Katrina MacDonald Author

Amanda Keddie’s research examines the broad range of schooling processes and conditions that can impact on the pursuit of social justice in schools including student identities, teacher identities, pedagogy, curriculum, leadership, school structures, policy agendas and socio-political trends.

Katrina MacDonald’s research is in social justice, educational leadership, and the sociology of education through a practice lens. Her research has focused on principals’ social justice understandings and practices, and the impact of school reform policies on just public schooling and the principal and teacher workforce.

Brad Gobby's research interests include education policy, governance and politics and their implication for schools, teachers and principals. His specific research focus is using Foucauldian and critical scholarship to investigate how policies and policy discourses transform the school education domain, including teachers and school leadership.

Jill Blackmore’s feminist research interests include education policy and governance; international and intercultural education; educational restructuring, leadership and organisational change; spatial redesign and innovative pedagogies; teachers’ and academics’ work, health and wellbeing all with a focus on equity.

Jane Wilkinson's research is in educational leadership for social justice, with a focus on refugee education, issues of gender and ethnicity; and theorising educational leadership as practice/praxis. She is a lead developer of the theory of practice architectures.

Scott Eacott’s research is concerned with the organisation of education and advocacy for the pursuit of equitable excellence in school provision. He is widely published with research interests in educational administration. His current projects focus on housing affordability and the teacher workforce.

Richard Niesche’s research is in educational leadership, the principalship and social justice in education. He focuses on critical perspectives in educational leadership to examine the work of school principals in disadvantaged schools and how they can work towards achieving more socially just outcomes.