This article contributes to theorising the value of collage as a methodological approach. It begins with a discussion of the methodological difficulties of exploring hidden meanings and individual experience through the research process. The illuminative potential of arts-based methodologies in qualitative research is then investigated. The article makes the case for the specific advantages of using collage to explore the experience of leadership, through a discussion of two collage-based studies. It proposes a variant of the ‘think aloud’ process, used in conjunction with collage, as a route to producing deep understandings of the multiple ways in which leadership is experienced and understood as a social process. The argument is made that...
This article discusses how the design of research should follow the questions the study seeks to add...
CITATION: Le Grange, L. 2007. (Re)imagining method in educational leadership and management research...
It has been argued that leadership in higher education differs from leadership in other organisation...
In the first edition of Qualitative Research Handbook, Denzin and Lincoln suggest an immediate futur...
ll published papers in IJTLHE are published under a Creative Commons Attribution-NoDerivs 3.0 Unport...
This article questions why leaders in post-compulsory education tend not to view leadership research...
© 2023 The Author(s). Published by Informa UK Limited, trading as Taylor & Francis Group. This is an...
This article describes a variant on a methodological approach which provides ways of developing educ...
Following an epistemic frame advanced by Elliott Eisner (2002), it is argued that the tradition of t...
Following an epistemic frame advanced by Elliott Eisner (2002), it is argued that the tradition of t...
Neoliberal ideologies influence both the content and pedagogical approach of educational leadership ...
This enquiry sets out to explore leadership development as an intrinsically aesthetic experience, dr...
Collegiality is at the heart of the academy’s collective endeavour. It is central to how we think ab...
It has been argued that leadership in higher education differs from leadership in other organisation...
The burgeoning interest in arts-informed research and the increasing variety of visual possibilities...
This article discusses how the design of research should follow the questions the study seeks to add...
CITATION: Le Grange, L. 2007. (Re)imagining method in educational leadership and management research...
It has been argued that leadership in higher education differs from leadership in other organisation...
In the first edition of Qualitative Research Handbook, Denzin and Lincoln suggest an immediate futur...
ll published papers in IJTLHE are published under a Creative Commons Attribution-NoDerivs 3.0 Unport...
This article questions why leaders in post-compulsory education tend not to view leadership research...
© 2023 The Author(s). Published by Informa UK Limited, trading as Taylor & Francis Group. This is an...
This article describes a variant on a methodological approach which provides ways of developing educ...
Following an epistemic frame advanced by Elliott Eisner (2002), it is argued that the tradition of t...
Following an epistemic frame advanced by Elliott Eisner (2002), it is argued that the tradition of t...
Neoliberal ideologies influence both the content and pedagogical approach of educational leadership ...
This enquiry sets out to explore leadership development as an intrinsically aesthetic experience, dr...
Collegiality is at the heart of the academy’s collective endeavour. It is central to how we think ab...
It has been argued that leadership in higher education differs from leadership in other organisation...
The burgeoning interest in arts-informed research and the increasing variety of visual possibilities...
This article discusses how the design of research should follow the questions the study seeks to add...
CITATION: Le Grange, L. 2007. (Re)imagining method in educational leadership and management research...
It has been argued that leadership in higher education differs from leadership in other organisation...