Muutke küpsiste eelistusi

School Leadership and Pedagogy for the Common Good: Building Bridges Between Faith and Secularity [Pehme köide]

  • Formaat: Paperback / softback, 148 pages, kõrgus x laius: 234x156 mm, kaal: 310 g, 1 Halftones, black and white; 1 Illustrations, black and white
  • Ilmumisaeg: 29-Apr-2026
  • Kirjastus: Routledge
  • ISBN-10: 1041030894
  • ISBN-13: 9781041030898
  • Pehme köide
  • Hind: 32,61 €*
  • * hind on lõplik, st. muud allahindlused enam ei rakendu
  • Tavahind: 43,49 €
  • Säästad 25%
  • Raamatu kohalejõudmiseks kirjastusest kulub orienteeruvalt 3-4 nädalat
  • Kogus:
  • Lisa ostukorvi
  • Tasuta tarne
  • Tellimisaeg 2-4 nädalat
  • Lisa soovinimekirja
  • Formaat: Paperback / softback, 148 pages, kõrgus x laius: 234x156 mm, kaal: 310 g, 1 Halftones, black and white; 1 Illustrations, black and white
  • Ilmumisaeg: 29-Apr-2026
  • Kirjastus: Routledge
  • ISBN-10: 1041030894
  • ISBN-13: 9781041030898

In a world grappling with social challenges, School Leadership and Pedagogy for the Common Good offers a timely and inspiring exploration of how education can unite communities. This book demonstrates how Christian, Islamic, Jewish, and secular values can work together to create schools that serve the common good of teachers, students, and society. It is an essential read for educators and policymakers.

Using real-life examples, this book highlights how religious and secular values have driven exceptional outcomes in three primary schools and a trust in the UK and the Netherlands. In Rotterdam, Aziem Jarmohamad, the first Muslim head teacher at a Catholic school, has successfully integrated secular and Christian values at Imelda and Emmaus schools, earning recognition from the Queen of the Netherlands and the US Secretary of State for Education. Meanwhile, in the East Midlands of England, Ramsden primary school led by Dr Chris Wilson has pioneered innovative approaches to support children in socio-economically deprived areas Through rich case studies, such as the Flying High Trust, leadership and teacher voices, and practical examples, the book highlights how these schools have embraced diversity, fostered integration, and achieved remarkable success.

This book illustrates the power of shared values in education, offering practical insights, inspiring stories, and actionable ideas to foster inclusion, celebrate diversity, and empower students. It is an essential resource for educators, school leaders, and anyone committed to the transformative potential of education.



This is a timely and inspiring exploration of how education can unite communities. This book demonstrates how Christian, Islamic, Jewish, and secular values can work together to create schools that serve the common good of teachers, students, and society. It is an essential read for educators and policymakers.

Arvustused

"In this attractively written book, Anthony Luby draws upon many years of teaching and research to propose ways forward for Catholic education in a secular context. How do we best serve our children? Luby's approach neither reduces education to direct evangelisation nor erases the Catholic "thing". He recognises the need for the Church to adopt a measure of self-limitation in a pluralist culture. He develops St Thomas' notion of valid "secondary ends" and carefully distinguishes the secular realm, where the common good can be pursued by believers of different persuasions or none, from the profane where any public presence of religion is arbitrarily vetoed. Responding to a complex, delicate, ever-fluctuating social context, Luby's contribution is a thoughtful and thought-provoking one. It deserves to be taken seriously."

Hugh Gilbert, Bishop of Aberdeen.

"What can a (non-Catholic) Christian senior lecturer from a liberal university in Amsterdam, a Jewish head teacher at a secular state school in Nottinghamshire, a Glaswegian Catholic teacher (the author of this book), and a practising Muslim head teacher of a Catholic school in Rotterdam teach us about leadership and pedagogy in Catholic schools operating in a pluralist culture in todays world? Written in an elegant and winning manner, Antony Lubys book offers a surprising and well-thought-out answer."

Rev. Tony Schmitz, Deacon, St Mary's Cathedral, Aberdeen, UK.

"School Leadership and Pedagogy for the Common Good is an exceptional and timely contribution to contemporary educational leadership studies. I have used a chapter of this book as a core text in a postgraduate course on education in diversity, and the results have been consistently positive: it has stimulated deep reflection, rigorous debate, and a renewed sense of purpose among experienced educators and emerging leaders alike.

What makes this book particularly powerful is its refusal to frame faith and secularity as opposing forces. Instead, through rich, carefully narrated case studies, it demonstrates how deeply held valueswhether rooted in religious traditions, humanistic philosophy, or community ethicscan serve as legitimate and constructive sources of educational leadership. The stories from Rotterdam and England illustrate leadership that is relational rather than bureaucratic, grounded in trust rather than control, and oriented toward the common good rather than narrow performance metrics.

For postgraduate students, especially those working in culturally and religiously diverse contexts, the book offers both conceptual clarity and practical insight. It provides concrete examples of how leaders translate values into daily practices: empowering teachers, co-creating shared norms with communities, and maintaining high expectations without sacrificing dignity or inclusion. These narratives resonate strongly with students, who often recognize similar tensions in their own professional settings.

Antony Lubys guiding voice adds intellectual depth and ethical coherence. His ability to connect lived experience, scholarly reflection, and moral inquiry makes the book accessible without being simplistic, and reflective without losing analytical rigor.

I strongly recommend this book for postgraduate programs in educational leadership, diversity and inclusion, ethics in education, and policy studies. It is not only an academic resource, but also a formative textone that invites educators to rethink leadership as a moral, communal, and profoundly human endeavor."

Prof. Dr. Daniel Ernesto Stigliano, Global Head for Scholas Chairs Program, The Pontifical Foundation Scholas Occurrentes.

"What a superb book - more than a book, an engagement, a reflection, an honest reflective but well researched piece of work. It made me laugh, especially when the author, Antony Luby, wrote with honesty, "27 pairs of eyes, 27, all looking at me, for help, for guidance: what am I to do? (chapter 5), I know exactly what he meant; or as some bright child pointed out, "there's more evidence for the existence of UFO's than God" (chapter 6). Oh, how true that is, from many a young persons point of view; and so it was throughout the book, the authors brilliant, honest and humble rhetoric about his past experiences - now that is really refreshing.

I thoroughly enjoyed reading the varying points, from Aziem especially, but also Chris Wilson and of course the emphasis on dialogue as well as to be found in chapter nine, the emphasis on the sacred, secular, profane. I must confess I had not known of "Scholas Occurrentes" and having now explored Pope Franciss innovative non-profit organisation which he set up in 2013, I have found something that is both very interesting and so relevant in todays troubled educational world. In my opinion, the author has a lot to contribute to this organisation, and I hope he has considered this as part of his mission.

Antony is so right when he points out there is a huge problem with liberal secularism although, having now discovered Flying High in his book, and still trying to get a handle on this, I have great hope that this may be the way forward in education.

Yes, listening and dialogue is the key to the future educational program, I absolutely agree, but the question is how do we reach out to those who devise the state curriculum and integrate Antonys excellent research into the curriculum for the benefit of all? How do we dispose of the emphasis on so-called educational and material subject matter that does not benefit the young person in any way but contradicts family and societal values thus causing confusion?

Antony Lubys book gives much to think about. I thoroughly recommend it to anyone stepping into any educational setting and who seeks to delve into a holistic approach in developing the student. I know it will be a success because it is alive, it is action research, it is funny, it is identifiable, it is profound and inclusive."

Dr Sylvia A. Hoskins, PhD, MEd, BSc (Hons), FHEA.

"Tony Lubys School Leadership and Pedagogy for the Common Good is a thoughtful and timely look at how Catholic education can continue to thrive in societies that feel increasingly secular and, at times, unsettled. Rather than dwelling on whats been lost in terms of traditional religious identity, Luby takes a more hopeful view. He suggests Catholic schools are evolvingmoving away from being defined by outward signs of faith, and instead becoming communities shaped by values, dialogue, and a strong commitment to the common good. Drawing on examples from Rotterdam to Nottinghamshire, he brings this shift to life through the people and schools leading the way.

Overall, I found this to be a thoughtful, hopeful, and very relevant book. It challenges uswhether were working in Catholic or secular contextsto think again about what education is really for. At its heart is a clear message: that values-led leadership, rooted in community and expressed through dialogue, has the potential to rebuild not just schools, but society more widely. While parts of it are quite weighty, its alignment with the common good, servant leadership, and a holistic approach to improvement made it a genuinely worthwhile read."

Isabelle Boyd CBE FRSA, Past President Catholic Headteachers Association of Scotland, 28 March 2026.

1. A Catholic, a Jew, and a Protestant walk into a Catholic Schooland
find that bridges are being built by a Muslim
2. Bridge Building, Dialogue
and Encounter: School as a Locus for Creating a New Society
3. Rotterdam to
the Stars: Exceptional expectations, distributed leadership and Aristotle
4.
Politics, Education and Subsidiarity
5. The Common Good and the Classroom
6.
Fraternal humanism and dialogue: classroom and society
7. Teachers as
prophets and the three realms of society
8. Leadership and Pedagogy at a
Rolls Royce of schools: A Judaic Perspective?
9. Bridging Faith and
Secularity: Flying High and The RVKO
10. Rebuilding Culture through Dialogue
Antony Luby teaches Educational Leadership and Management at the University of Glasgow, UK. An award-winning writer, he holds a PhD in Education Studies and multiple masters degrees (MPhil, MTh, and MSc) from Glasgow, Strathclyde, Aberdeen, and Oxford, respectively. A Founding Fellow of the Chartered College of Teaching, he is also a Fellow of the College of Teachers and the Higher Education Academy.