TY - JOUR
T1 - Social identity approach to understanding teacher-leadership
AU - Nolan, Donna
AU - O'Donovan, Margaret
AU - Lafferty, Niamh
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2025
PY - 2025/1
Y1 - 2025/1
N2 - Teacher-leadership has received significant consideration in recent years, being frequently acknowledged as inconsistently defined. Through the lens of social identity theory, the current study explores the concept of teacher-leadership identity from the perspective of teachers not holding formal leadership positions. The study adopts a qualitative approach involving semi-structured interviews with 14 practicing schoolteachers in Ireland, none of whom hold a formal leadership position. Results highlight the reasons why schoolteachers identify or disidentify as teacher-leaders, and the impact this can have on their engagement with leadership practices and behaviours. Formal leadership emerged as a specific barrier to informal leadership, confounded by perceptions of formal leadership cliques and exclusion of non-formal leaders. A dark side of teacher-leadership also emerged with informal leaders experiencing a lack of recognition or appreciation for their efforts, negative treatment from formal leaders, and a lack of support from formal leaders, including the principal. The role of the principal in promoting or inhibiting teacher-leadership also emerged, highlighting the pivotal role they play in the promotion of teacher-leadership in schools. Suggestions for policy, practice, and research are presented.
AB - Teacher-leadership has received significant consideration in recent years, being frequently acknowledged as inconsistently defined. Through the lens of social identity theory, the current study explores the concept of teacher-leadership identity from the perspective of teachers not holding formal leadership positions. The study adopts a qualitative approach involving semi-structured interviews with 14 practicing schoolteachers in Ireland, none of whom hold a formal leadership position. Results highlight the reasons why schoolteachers identify or disidentify as teacher-leaders, and the impact this can have on their engagement with leadership practices and behaviours. Formal leadership emerged as a specific barrier to informal leadership, confounded by perceptions of formal leadership cliques and exclusion of non-formal leaders. A dark side of teacher-leadership also emerged with informal leaders experiencing a lack of recognition or appreciation for their efforts, negative treatment from formal leaders, and a lack of support from formal leaders, including the principal. The role of the principal in promoting or inhibiting teacher-leadership also emerged, highlighting the pivotal role they play in the promotion of teacher-leadership in schools. Suggestions for policy, practice, and research are presented.
KW - Darkside of leadership
KW - Educational leadership
KW - Informal leadership
KW - Teacher leader identity
KW - Teacher-leadership
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/105012141584
U2 - 10.1016/j.ijer.2025.102730
DO - 10.1016/j.ijer.2025.102730
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:105012141584
SN - 0883-0355
VL - 133
JO - International Journal of Educational Research
JF - International Journal of Educational Research
M1 - 102730
ER -