Project information
End date
April 2014
HK Principal Investigator
Professor Allan David Walker (Hong Kong Institute of Education)
HK Co-Investigators
Funding
ESRC-RGC HK Bilateral
Focus
Raising standards of teaching and learning in schools is an issue of global concern and a key focus of recent educational reforms. However, there are continuing debates within policy, academic and practice communities about how and to what extent schools implement such reforms in ways which ensure that their intentions are achieved.
The purpose of this research is, therefore, to contribute to new knowledge of the complex interface between policy intentions and educational practices and outcomes through a comparative analysis of the ways in which the intended outcomes of such reforms are mediated by school leaders and teachers in a diverse range of effective and improving secondary schools in England and Hong Kong.
Methodology
The research will begin with a mapping exercise of perceived challenges of current government reforms in Hong Kong and England and a secondary analysis of two existing national surveys on senior and middle leaders' perceptions of their principals' contribution to change and improvement in their schools.
These analyses will form the basis for detailed case studies of eight successful secondary schools (four from the parallel study in each country) across diversified school populations in different socio-economic contexts. The case studies will focus upon the ways in which reforms are mediated by principals, senior and middle leaders and teachers in order to assess the extent to which their primary intentions have been translated into practice and whether their focus on improving the leadership of learning and teaching in schools and classrooms has been effectively realised and sustained.
Outcomes
By exploring perceptions of change at different levels and from different perspectives, the research will help us better understand the continuities, discontinuities and relative impact on schools serving different communities of reform led changes which seek improvements in educational practices and in pupil outcomes.
This comparative analysis between schools in England and Hong Kong will provide new insights on the nature of the leadership and management of change in educational practice in the context of similarities and differences in the social, cultural and societal values between the two countries and similarities in the reform objectives.
Moreover, by using longitudinal, mixed methods to investigate the interface of reform at macro (country), meso (school) and micro (classroom) levels, the research will make a distinctive contribution to knowledge of how mandated reforms are mediated in their contexts of use by school leaders and classroom teachers.