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In the first post of this series, I explored how leadership is inherent in the role of the teacher librarian (TL) and school library professionals, even if it’s not always formally recognised. We discussed the value of building fluency in the language of leadership as a strategy for visibility and advocacy. Now, let’s go deeper.
This post focuses on how TLs can use two powerful leadership concepts – leadership styles and leadership frames – to read their school context, build influence, and strategically design library proposals and projects.
Why Leadership Styles and Frames Matter
There is nothing more frustrating that pitching a great idea to a school leadership team only to have it fall on deaf ears. If this is happening repeatedly, it may be worth considering whether it is not the idea that’s the problem; it’s the way it has been framed, and who it’s been framed for.
Every school leader and leadership team is different. Understanding leadership styles and frames may make it easier to “read the room”, by explaining how particular leaders might think, prioritise and act. This insight can inform how to shape the messages of the school library so that they align with leadership perspectives.
Leadership Styles: Patterns of Behaviour That Influence Decisions
Leadership styles describe the typical behaviour patterns of leaders. Three key categories help TLs make sense of how school leaders approach decision-making:
Knowing the leadership style of your principal or leadership team helps you pitch ideas in a way that resonates. For example, a transformational leader may respond best to a visionary idea tied to long-term student growth, while a transactional leader may want clear KPIs and policy alignment.
Leadership Frames: Lenses for Strategic Communication
Bolman and Deal (2021) propose that leaders see the world through one or more of four leadership frames:
As a school library professional, your proposals may gain greater traction when you align them with the dominant frame of your school leaders—or better yet, address multiple frames. Frames may change according to the principal’s personal goals or the school’s strategic goals. External impacts such as new Government requirements or the school’s timeline can also shift the frame in focus. For example, if the Admin Team is preparing for a school review, they might take a stronger structural focus, to ensure the school is running optimally and that data they share is positive and strong; if the school is celebrating it’s 50th year, the focus is more likely to be symbolic, with time spent reflecting on the values and culture that has developed over this time.
Primary School Example: Framing a Literacy Intervention
Let’s say you want to introduce a structured reading intervention program for Years 1–3.
If your principal leads with a commanding style, focus on outcomes, compliance, and implementation efficiency. If they have a servant leadership style, highlight how the program nurtures student wellbeing and strengthens collaboration.
Secondary School Example: Proposing an Academic Integrity Program
You propose a new digital academic integrity and AI literacy program for senior students.
A democratic leader may appreciate your collaborative process. A transactional leader will want to see performance indicators and curriculum alignment.
Practical Strategy: Match Your Message to the Style and Frame
Next time you prepare a proposal:
For example:
Framing is not manipulation—it’s translation. It’s about speaking the language of leadership to ensure your message is heard.
What’s Next in the Series?
The final post will focus on building leadership practice—how school library professionals can lead from where they are, use power and influence ethically, and strengthen their advocacy through intentional professional learning.
Advocacy on its own may not be heard. But when backed by strategic, informed leadership, it becomes something much harder to ignore.
References
Bass, B. M. (2005). Transformational leadership theory. In J. B. Miner (Ed.), Essential theories of motivation and leadership (Vol. 1, Organizational behaviour series, pp. 361–385). M.E. Sharpe.
Bolman, L. G., & Deal, T. E. (2021). Reframing organizations: Artistry, choice, and leadership (7th ed.). Wiley.
Goleman, D. (2014). What makes a leader: Why emotional intelligence matters (1st ed.). More Than Sound.
Greenleaf, R. K. (1998). The power of servant-leadership. Berrett-Koehler Publishers.
Lewin, K., Lippitt, R., & White, R. K. (1939). Patterns of aggressive behavior in experimentally created social climates. The Journal of Social Psychology, 10(2), 271–299.
Feature image: Photo by Kevin Grieve on Unsplash