Introducing the concept of salutogenesis to school leadership research: problematizing empirical methodologies and findings
Introducing the concept of salutogenesis to school leadership research: problematizing empirical methodologies and findings
This paper introduces and explores the concept of ‘salutogenesis’ as a way of interpreting school leadership research and its findings in two significant areas: its effect on student outcomes; and the motivation of incumbents. In its original setting, salutogenesis describes an approach that focuses on health, rather than on disease, but regards both as points on the same continuum. ‘Pathogenesis’ is the opposite, more traditional view. The two make very different ab initio assumptions: pathogenesis starts by regarding illness as a departure from the natural state and something to be cured; salutogenesis regards illness as the natural condition, and health as something to be created. In the context of adapting these concepts to schooling, where ‘illness’ can be read as ‘dysfunction’, the latter approach would take the view that schools are inherently imperfect and chaotic places, and that the aim of leadership is therefore to create a more functional state. The pathogenic approach, on the other hand, assumes that the natural state is inherently stable so that the purpose of leadership is to ward off malfunction.
salutogenesis, school leadership
167-177
Kelly, Anthony
1facbd39-0f75-49ee-9d58-d56b74c6debd
2015
Kelly, Anthony
1facbd39-0f75-49ee-9d58-d56b74c6debd
Kelly, Anthony
(2015)
Introducing the concept of salutogenesis to school leadership research: problematizing empirical methodologies and findings.
International Journal of Leadership in Education, 18 (2), .
(doi:10.1080/13603124.2014.922219).
Abstract
This paper introduces and explores the concept of ‘salutogenesis’ as a way of interpreting school leadership research and its findings in two significant areas: its effect on student outcomes; and the motivation of incumbents. In its original setting, salutogenesis describes an approach that focuses on health, rather than on disease, but regards both as points on the same continuum. ‘Pathogenesis’ is the opposite, more traditional view. The two make very different ab initio assumptions: pathogenesis starts by regarding illness as a departure from the natural state and something to be cured; salutogenesis regards illness as the natural condition, and health as something to be created. In the context of adapting these concepts to schooling, where ‘illness’ can be read as ‘dysfunction’, the latter approach would take the view that schools are inherently imperfect and chaotic places, and that the aim of leadership is therefore to create a more functional state. The pathogenic approach, on the other hand, assumes that the natural state is inherently stable so that the purpose of leadership is to ward off malfunction.
Text
Kelly(2014)_Saluto_leadership.pdf
- Accepted Manuscript
More information
e-pub ahead of print date: 6 June 2014
Published date: 2015
Keywords:
salutogenesis, school leadership
Organisations:
Southampton Education School
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 365023
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/365023
ISSN: 1360-3124
PURE UUID: 50c46adc-bbd4-452c-9124-c5328e55d32d
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Date deposited: 20 May 2014 09:37
Last modified: 15 Mar 2024 03:14
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