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EFFECTIVE SCHOOL MANAGEMENT
susceptible to a systematic problem-solving approach (Chapter 7). If this
fails, there are other devices that can be used to secure a constructive
resolution:
(1) Each unit or individual can report to a manager (e.g. a deputy head) who
is made accountable for ‘synergizing’ the two roles (bringing them
together so that the sum is greater than the parts).
(2) A third unit or individual (e.g. a head of year), seen by the other two as
understanding their roles and as
standing midway between them, is
interposed to act as intermediary.
(3) Some kind of training or ‘image exchange’ can be undertaken to help
each unit understand more accurately why the other unit behaves as it
does (see Exercise 6, p. 114).
(4) Interdepartmental groups or task forces, with members selected from the
two departments, can be formed on a temporary or permanent basis to
resolve issues between the two departments.
However, rather than rely solely on formal mechanisms for cross-linking
departments, the best organizations encourage an informal approach. Peters
and Waterman (1995, p. 117) comment on this as follows: ‘All of them [previous
commentators on excellence] fall far, far short of depicting the richness, the
variety of linkages that we observed in the excellent companies.’
PERSONAL APPLICATION
What problems arise in your school which can be attributed
to high differentiation
and low integration? How effective are the integrating mechanisms and lateral
processes? What methods are used to get departments to work synergistically?
What else needs to be done?
ELEMENTS OF ORGANIZATIONS
There is a temptation to think of organizations solely in structural terms – as
in an organization chart. However, organizations can be said to consist of
four interdependent elements, of which structure is only one (Figure 9.7). The
elements are as follows:
Technology. The ‘technology’ of an organization is its processes – in the case
of a school, the process of education and the plant (classrooms, workshops,
gymnasia, whiteboards, etc.) that goes with it.
Structure. An organization’s structure embraces the organization chart, the
committees, the departments, the roles, the hierarchical
levels and authority,
the procedures in the staff manual, the timetable, etc.
People.
The people in a school organization are the teachers, their pro-
fessionalism, their knowledge, experience, skills and attitudes; also the pupils
and non-teaching staff.
ORGANIZATIONS
157
Culture. The character (or culture) of the organization covers such intangibles
as its tone, its value system, the standards
by which merit is judged, personal
relationships, habits, unwritten rules of conduct and the practice of educational
judgement.
The arrows in the diagram indicate that all the elements interact. The
management of organizations involves not only the management of each of
the elements but also of the balance or harmony between them.
Organization managers are apt to under-rate the importance of character
as a formative influence on the people, the technology and the appropriate
structure, and therefore give too little attention to shaping it. Instead, they
constantly tighten up the structure. Goldsmith and Clutterbuck (1984, p. 162)
show from their study of successful British firms that organizations can and
do change their character radically: attitudes and culture are constantly
evolving. Managers seek to build a unity of perception of what the company
stands for, and culture changes take place, not as a result of edict, but as
people observe behaviour and attitudes at work
and assimilate them into
their own way of thinking and doing. They conclude (ibid.): ‘One of the
strengths of many of the company leaders we have featured in this book has
been their ability to adapt their own behaviour to stimulate cultural change.’
Rutter
et al. (1979) showed how the ethos of Inner London Education
Authority schools affected the outcome of the pupils’ education. Indeed, in
few organizations is the influence of ethos or culture on the product greater
than in a school, or its consequences for society more profound. Mant, an
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