Books launching - Understanding Leadership in Educational Contexts and Leading under pressure
Understanding Leadership in Educational Contexts and Leading under pressure
Sep 12, 2022 — All day
Join us for the books launching event in our Equitable Leadership Network Conference Series ''Leading under pressure'' and ''Understanding Leadership in Educational Contexts'' with Douglas Archibald, Stephanie Chitpin, Cameron Hauseman, Troy Heffernan, Olfa Karoui, Parisa Rezaiefar, Nathalie Sirois and Robert E. White. Register for this event happening on September 12, 2022.
Event description
It is a pleasure to welcome you to our two book launches.
My name is Stephanie Chitpin. My book “Understanding Leadership in Educational Contexts - A Case Study Approach” was published in March last year. In this book, I talked about school principals who work in complicated and multifaceted environments when it comes to operational decision-making. The book is part of the Transforming Education through Critical Leadership, Policy and Practice series, which is about what is happening in our schools now. It discusses what is being taught and learned, what we already know, what is being discovered, and how school leaders make decisions about specific events that regularly occur in their schools.
Our second book, edited by Dr. Robert White and myself, is titled “Leading Under Pressure - Educational Leadership in Neoliberal Times” and discusses leaders who lead by example, not by mandate. They are quite rare because the best leaders are too smart to tackle such a thankless task. This is where the book begins. In an increasingly hostile political, commercial and natural environment, there are glimmers of hope.
Douglas Archibald
Full Professor of Leadership in the Faculty of Education, University of Ottawa
Douglas Archibald, PhD, is a white cisgender man. On his father's side he descends from Scottish settlers who came to Canada in the late eighteenth century. On his mother's side, much more recently, as she immigrated from England in 1958. He humbly helped write this chapter from a position of privilege. He has not faced discrimination or racism in his years growing up and in his adult life. His lens is of an Anglophone male teacher, school administrator, and university professor. He has taught mainly in inner-city schools of Boston, Massachusetts; Ottawa, Canada; and in the ethnically diverse suburbs of Toronto, Ontario. He currently teaches and supervises health professions educators at the University of Ottawa.
Stephanie Chitpin
Full Professor of Leadership in the Faculty of Education, University of Ottawa
Stephanie Chitpin is a Full Professor of Leadership in the Faculty of Education, University of Ottawa, Canada. She is the recipient of the 2020 Research Excellence Award. Her research, funded by the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada (SSHRC) and the Ontario Ministry of Education, Canada, is international in scope. Her research includes the analysis of the Objective Knowledge Growth Framework (OKGF), based on Sir Karl Popper's critical rationalism, as a new tool for understanding principals' decision-making. She is Series Editor of Transforming Education Through Critical Leadership, Policy and Practice. She has authored several books on leadership, and her most recent one is Understanding Decision-Making in Educational Contexts: A Case Study approach.
Cameron Hauseman
Assistant Professor in the Faculty of Education at the University of Manitoba
Cameron Hauseman is an Assistant Professor in the Faculty of Education at the University of Manitoba. His research interests are situated in K-12 school leadership and program evaluation, with a specific focus on the work and well-being of school principals.
Troy Heffernan
Lecturer and Fulbright Scholar at the University of Manchester's Institute of Education
Troy Heffernan is a Senior Lecturer and Fulbright Scholar at the University of Manchester's Institute of Education. His current work explores vice-chancellors' approaches to management; the emotional labor involved in higher education leadership; the consequences of precarious employment; the implication of personal networks in academic promotion and hiring relating to gender, race, and minority groups; and understanding the repercussions of higher education's shift to business models and marketing practices.
Olfa Karoui
PhD Candidate specializing in educational, leadership at the University of Ottawa
Olfa Karoui is a PhD Candidate specializing in educational, leadership at the University of Ottawa. Olfa's research aims at understanding the impact of food insecurity in schools and the decision-making processes of leaders working with marginalized populations. Olfa's work includes A Canadian Move Towards Culturally Responsive Pedagogy (with Dr. Chitpin).
Parisa Rezaiefar
Assistant Professor in the Department of Family Medicine at the University of Ottawa
Parisa Rezaiefar, MD, CCFP, is a Muslim-born, heterosexual cis-woman, parent, and recent settler as a refuge to Canada from Iran. She writes this chapter as an underrepresented physician in medicine because of her ethnic background, mother tongue, the poverty she has experienced, and being the first woman to attain a postsecondary degree in many generations of her family. She is a family physician in Ottawa and is currently an Assistant Professor and clinical teacher to family medicine residents and medical students.
Nathalie Sirois
Experienced education professional
Nathalie Siris is an experienced education professional who has worked locally and internationally at many levels in the education system, including as a teacher, a consultant, and a system leader. Her work is focused on developing socially just practices creating educational contexts built for human flourishing in all its diversity.
Robert E. White
Senior Research Professor with the Faculty of Education at St Francis Xavier University
Robert E. White has taught extensively in public school across Canada for over 20 years. Robert is a Senior Research Professor with the Faculty of Education at St Francis Xavier University and an Adjunct Professor in Education at the University of Toronto (OISE). Robert's research interests include educational administration and policy, postmodernity and globalization, qualitative research methodologies, and critical pedagogy. Robert is Associate Editor of the International Journal of Leadership in Education and Editor of the International Studies in Educational Administration. In 2013, he received the President's Research Award, granted by St. Francis Xavier University.