Creative insubordination of school principals and the legitimacy of the justifiable
- 1 October 1995
- journal article
- Published by Emerald Publishing in Journal of Educational Administration
- Vol. 33 (4) , 21-35
- https://doi.org/10.1108/09578239510147342
Abstract
Viewing school principals as street‐level bureaucrats, creative insubordination is the implementation of policies and programmes at the school level in a way that fits the principal′s values, philosophy, and goals. Focuses on school principals′ use of creative insubordination in relationships with the central office, their professional beliefs about discretion, perceptions of role conflict, and their locus of control. Creative insubordination was most frequent among veteran principals who value on‐the‐job competence over completion of degrees and certificates and are thought to be instructional leaders by central office supervisors. Social protection from negative sanctions from central office seemed to be associated with principals′ ability to show that their insubordination was justifiable in terms of the needs of their school, teachers or students.Keywords
This publication has 9 references indexed in Scilit:
- Managerial Ethics in Educational AdministrationUrban Education, 1989
- Administrative Control in Large-City School Systems: An Investigation in ChicagoEducational Administration Quarterly, 1985
- SPHERES OF CONTROL: An Interactionist Approach to Assessment of Perceived ControlPublished by Elsevier ,1981
- Leadership Style of Principals and the Professional Zone of Acceptance of TeachersEducational Administration Quarterly, 1976
- Educational Organizations as Loosely Coupled SystemsAdministrative Science Quarterly, 1976
- Student Brinkmanship and the School as a Social SystemEducational Administration Quarterly, 1975
- THEORY IN EDUCATIONAL ADMINISTRATIONJournal of Educational Administration, 1975
- Status Obeisance and Pupil Control IdeologyJournal of Educational Administration, 1971
- Role Conflict and Ambiguity in Complex OrganizationsAdministrative Science Quarterly, 1970