Vice Provost, Instruction & Innovation
Augusta, GA, UNITED STATES
An educator with more than 25 years of experience, Dr. Zach Kelehear is a thought-leader on organizational change.
Augusta Chronicle
2016-08-02
Sheahan served as a paparazzi, taking photos as kids walked to the gymnasium. Also cheering students along the red carpet were Augusta University Dean Zach Kelehear and Associate Dean Judi Wilson. “We don’t necessarily know where a student comes from before they get on the bus each morning,” Kelehear said. “We don’t know where they’re going when they leave this afternoon. But while they’re at school, it’s our job to inspire. It’s our job to motivate these children and help put a smile on their face. Everyone can be a positive influence.”...
view moreRowman & Littlefield
2013-12-01
Leading without Being Stung offers practitioners a repertoire of eight, research-supported strategies for affecting teaching performance.
view moreInternational Journal of Education Policy and Leadership
2010
The results of an arts-based leadership (Kelehear, 2006, 2008) practice at a rural middle school in South Carolina are examined. The school principal and art teacher led a day-long staff development and followed up individually to assist teachers to create art as metaphor for individual growth plans as well as school improvement plans. Specifically, the arts-based initiative sought to invite professional conversations that focused on: 1) personal reflections, 2) multiple perspectives, and 3) art making. Findings suggest that when the art ...
Current Issues in Education
2010
The degree to which instructional supervisors encourage reflection by teachers is in large part a function of both the supervisor's and teacher's use of the art of conversation. The author juxtaposes the Concern Based Adoption Model theory for innovation with the Feldman Method for art criticism to support reflection as aesthetic. Reflection that is grounded in an arts-based methodology may embrace both the technical and aesthetic dimensions of teaching and supervision. The author concludes that utilizing the language ...
International Journal of Leadership in Education
2008
Recent teacher effectiveness research supports the notion that students learn best from teachers who can be characterized as managing both the craft and the artistic dimensions of learning. Additionally, there is a body of research that has examined possible strategies instructional leaders might use to support the development of the craft dimension. It is less clear, however, in what ways leaders might address the artistic dimensions of the classroom performance when working with teachers. Rooted in a theory of qualitative inquiry, the ...
International Journal of Education Policy and Leadership
2008
If teaching at its best is an art (Davis, 2005; Sarason, 1999; Grumet, 1993; Eisner, 1985; Barone, 1983; Greene, 1971; Smith 1971), then instructional leadership of teaching, done best, must also be based in art (Behar-Horenstein, 2004; Klein, 1999; Eisner, 1983 & 1998a; Blumberg, 1989; Barone, 1998). The author examines possible applications of an arts-based approach to instructional leadership (Blumberg, 1989; Pajak, 2003; Barone, 1998). Building on the research base regarding instructional leadership as art form, the author combines the Feldman Method (Feldman, 1995) of critique, Eisner’s (1998) notion of connoisseurship and Ragans’ (2005) articulation of the elements of art and the principles of design to construct a practice that captures both the technical craft of teaching and the aesthetic dimensions evident in artistic pedagogy (Eisner, 1983; Sarason, 1999). Preliminary results of an ongoing implementation study are presented.
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