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Teachers College Record Volume 118, 080304, August 2016, 38 pages
Copyright © by Teachers College, Columbia University
0161-4681
Competing Priorities and Challenges:
Principal Leadership for Social Justice Along
the U.S.–Mexico Border
DAVID EDWARD DEMATTHEWS
University of Texas at El Paso
Background/Context: Previous research has focused on the importance of a social justice
leadership approach to improve schools that serve marginalized students, but less attention
has been focused on potential dilemmas associated with social justice leadership and the ways
in which principals prioritize when dilemmas or challenges arise. Principals may be frequently
confronting challenges and dilemmas when they lead for social justice, especially considering
the pressures and unintended consequences of high-stakes accountability, dwindling school
budgets, and increased teacher turnover rates. By examining the nature of social justice
leadership in a high-poverty elementary school located along the U.S./Texas–Mexico border,
this study explores how certain facets of social justice generate contradictions, tradeoffs, and
dilemmas that have implications for marginalized student groups and communities.
Purpose: The purpose of this study is to explore one principal’s enactment of social justice
leadership, particularly in relation to how emergent circumstances influence the way social
justice challenges are identified, prioritized, and addressed.
Setting: Data were collected at one predominantly Hispanic serving elementary school located
along the border: Saenz Elementary Schools (pseudonym).
Research Design: In this study, I employed a qualitative case study methodology and con-
ducted ongoing interviews and observations with the school’s principal (Ms. Uribe) to see
how she enacted social justice leadership over the course of one school year. Additionally, I
interviewed and observed teachers, the school’s assistant principal, and other staff to explore
alternative perspectives of Ms. Uribe’s leadership.
Findings: Findings reveal the specific leadership actions Ms. Uribe applied to create a more
socially just school, but also highlights the complicated nature of social justice leadership.
Contextual circumstances associated with the school and community, as well as Ms. Uribe’s
own personal and professional experiences and worldviews influenced the way she identified,
prioritized, and addressed the many social justice challenges present in her school.
Conclusions/Recommendations: Major conclusions and recommendations from this study
include the importance to further explore the way school context and principal experience in-
fluence the enactment of social justice leadership, the importance of ongoing critical reflection
for school leaders addressing issues of marginalization, and the necessity to further consider