1st Edition

Teaching, Learning and Responsive Educational Leadership Designing the Future in Our Schools

138 Pages 1 B/W Illustrations
by Routledge

138 Pages 1 B/W Illustrations
by Routledge

This book supports educational leaders around the world in navigating constant political pressures and rising expectations for teaching and learning. It offers a clear and accessible framework for the aims of education, the competencies students need, and the teaching strategies that support a future-ready school. Building on their previous work on responsive educational leadership, the... Read more

Chapter 1.  Responsive Educational Leadership in School: Education is Important but Why?

Chapter 2.  Learning for Uncertainty

Chapter 3.  Defining the Aims of Education for the Future-Oriented School: Designing Competencies that Matter

Chapter 4.  Teaching for the Future: Responsive Educational Leadership, Change, and Pedagogy

Chapter 5. Setting The Conditions for Teaching and Learning

Chapter 6. Looking Beyond the Horizon (When Clouds Obscure the View)

Biography

Grzegorz Mazurkiewicz is a teacher, sociologist and researcher. He works at Jagiellonian University in Kraków, Poland.

 

John M. Fischer is emeritus professor and faculty member in the School of Inclusive Teacher Education at Bowling Green State University in Ohio, United States.

'In an era defined by uncertainty, complexity, and rapid social change, this intellectually compelling volume offers a timely and original rethinking of educational leadership. Grzegorz Mazurkiewicz and John M. Fischer advance a theoretically sophisticated concept of responsive educational leadership, reframing it as a reflective, context-sensitive, and ethically grounded practice rather than a set of managerial competencies. By integrating insights from democratic education, and contemporary pedagogical paradigms, the authors challenge dominant technocratic and standardization-driven paradigms, foregrounding instead complexity, human agency, and the necessity of locally constructed educational responses. This important contribution not only enriches current scholarly debates but also provides a persuasive and inspiring vision of education as a human-centered, socially responsible public good.' 

Henryk Mizerek, Professor, Department of Social Pedagogy and Educational Research Methodology, University of Warmia and Mazury, Olsztyn, Poland

 'Teaching, Learning and Responsive Educational Leadership: Designing the Future in Our Schools offers a stimulating read that invites us to rethink the purpose of education in a context of change, complexity and uncertainty. The work offers a solid framework for understanding and exercising responsive educational leadership, closely linked to the deep meaning of teaching and learning in today's world. It appeals to the need to reconceptualize learning by reconnecting with the ideas of meaningful, dialogic learning linked to the experience of students, aimed at their well-being and their ability to improve their lives and the environment that surrounds them.

Their proposal favours the connection between what is learned at school and life outside of it, preparing students to face an uncertain future, adapt to change and develop the ability to learn throughout life

Through reflections and practical examples, the book offers leaders and teachers keys to teach and lead responsibly, strengthening the connection between school and life.'

 - Dr. María Jesús Rodríguez-EntrenaAssociate Professor, Director of Corporate Training, University of Murcia, Murcia, Spain

 

 'A powerful and timely call for the modern educator and administrator. In an era defined by rapid transformation and “wicked problems," this book offers more than just a framework—it offers a way back to the heart of what matters: teaching, learning, and our shared humanity. By embracing the complexities of leadership and the courage to act in the face of challenges, the authors provide a roadmap for building schools that are not just reactive to the present, but ready for the future. A must-read for any leader seeking to replace polarization with democracy and isolation with community.'

 - Nick Bardo, PhD; Associate Professor, Director of the Center for Teacher Education,Colorado Mesa University, Colorado, USA