Toward a Deeper Awareness: Becoming a Mindful Educational Leader

Date
2015-08-14
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Abstract
This study explored the meditative practice and non-meditative process of mindfulness and its application to educational leadership. The definition of mindfulness that guided this research was – being attentive and aware in the present moment. Mindfulness was viewed as being more than meditation; it was seen as clear comprehension of a situation and being prepared and willing to address whatever happened. It was a way of understanding one’s self and one’s self in relation to others and the world. The purpose of this research was to construct a conceptualization of mindful educational leadership. This Scholarly Personal Narrative (Nash, 2004; Nash & Bradley, 2011; Nash & Viray, 2013) study provided a conceptualization of what it means to be a mindful educational leader. The conceptualization came from the application of a review: of mindfulness; of leadership as expressed in a way closest to mindfulness, and through the application of Scholarly Personal Narrative to the researcher’s experiences as an educational leader, and as a participant in major life-changing events. Data collection included: epistolary letters, journal reflections, as well as narrative and poetic life texts. A parallax vantage analysis was utilized to uncover and identify universalizable themes within the narrative. These themes offered an understanding of the duality of mindfulness (awareness of self and others) that was linked to the duality of leadership that, at its base, is about the leader and the follower, and thus it is both self and relational. The resulting construct of mindful educational leadership would fill a gap in the academic literature on leadership and would offer to educational leaders, a reflective and purposeful way of being in the world.
Description
Keywords
Education, Education
Citation
Karrah, D., & Bearance, D. (2015). Toward a Deeper Awareness: Becoming a Mindful Educational Leader (Doctoral thesis, University of Calgary, Calgary, Canada). Retrieved from https://prism.ucalgary.ca. doi:10.11575/PRISM/28470