"Real leaders concentrate on doing the right thing, not on doing things right."
That advice from organizational consultants comes as no surprise to leaders of educative institutions, whose lives are filled with difficult ethical dilemmas. Principals experience such dilemmas on a daily basis, says William Greenfield (1991). Having moral obligations to society, to the profession, to the school board, and to students, they find that “it often is not clear what is right or wrong, or what one ought to do, or which perspective is right in moral terms. Unfortunately relatively few administrators have been trained to deal with these conflicts. Until very recently, ethical issues were given little attention in preparation programs" (Lynn Beck and Joseph Murphy 1994).
What ethical responsibilities do leaders
have?
Greenfield notes that program leaders face a unique set of ethical
demands. Schools are moral institutions, designed to promote social
norms, and principals are moral agents who must often make decisions
that favour one moral value over another. Moreover, although schools,
for example, are dedicated to the well-being of children, students have
virtually no voice in what happens there. For all these reasons, the
leader's conduct “must be deliberately moral."
Leaders' moral duty expresses itself not only in the obvious day-to-day ethical dilemmas, but in the mundane policies and structures that may have hidden ethical implications. Robert Starratt (1991) notes that every social arrangement benefits some people at the expense of others; simply to assume that schools embody desirable standards is “ethically naive, if not culpable." Thus, the principal must not only behave responsibly as an individual, but must create an ethical institution. As leaders, principals have a special responsibility to exercise authority in an ethical way. Greenfield points out that much of a principal's authority is moral; that is, teachers must be convinced that the principal's point of view reflects values they support. Coercion through bureaucratic authority will seldom have a positive, lasting effect.
What ethical dilemmas do directors face?
As defined by Rushworth Kidder (1995), an “ethical dilemma" is not a
choice between right and wrong, but a choice between two rights. For
example, considering a bribe would be a “moral temptation"; deciding
whether scarce resources should go to a gifted curriculum or a
dropout-prevention program would constitute a dilemma. Dilemmas arise
when cherished values conflict. A principal who values both teacher
autonomy and student achievement will face a dilemma when teachers want
to enact a policy that lowers expectations. This kind of conflict is
heightened because school leaders are public officials with obligations
to many people who often have competing values or interests. Should
parents be informed if a counselor learns that their daughter is
considering an abortion? Should a student group be able to book an
assembly speaker whose views will offend some in the community? Should
the principal support a teacher who has made a questionable grading
decision?
Some studies suggest that obligations to superiors put special pressure on ethical decision making. For instance, Peggy Kirby and colleagues (1990) asked principals to estimate how “a typical colleague" would respond to hypothetical dilemmas. Respondents usually indicated that colleagues would take “the path of least resistance" by deferring to superiors or taking refuge in official policies. Kirby and her colleagues speculate that these hypothetical colleagues actually reflect the norm.
How can leaders resolve ethical dilemmas?
Moral philosophers generally agree there is no ethical “cookbook" that
provides easy answers to complex dilemmas. But a number of thinkers have
suggested some guidelines. First, leaders should have and be willing to
act on a definite sense of ethical standards. Starratt argues that a
fully informed ethical consciousness will contain themes of caring (What
do our relationships demand of us?); justice (How can we govern
ourselves fairly?); and critique (Where do we fall short of our own
ideals?). Second, leaders can examine dilemmas from different
perspectives. Kidder describes three.
One is to anticipate the consequences of each choice and attempt to identify who will be affected, and in what ways. Another approach uses moral rules, assuming that the world would be a better place if people always followed certain widely accepted standards (such as telling the truth). A third perspective emphasizes caring, which is similar to the Golden Rule: How would we like to be treated under similar circumstances?
Third, leaders can often reframe ethical issues. Kidder claims that many apparent dilemmas are actually “trilemmas," offering a third path that avoids the either-or thinking. For example, faced with a parent who objects to a particular homework assignment on religious grounds, a principal may be able to negotiate an alternative assignment, thereby preserving academic integrity without trampling on parental rights. Finally, leaders should have the habit of conscious reflection, wherever it may lead them.
How do leaders create ethical institutions?
By their nature, most schools do not encourage discussion of ethical
issues; educators spend most of the day isolated from one another, and
time is always at a premium. One means of raising ethical awareness is
to form an ethics committee similar to those found in many hospitals.
Such committees would not make formal rulings, but would raise awareness
of ethical issues, formulate ethical codes, and advise educators
grappling with ethical dilemmas (Betty Sichel 1993). Thomas Sergiovanni
(1992) says that truly effective schools are those with a shared
covenant clearly articulating the school's core values and providing a
standard by which actions will be judged. Leaders must not only take the
lead in formulating the covenant but actively support and enforce it.
When a vital standard is ignored, principals should “lead by outrage."
What virtues must leaders practise?
Students of ethics are unanimous on one point: moral leadership begins
with moral leaders. Howard Gardner (1995) says of great leaders that
they embody the message they advocate; they teach, not just through
words, but through actions. What virtues are most important for school
leaders? Some studies suggest that honesty is the quality most
appreciated by subordinates (Michael Richardson and others 1992). And
any principal who has launched a risky new program or has publicly
shouldered the blame for someone else's mistake can testify to the
importance of courage. Some who write about ethics argue that leaders
must use their power with restraint, since it always holds the potential
for treating others as less than fully human. Peter Block (1993)
advocates stewardship, which is the willingness to accept accountability
for results without always trying to impose control over others. In
simplest terms, stewardship asks leaders to acknowledge their own human
faults and limitations rather than hiding behind their status and power.
Whatever virtue is desired, moral philosophers going back to Aristotle
have emphasized that it must become a habit. just as musicians develop
musical ability by playing an instrument, people become virtuous by
practising virtue.
Ethical behaviour is not something that can be held in reserve for momentous issues; it must be a constant companion. To be an ethical school leader, then, is not a matter of following a few simple rules. The leader's responsibility is complex and multi-dimensional, rooted less in technical expertise than in simple human integrity.
References
Beck, Lynn G., and Joseph Murphy. Ethics in Educational Leadership Programs: An Expanding Role. Thousand Oaks, California: Corvin Press, 1994.
Block, Peter. Stewardship: Choosing Service over Self-Interest. San Francisco: Berrett-Koehler Publishers, 1993.
Gardner, Howard. Leading Minds: An Anatomy of Leadership. New York: Basic Books, 1995.
Greenfield, William D., Jr. Rationale and Methods To Articulate Ethics and Administrator Training. Paper presented at the annual meeting of the American Educational Research Association, Chicago, April 1991. 32 pages.ED 332 379.
Kidder, Rushworth M. How Good People Make Tough Choices. NewYork: William Merrow, 1995.
Kirby, Peggy C.; Louis V. Pardise; and Russell Protti. The Ethical Reasoning of School Administrators: The Principled Principal. Paper presented at the annual meeting of the American Educational Research Association, Boston, April 1990. 11 pages.ED 320 253.
Richardson, Michael D., and others. Teacher Perception of Principal Behaviour “A Study. Paper presented at the annual meeting of the Mid-South Educational Research Association, Knoxville, Tennessee, November 1992. .15 pages. ED 352 710.
Sergiovanni, Thomas J. Moral Leadership: Getting to the Heart of School Leadership. San Francisco: Jossey Bass, 1992.
Sichel, Betty A. Ethics Committees and Teacher Ethics In Ethics for Professionals in Education: Perspectives for Preparation and Practice, edited by Kenneth Strike and Fl Lance Ternasky. 162-75. New York: Teachers College Press, 1993.
Starratt, Robert J. Building an Ethical School: A Theory for Practice in Educational Leadership. Educational Administration Quarterly 27, 2 (May 1991): 185-202. EJ 425 540.
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