Looks at school leadership and reform in an alternative way, following the story of change at Washington School, a troubled grades 5-6 centre in a small town in Western Oklahoma. Not only does the book address a neglected population, it uses the occasion to invert thinking about school reform.
Living Faithfully is for anyone interested in education and education policy,
whether parent, community member, teacher, student of leadership or policy
maker. It looks at school leadership and reform in an alternative way, following
the story of change at Washington School, a troubled grades 5-6 center in a small
town in Western Oklahoma. Not only does the book address a neglected population,
the more than 1/3 of the nation's children who go to school in small towns and
rural areas, it uses the occasion to invert thinking about school reform. It argues
that in today's policy climate where guaranteed, standard outcomes are touted as
goals of education, leadership schemes, even those designed to challenge topdown,
bureaucratic models, are quickly co-opted to produce the appearance of learning. Prevailing leadership
theories beg the question of who is being transformed and to what end, failing to challenge assumptions and
dominant ideas of contemporary education and leadership thinking.
Drawing on Philip Phenix's idea of the faithful life, the book proposes an alternative way forward. Phenix talks
about connections between school and life. According to Phenix, the faithful life is concerned with the normative
question of what is good, true, right, just, beautiful, and holy. This is not the vocabulary of current education
policy. But it describes the kind of community created at Washington School despite its history of failure. And it
describes what most families want for their children whether they live in the
city or country, America or elsewhere: an education that matters.