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The convergence of National Professional Qualifications in educational leadership and masters level study
Lambert, Steve
Lambert, Steve
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2018-11-12
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Abstract
In February 2012, less than three years after the introduction of the compulsory National
Professional Qualification for Headship (NPQH) for aspiring school head teachers, the mandatory requirement was removed. Despite no longer being a requirement, nearly 900 individuals annually, successfully complete the programme, with a further 5,000 completing the awards of National Professional Qualification for Middle Leadership (NPQML) and the National Professional Qualification for Senior Leadership (NQPSL). In 2017, the UK government decided that the suite of national professional qualifications (NPQML, NPQSL, NPQH) needed to be updated in order to ensure that they remained relevant to the changing shape of the educational landscape, particularly through the expansion of multi-academy trusts. At the same time, the government proposed a new National Professional Qualification for Executive
Leadership (NPQEL) aimed at the chief executives of multi-academy trusts, which vary in size from two or three schools working together, to trusts with in excess of thirty-five schools.
This paper explores the way in which the new NPQ programmes are having masters level criteria embedded into them to facilitate a seamless progression into masters level study and what potential benefits this brings to the individual and the provider of the NPQ programmes.
Citation
Lambert, S. (2018). The convergence of National Professional Qualifications in educational leadership and masters level study. Higher Education, Skills and Work-Based Learning. http://doi.org/10.1108/HESWBL-07-2017-0040
Publisher
Emerald
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Higher Education, Skills and Work-Based Learning
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DOI
10.1108/HESWBL-07-2017-0040
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Article
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en
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2042-3896
