrus Mahlangu [BA. ED; BED; M. ED; PHD] is a Full Professor at the University of South Africa, Department of Educational Leadership and Management. He had extensive writing, supervision, and publication experience in education. He had published books, book chapters, articles and supervised M and D students to completion. He presented papers at national and international conferences.

Published
2021-12-27

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