A volume in Educational Leadership for Social Justice
Series Editor Jeffrey S. Brooks, University of Idaho, Denise E. Armstrong, Brock University;
Ira Bogotch, Florida Atlantic University; Sandra Harris, Lamar University;
Whitney H. Sherman, Virginia Commonwealth University; George Theoharis, Syracuse University
While social identity challenges probably confront all school administrators, the authors focus on a doubly
marginalized leadership population-Black female principals-whose experiences are rarely tapped. Based
on lessons from this study and the literature reviewed, the authors think that leadership preparation programs
should give prospective administrators opportunities to gain knowledge and develop skills relevant to navigating their leadership identities.
In the age of accountability, and with the pressures placed on the education system to ensure the success of all students, school leaders are under
constant scrutiny. The appearance, speech, body language, and interactions of principals with students, parents, teachers, and community members are
dissected. Stretching to satisfy expectations, many principals find themselves trying to conform to a predefined image. Work pressures like these prove
immeasurably intense for many Black women. Society has subscribed to certain beliefs about different groups, and these beliefs affect the roles,
responsibilities, and identities of the individuals. They can have a positive or negative influence.
Many principals have created professional identities that they have fine-tuned and learned to steer. Trial and error has helped them learn identity-fitting
techniques, while other principals may still be learning how to effectively manage people, address supporters and nonsupporters, and be politically
savvy. Regardless of how they develop their identity, principals work toward inventing and branding
themselves, fulfilling public identities (e.g., caregiver) and trying out new identities, such as
commander-and-chief. Black female principals must navigate their identities as bicultural beings with
different stakeholder groups and within work spaces that are traditionally geared to monocultural White
males.