Preparing Educational Administrators: An Australian Perspective
Abstract
Suggests that educators in Australia are displaying a growing interest in graduate instruction in educational administration. Examines issues that are central to making courses relevant, stimulating and appealing for educational administrators today using the review of one Master′s degree course as an illustration. Discusses the need to review courses, then considers decisions about the primary instructional focus, the educational clientele, neglected content areas, experiential components and flexible modes of attendance. Proposes teaching arrangements that add diversity and relevance to curricula, including the design of subjects in conjunction with local education authorities, lecturing by expert managers, and reliance on part‐time and visiting appointments. Presents continuing education as a further responsibility of educational administration departments. Advocates course promotion and ongoing contact with the profession and advances some strategies. Cautions, however, against innovations designed only to capture additional enrolments and funding.
Keywords
Citation
Johnson, N. (1993), "Preparing Educational Administrators: An Australian Perspective", Journal of Educational Administration, Vol. 31 No. 1. https://doi.org/10.1108/EUM0000000002476
Publisher
:MCB UP Ltd
Copyright © 1993, MCB UP Limited