The project itself consists of the four elements shown in figure 1.0 and the
overarching project idea (described below). Its focal point is the change in
the culture of teaching and learning brought about by the educational
reforms. In the reform documents this is described as a shift from a teacher-
centred to a learner-centred approach. In the project this shift is being stu-
died from various angles: how does a learner-centred approach challenge
educational leadership? How is knowledge being constructed in traditional
African cultures, and how does this influence what the learners bring to
school? How could qualitative methods be used and
further elaborated in the
study of these processes? I will give a very brief presentation of the four ele-
ments of the project.
African knowledge systems: This part of the project aims at giving substance
to the idea of an African renaissance. The marginalisation of African values
in formal education systems has resulted in a general “westernisation” of
education and research. A challenge for African researchers is to develop
research based on African cultures, values and experiences and to engage
the local communities in the developmental processes. African universities
and research institutions could take an active part in promoting heritage, cul-
ture and knowledge systems by redirecting the focus of research into nation
and community building. The project’s
aims are, first, to initiate community-
based research that actively builds on and further develops community
knowledge, and second, to give African research a social and cultural basis
by linking research to communities.
Leadership in education: A contemporary challenge for leaders is the emerg-
ing knowledge society and how to manage knowledge construction (Wilson
1996). Resent research indicates that knowledge should not only be ma-
naged, but should be created and recreated in organisations (Von Krogh,
Ichijo & Nonaka 2000). As a consequence of such insights, also established
institutions like schools should make a move towards becoming learning
organisations and focus on the specific requirements
on new skills and styles
in leadership (Senge 1990, Nonaka & Takeuchi 1996). In this process, estab-
lished power structures are being challenged (Tabulawa 1995, Hirschhorn
1998). In a developmental perspective, organisations are being studied as
units that are evolving (Aldrich 1999), and a relational perspective on educa-
tional processes proves fruitful in contemporary studies of leadership pro-
cesses (Fuglestad & Lillejord 1997).
Qualitative methods: Qualitative methods are well suited for the study of edu-
cational processes because education is action-oriented and involves human
beings. Qualitative research takes into consideration
that our knowledge
about the man-made world is constructed. Man is, as Max Weber once point-
ed out, “suspended in the webs of significance he himself has spun” (Geertz
1973:5). According to Geertz, the webs are culture and the analysis of cul-
ture is not experimental science in search of laws, but an interpretative,
75
semiotic one in search of understanding. When qualitative research is used
interpretatively, it is thus essentially hermeneutic. Our knowledge of the
world is also contextually based – and always somewhat local – as we are
being reminded by pragmatics like Dewey, who insists that method is “never
something outside of the material” (Dewey 1916:165). In
this project, qualita-
tive methods are used to support the understanding and interpretation of
African knowledge systems and to investigate and interpret characteristics of
leadership issues and relations in a productive learning culture.
Web-based learning: Interactive, web-based learning is a project bridging the
other project elements (see figure 1.0). An intention in this part of the project
is to promote and support the communication within the project, but also to
learn more about the characteristics of interactive ICT-mediated teaching and
learning. The development of ICT has without doubt a profound impact upon
teaching and learning. There is a change from a
model based on transmission
of knowledge, from teacher to learner, to the construction of knowledge within
a context. Electronic networking facilitates communication across boundaries,
cultures and on a global scale. Successful online learning depends on
teachers acquiring new competencies, and in this part of the project the focus
will be on the construction of knowledge in interactive learning.
Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: