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Ng, David Foo Seong
- PublicationOpen AccessDiffusing education innovations at different levels of the system: Perspectives from ecological leadership.(National Institute of Education (Singapore), 2021)
;Ho, Jeanne Marie Pau Yuen ;Chua, Puay Huat ;Norhayati Munir; 331 175 - PublicationOpen AccessSchool leadership in ICT implementation: Perspectives from SingaporeSingapore has implemented two Masterplans for Information Communication Technology (ICT) in education over the last decade. This article examines Singapore teachers’ perspectives of how leadership for ICT implementation in schools is distributed among leaders, by means of a survey conducted in 2007. The study found that transformational and instructional leadership are perceived to be distributed among multiple leaders including Principal, Heads of Technology, and Heads of Subject. Heads of Technology are viewed as performing both transformational and instructional leadership activities more frequently than the Principal or the Subject Heads. The transformational leadership and instructional leadership performed have a significant effect on the amount of extra effort teachers put into their use of ICT.
WOS© Citations 15Scopus© Citations 17 621 820 - PublicationOpen AccessDistributed leadership in ICT reformThis study examined distributed leadership in Information Communication Technology reform in a government school in Singapore. The study adopted a naturalistic inquiry approach, involving the case study of a school. The study found that leadership for ICT reform is distributed according to functions of transformational, instructional, emotional and strategic management of resources. The key enabling factors are an official leadership position, access to expertise, support by senior management, and interpersonal synergies amongst the leaders. Transformational leadership is performed mainly by senior management. Instructional leadership is performed mainly by middle management. Both senior and middle management provided emotional leadership.
Scopus© Citations 19 201 367 - PublicationOpen AccessLeadership across schools to diffuse an education innovation: Applying complexity leadership theory with ecological leadership(Taylor & Francis, 2021)
;Ho, Jeanne Marie Pau Yuen; ;Chua, Puay HuatNorhayati MunirThis paper examined leadership practices which supported the diffusion of an innovation in a cluster of schools in Singapore, through the lenses of complexity leadership theory (CLT) and ecological leadership. The approach is a qualitative case study, with the unit of analysis bounded by the innovation and a cluster of schools involved in the diffusion effort. The case study involved investigations mainly at four ecological levels: the ministry (macro), the cluster (exo), school/subject department (meso) and teacher (micro), involving nine observations of the cluster’s community of teachers in 2019, and interviews or focused group discussions with 33 participants, including ministry officers, school leaders, key personnel and teachers. Findings and Implications: The findings illustrate the diffusion of an innovation through the interactional dynamics of administrative, adaptive, and enabling leadership, how these three CLT roles were performed by formal and informal leaders, deliberately or emergent, and across ecological levels. These leadership roles enabled learning and adaptions across and within ecologies. The study also reinforced the importance of the moral and emotional aspects of leadership in providing teachers with the motivation and support to cope with changes. The affordances, challenges, and limitations in applying CLT are elaborated.Scopus© Citations 2 124 122 - PublicationOpen AccessTensions in distributed leadership
Purpose: Distributed leadership has grown in popularity over the past decade. Much of the literature to date has presented distributed leadership as a desired leadership practice and generally unproblematic. This paper suggests that the distribution of leadership encounters tensions within the hierarchical structure of schools, when leaders are faced with conflicting or overlapping goals, and organisational norms which govern the behavior of actors by prescribing role relations. The value of this paper is that it adds to the body of knowledge of distributed leadership, illustrating contexts in which leaders encounter tensions and how they resolve these tensions.
Research Methods: The study adopted a naturalistic inquiry approach involving the case study of a school in the process of implementing a project using Information Technology (IT) for instruction. The setting involved an elementary school in Singapore which was at the start of implementing an IT project at the Grade 4 level. The leaders identified included the principal, vice principals, and middle managers, including a senior teacher. Activity theory was used as the interpretative lens for data analysis.
Findings: Tensions were identified between activity systems at the structural and at the process levels, mainly as a result of conflicting or overlapping needs or objectives. However, the existence of tensions also gave rise to innovative solutions to resolve such tensions. This paper highlights three ways in which tensions were balanced in the distribution of leadership.
WOS© Citations 20Scopus© Citations 34 162 801 - PublicationOpen AccessDistributed leadership through the lens of Activity TheoryPurpose: Using Activity Theory as an interpretive lens to examine the distribution of leadership, this paper shares a case study on how leadership for an ICT project was distributed in a Singapore school. Method: The case study involved observations of 49 meetings and 34 interviews of leaders and the teachers who were involved in the ICT project. Findings: Applying the lens of 3rd generation Activity Theory helped to surface two main interrelated activity systems, and the leadership actions performed by senior and middle management. The two activity systems comprised the school and the ICT project. The focus in Activity Theory on the social-cultural perspective highlighted the role played by social norms in mediating the leadership activity. Implications for future research: The conclusion focuses on the understanding of distributed leadership as analysed through the lens of Activity Theory and suggests future research directions. Activity Theory enables research on distributed leadership to identify and examine interrelated activity systems that various leaders are involved in, and how these impact the leadership provided.
WOS© Citations 18Scopus© Citations 31 235 711