Affiliation:
1. National Institute for Educational Development, Ministry of Education, Okahandja 9000, Namibia
2. Department of Education Management and Policy Studies, Faculty of Education, Groenkloof Campus, University of Pretoria, P.O. Box 20, Hatfield 0028, South Africa
Abstract
This paper defines ideology as the belief systems, attitudes, views, and mindsets of educationists which inform their work. It examines the ideologies of school inspectors, principals, and teachers in the implementation of decentralized, cluster-based educational change in Namibia (see Pomuti 2009). Data were collected in three diverse school clusters. Data analyses resulted in the ideologies of the educationists being characterised as authoritarian, bureaucratic, and managerial. The paper argues that while the postapartheid Namibian government has changed the governance structures in education, it has not succeeded in changing the mindsets and actions of important reform implementers. These have more in common with the apartheid system than with the participatory, collaborative, and democratic ideas upon which cluster-based school management in the new Namibia is based.