https://doi.org/10.1177/0192636520976865
NASSP Bulletin
2020, Vol. 104(4) 292–313
© 2020 SAGE Publications
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DOI: 10.1177/0192636520976865
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Article
Support for Marginalized
Children: Influences of
Micro and Meso Contexts
on Socially Just Principal
Practices
Alex N. Oldham
1
, Lee D. Flood
1
,
and Pamela S. Angelle
1
Abstract
This qualitative case study research examines the perceptions of three U.S. principals
as they work for social justice in the school level meso context as enacted through
the lens of their micro contextual values and beliefs. Through interviews with three
rural high school principals, we look to the influence of context on decision making
through a study of the principals’ articulations of the role of context in supporting
or hindering their work for marginalized children. Findings from this study point to
the culture of the community in which the school was situated and the challenges
sometimes associated with the community as the most mentioned meso factor that
guided the principals’ practice. The micro context of the leader’s personal story was a
testament to what they valued and how they enacted these values as a leader for social
justice. The study concludes with a model which reconceptualizes the macro, meso,
and micro relationships not as a directional relationship that indicates the influence
of one context onto another, but as a structural bond suggesting interdependency.
Keywords
principal leadership, rural schools, social justice, equity in education
While governing bodies and policies at the local level may differ across the United
States, the essential nature of schools as organizations are quite similar. However,
schools are inevitably located in communities with varying demographics and
1
Maryville High School, Maryville, TN, USA
Corresponding Author:
Alex N. Oldham, Maryville High School, Maryville, TN, USA.
Email: alex.oldham@maryville-schools.org
976865BUL XX X 10.1177/0192636520976865NASSP BulletinOldham et al.
research-article 2020