The Role of Rural Educational Leadership in Influencing Societal Behaviour: A Case Study of Goromonzi District: Educational Leaders’ Perceptive
Abstract
This study establishes the role of rural educational leadership in influencing
societal behaviour, focusing Goromonzi District. It was positioned alongside the
behavioural theories and the African unhu/ubuntu philosophy, informed by a
qualitative case study. It made use of interviews, focus group discussions and
observations in the generation of data from a purposive sample of three rural
secondary schools. The rural context has its own set of unique community
identifiers, making rural schools remarkably different from those found in the
urban centres. The rural community is experiencing an influx of urban migration
and as a result, the disturbance of an ideal rural setting is posing a challenge to
the educational leadership in impacting the societal behaviour in the way it ought
to be. Moreover, the educational leadership in the rural community is often
characterised by lack of understanding of the rural communities’ traditional
beliefs and practices, giving rise to contradictions with what the educational
leadership intends to promote and encourage at times. Consequently, a cultural
shift and contextual adaptation of distinctive attitudes and behaviours that
enhance positive behaviour transformation becomes imperative. Above it all,
studying rural behavioural trends as a response to educational leadership was
paradoxical journey. The study thus, concludes that while literature points out
that leadership has a direct influence of the behaviour of its community, this
cannot go far unless the educational leadership deliberately aligns its own
behaviour with the dictates of unhu/ubuntu philosophy which has a place in the
African rural context.