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School Leadership: The Importance of Management Roles

School Leadership: The Importance of Management Roles 1

The Role of Middle Leaders/Managers in Schools

This post was inspired by this article on how organisations overlook the potential of their middle managers from the Big Think. Since my NPQML I felt that there was a severe undervaluing of middle managers in schools, You can read my naive reflection from the start of my leadership journey (from 2015) here. There can be a tendency to talk about more managerial roles as somehow lesser than being a “Leader”. The Importance of school management is well explained in this article from the Harvard Business Review.

In 1977, Abraham Zaleznik made a clear distinction between being a leader and being a manager. These ideas are still central to what is taught in many education leadership development programs, where there is a tendency to educate managers on how to “upgrade” and become leaders. Zaleznik argued that managers focus on building competence, control, and the appropriate balance of power, while leaders embrace chaos and lack of structure and are willing to delay closure to understand issues more fully. I am not sure about the “Chaos” element but thinking about the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on schools there is certainly a link between headteachers stepping up to a challenge. Whether they embraced it is questionable given the impact on recruitment and retention. Leaders are concerned with ideas and relate in more intuitive and empathetic ways, while managers relate to people according to the role they play in a sequence of events or a decision-making process.

This article forms part of our Special School Leadership Series.

Middle managers serve the most important role

Challenges faced by middle managers

Survey results highlight the problem

The importance of focusing on managers

Read about leading and developing teams and leadership and the management role in Ray Dalio’s book

The challenges faced by middle managers

The changing nature of work

Middle managers in schools are often overlooked

Providing tools and training for middle managers

The following roles and skills required highlight the importance of middle managers. When relating this to schools middle leaders are often the ones who keep companies together. The author identifies four key practices of successful middle managers:

  1. Janus: looking up and down the hierarchy and empathizing with both sides.
  2. Broker: negotiating between different levels of the School.
  3. Conduit: amplifying the voices of their direct reports.
  4. Tightrope walker: critically appraising and balancing dilemmas.

Middle managers are essential for the success of any school. They are the ones who bridge the gap between Senior Leaders, teachers and teaching assistants. They are also the ones who are responsible for implementing change and ensuring that everyone is following the strategic plan – well their elements of it. They are the ones who make things happen, and they deserve more recognition for their contributions.

Management Roles in Schools
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