Followership – The Real Leadership Key to Improvement in Public Schools

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Two years ago School District 74 organized a series of leadership workshops designed to strengthen the leadership performance of school administration and teaching staff. Participants were encouraged to think of themselves as leaders and to identify situations in which they were or could be leaders. The idea seemed to be not only that our school system will be improved through the development of strong leadership (on its own an important recognition), but also that anyone (and everyone) can be a leader in his or her own position within the system. This is a ridiculous idea. If leadership is approached as the only label that designates personal merit or importance, then the implication is that followers are less capable, less thoughtful and less important than leaders. If everyone is a leader, then the idea of leadership quickly loses its meaning; leadership implies followership, and without followers leaders could never lead effectively. Past emphasis on leadership has largely ignored the reciprocal relationship between leadership and followership. The purpose of this paper is to briefly discuss followership, and to acknowledge its importance to organizations, especially school systems.

The word “follower” has long-time connotations that imply lack of incentive, independence or even intelligence. The idea of followers as unthinking people, who simply carried out instructions given by their overseers, began with the industrial model where managers and leaders were thought of as one and the same. But, as Joseph Rost points out, followers should not be equated to subordinates in a post-industrial world, just as leaders are no longer equated to managers (Rost in Wren, 1995, p.190). For most people, following is the role t...

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