Post Transformational Leadership on Leading Change for
Successful Madrasahin Malang East Java Indonesia
Muhammad Walid and Fitratul Uyun
Universitas Islam Negeri Maulana Malik Ibrahim Malang
Keywords: Post Transformational Leadership, Leading Change, Madrasah.
Abstract: This research investigates the practice of madrasah principle leadership in managing changes. The foci of
this research are the process of an event. In details, it is about obtaining an in-depth understanding about
how is the foundation practice of head of madrasah in managing successful madrasah. This research applied
the qualitative approach (study case). Data were collected through some techniques, which are in-depth
interview, semi-involved observation, and documentation. Then, the obtained data is analyzed by using
descriptive qualitative technique (data on a website) and comparative analysis (data from various websites.
To measure the validity of the obtained data, the researcher used some standards, such as: credibility,
transferability, dependability, and confirmability. Leadership in managing changes in madrasah had some
principles, they are: (a) analyzing and identifying the performance of madrasah to respond toward
organizational situation in creating the need of changes; (b) distributing authority and decision making
process by building and strengthening the team of change coalition; (c) setting direction of madrasah which
covers building and disseminating vision and mission, creating consensus about goals and priorities, and
building high expectation of madrasah performance; (d) inspiring acceptable understanding about education
and schooling through the strategic implementation to accomplish goals and creating an effective learning in
organization; (e) building madrasah capacity, both personality and professionalism to broaden changes and
madrasah development by developing human resources; (f) stimulating appreciation to increase
commitment towards madrasah development through short-term-achievement celebration; (g) redesigning
organization, identifying, creating, maintaining, and modifying structure of decision making process to
consolidate changes; (h) building the collaborative culture which encourages the involvement of school
stakeholders in order to strengthen the result of changes.
1 INTRODUCTION
The background of this study is the worry towards
the existence of Islamic Education institutions,
especially madrasah. Besides pesantren, madrasah is
one of the most substantial Islamic education
institutions in Indonesia. The existence of madrasah
is so crucial to create high qualified young
generation who are not only excellent in general
knowledge, but also in understanding Islamic
knowledge. It has significant role in creating
excellent Indonesian young generation by far.
However, the quality of madrasah in Indonesia is
quite distressing (Azra 2000). In fact, Muslim
community in Indonesia are so passionate to hold
Islamic education. It is indicated by the total number
of madrasah in Indonesia, which is quite high.
Nevertheless, their passion about Islamic education
is contrast to their performance in managing
madrasah, especially in term of professionalism.
Further, it creates a big gap between the quality and
quantity of madrasah.
When we track back the history of madrasah in
Indonesia, it is undeniable that they were developed
by Muslim community and they are designed
completely based on their belief. Everyone within
the community has contribution to develop
madrasah. Therefore, it can be concluded that
Indonesian Muslim community implemented the
concept of community-based education. This fact
also explains why the quality of madrasah in
Indonesia is mediocre or even low. However, the
passion of Indonesian Muslim community has been
beneficial for Indonesia. By now, because of their
effort, there have been many madrasahs all over
Indonesia, in form of public and private madrasah
2918
Walid, M. and Uyun, F.
Post Transformational Leadership on Leading Change for Successful Madrasah in Malang East Java Indonesia.
DOI: 10.5220/0009917129182926
In Proceedings of the 1st International Conference on Recent Innovations (ICRI 2018), pages 2918-2926
ISBN: 978-989-758-458-9
Copyright
c
2020 by SCITEPRESS Science and Technology Publications, Lda. All rights reserved
(Azra 2000). Statistic reveals, there are more private
madrasah than public madrasah (Azra 2000).
Those data show how big the passion and the
independence of Indonesian Muslim community in
hold education through the development madrasah
is. They succeeded in creating madrasah for all
school level so students can accomplish the nine
year of compulsory education in Indonesia, covering
MI (Madrasah Ibtidaiyah or primary school), MTs
(Madrasah Tsanawiyah or middle school), and MA
(Madrasah Aliyah or senior high school). However,
unfortunately those efforts have not been supported
by good school (madrasah) management, teachers’
professionalism, and other internal factors such as
curriculum development, learning system, human
resources, and funding resources. Later, it created
problems and gaps in education which held by
madrasah in Indonesia.
Nevertheless, not all madrasah in Indonesia is
poorly rated. Some of them are good, either from its
achievement, management, and facilities.
Steenbrink, in one of his studies about Islamic
education institutions in Indonesia, concluded that
these days, madrasah Indonesia started to be able to
compete with other regular schools. The availability
of high quality madrasah in some of capital cities in
Indonesia, such as MIN “Para Juara” in Malang,
East Java, shows that madrasah can perform as great
as regular schools, or even better (Steenbrink 1994).
That kind of madrasahs prove that they can compete
with, not only madrasah under the authority of
Ministry of Religion, but also general schools under
the authority of Ministry of Education and Culture,
both academically and non-academically
(Djojonegoro 1998; Sergiovanni 1987).
From the above description, there were two
questions rising: why do some madrasahs are
successful, while others fail? And further, why those
madrasahs can be successful, while others fail in
achieving their goals?
Most reformation in madrasah happens when its
principal and its academic staff can change status
quo to a better stage. This is based on a research
outcome which shows that one of the greatest factor
in succeeding school transformation is the leadership
skill of its principal, since he is the agent and
manager of change. This is in accordance to a study
which was done by Edmond (1979) about school. It
was found in his study that schools which have
progressive achievement are mostly lead by a great
principal (Edmonds 1979). Tobroni (2005) also
stated that there is a significant relationship between
effective organization and effective leadership. In
addition, Edmond also stated that an organization
which has dynamic change is mostly lead by a great
principle who always attempt to improve his
achievement (Edmonds 1979). Hallinger and
Leithwood, in their study, later concluded that an
effective school is led by an effective principle as
well (Hallinger et al. 2005). The result of Borko,
Wolf, Simone, and Uchiyama’s study (2003)
revealed that leadership hold such a crucial role and
become a main factor which encourage the success
of school reformation (Borko et al. 2003). In
addition, Fullan (1993) also stated that school
principal is the agent of school transformation
(Fullan 2012). Putter as cited by Sergiovanni
(Sergiovanni 1987), drawn a conclusion that
principle is the main key within the effort of
increasing the quality of students. To sum up, all
those findings shows that principal or head of
madrasah is a leader and the most crucial agent of
change at schools.
Based on the explanations, it can be concluded
that the achievement of madrasahs is mostly
determined by school principals, as the agent of
change. Leithwood & Riehl (Leithwood & Riehl
2003), Hill (2002), (Leithwood et al. 2004) in their
studies concluded that the factors determined the
achievement of a school in general are students’
achievement and principals. A more detailed
explanation is available below:
The effect of educational leadership towards
students’ achievement is undeniably existed.
However, it is not directly seen and functioned
through the betterment of organization variables,
such as school mission or goals, curriculum, and
learning activities. However, when it is viewed from
the viewpoint of quantitative approach, it can be
estimated that the effects aren’t always invisible and
variables of leadership can explain the important
proportion related to school and students’ learning
achievement (Leithwood et al. 2004).
Even though the effect is not directly seen, but it
does significantly existed. In their review about how
leadership affect students’ learning, it is stated that
from all factors that affect students learning
achievement in schools, the existed findings guide
us to a conclusion where leadership is only one level
below learning process in classrooms (Leithwood et
al. 2004).
In recent times, there are many research about
leadership at schools in various contexts. One of
research which pay attention towards leadership at
schools is International Successful Principalship
Project (ISSPP). This project involves seven
countries, they are: Australia, China, Denmark, UK,
Norway, Sweden, andthe US. This project results
Post Transformational Leadership on Leading Change for Successful Madrasah in Malang East Java Indonesia
2919
some important findings about the characteristics of
a successful principal (Day et al. 2000). Leithwood
and Riehl (Leithwood & Riehl 2003), believe that
kind of principal shows some basic dimensions of
transformational leadership, such as great in
directing school development, developing human
resources, and redesign organization. That kind of
principal is also depicted as having strong personal
values and characteristics, professional, and
equipped by the ability to analyze and suit his
leadership with the unique school contexts. Based on
those findings, the characteristics of principalship
which found by ISSPP gives such a great
contribution towards a betterment of leadership at
schools.
ISSPP shows some differences between the
characteristics and practice of leadership which are
implemented by principals. The differences cover
the focus and priority within their leadership,
characteristics, and style (Leithwood 2005). The
researchers believe those differences are affected by
different situation and contexts, depends on where
the principalship is applied. Be it in public or private
schools, rural area or downtown, primary schools or
senior high schools, religiously-affiliated schools or
general schools, and Asia or Europe, East, West, or
Central. This is in accordance with the general
theory of leadership: leadership depends on the
context (contingency theory of leadership) (Fiedler
1993).
Eventhough, later, it is found that different
school context has massive effect towards the
establishment of leadership characteristics and
practice, the ISSPP project only result successful
principalship only in western school context. Asia
which is represented by China is not much different
from other Asian countries, such as Japan, Malaysia,
Korea, and even Indonesia itself. The differences
between China and other Asian countries cover
political, economics, sociocultural, and even,
religion matters in Indonesia context as the largest
Islamic country (Hallinger et al. 2005). The lack of
information about Asia and other contexts has limit
Indonesian teachers’ understanding about the
viewpoint of school leadership globally and
transformative school leadership.
There are a lot of studies about school leadership
which result findings about various leadership
characteristics. However, the writer found that there
are just a small number of research which focus on
school leadership in the context of madrasah in
Indonesia. In fact, knowledge about this area is so
crucial in filling that empty room and finding the
best leadership model and practice for the
development of madrasah in Indonesia. Besides,
study about leadership in madrasah can also be
beneficial for knowledge development in school
leadership in developing countries, such as
Indonesia, or even for the whole Asia.
Madrasah which considered successful in
Indonesia is used as the sample and the focus of this
study. That madrasah is The Public Madrasah
Ibtidaiyah (MIN) of Malang. The success of MIN
Malang both academically and non-academically is
greatly recognized in Indonesia. MIN Malang even
already gained some achievements in International
competition. For five years, this madrasah even
become a pilot model for schools and madrasahs in
Indonesia. It is even nominated as one of the most
favorite madrasah between 6.533 madrasahs in
Indonesia.
A British management expert, Roger Gill, once
stated that the determiner of success within an
organization depends on its change management and
change leadership. Gill also believe good
management of change is sine-qua-non (Gill 2002).
In addition, he states that while change must be well
managed, it also requires effective leadership to be
successfully introduced and sustained (Gill 2002).
Therefore, once we found a successful madrasah, we
need to analyze how the way of principal leadership
isimplemented in managing change, not only on his
leadership style and characteristics.
From those backgrounds, it can be concluded
that the focus of this research is madrasah principal
leadership in managing change in a successful
madrasah in Malang. In detail, this research studied
the practice of madrasah principle leadership in
managing changes. Research question in this study
are how is the practice of madrasah principal
leadership in managing change, starts from the stage
of unfreezing, changing, and refreezing.
2 METHOD
The focuses of this study are the process of an event,
or in details, it is about getting an in-depth
understanding about how is the principalship
practice of head of madrasah in managing successful
madrasahs. Therefore, it can be said that this
research applied the qualitative approach (study
case). Madrasah is chosen as the research object
because there are still a little number of research in
Indonesia which investigate successful madrasah.
Most researcher tend to study general school.
Data is collected through some techniques,
which are in-depth interview, semi-involved
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observation, and documentation. Then, the obtained
data is analyzed by using descriptive qualitative
technique (data on a website) and comparative
analysis (data from various websites. To measure the
validity of the obtained data, the researcher use some
standards, such as: 1) credibility, 2) transferability,
3) dependability, and 4) confirmability.
3 RESULT AND ANALYSIS
3.1 Creation of the Urgent Madrasahh
Transformation
The practice of madrasah principalship in creating
and building the urgent change in successful
madrasahs, can be done by analyzing and identifying
the performance of madrasahs to respond
organizational situation in creating the changes of
needs. This can be explained in the Table 2 as
follows.
Table1: The Creation of the Urgent Madrasahh
Transformation.
Sub-Theme
Realizing the changes of needs; comparing the
achievement of one madrasah to another’ social
changes which related to school (MBS, IT-based
learning); looking at the performance of
madrasahs/achievement expectation (internal analysis
and external analysis; comparing the performance of
the pioneers; and digging worker’s expectation
The sources of changes;madrasahh principal; bottom
up; vice principals and subject coordinators; teachers
and other staff at schools.
The ability of madrasah principal to analyze the
performance of academic and non-academic
achievement in every year to create the need of
changes in madrasah and/or comparing to other
madrasahs, are needed to realize a successful
transformation in a madrasah. Madrasah principals
can also identify the performance of madrasahs
through some indicators and utilize this information
to set aims and strategies. Madrasah principal also
can analyze and create school culture which support
changes and school development, and finally, thus,
students may achieve better at madrasah. Therefore,
madrasah principals need to focus their attention in
responding organizational situation and problems
that are faced by the organization. This implied the
principles of contingency leadership.
3.2 Creating Changes Coalition Teams
Thepractice of madrasah principalship in managing
changes, especially in terms of the creation or the
strengthening of changes coalition team can be done
through distributing authorities and decision making
process by building the changes coalition teams.
Table 3 shows that madrasahs can change by
creating changes coalition teams in the first place.
Table2: Strengthening Changes Coalition Teams.
Sub-Theme
Creating changes coalition teams; strengthening the
roles of vice principals
Strategies for strengthening the changes coalition
teams; nourishing the sense of belonging; attention,
motivating, and the actualization recognition;
expectation management; establishing effective
communication; consolidation and coordination of
the changes coalition teams
Madrasah principals assumed that the process of
decision making should be the focus in madrasah
transformation. Madrasah principals practice their
principalship by giving opportunities for madrasah
community to increase the organizational
effectiveness which based on the values of
democracy, and put school-based management as a
priority where stakeholders share leadership.
Besides, that kind of participative leadership can
improve school capacity to respond productively to
the demand of changes, both from internal and
external aspects. Participative leadership requires the
ability of madrasah principal to communicate with
their coalition team to create and improve the sense
of belonging.
3.3 Visioning
Themadrasah principals also show their
principalship practice, especially in the stage of
improving vision, by setting the direction of
madrasah which covers building mutual visions,
creating consensus about goals and priorities, and
settting high expectation of high achievement.
Post Transformational Leadership on Leading Change for Successful Madrasah in Malang East Java Indonesia
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Table3: Improving Vision.
Sub-Theme
Visioning; Sharing with other madrasah community
through formal activity, such as meeting, informal and
non-formal; learning from the ancestor and utilizing
skills and understanding about management; internal
and external context analysis. Internal context analysis
covers the situation of madrasahs, teachers, students,
madrasah resources, financial, and madrasah facilities.
While, external context analysis covers: society
expectation, parents, and neighborhood around
madrasahs, competition between madrasahs, global
and local changes, societal changes, and the changes
of education regulation (MBS, K13, IT-based learning,
etc.).
The urgency of vision; guiding and monitoring all the
elements of madrasahs to achieve those visions and
missions; using visions as the focal point in driving
madrasah; packing the visions with the basics of Islam
as the special characteristics of madrasah.
Vision dissemination; formal (general meeting, etc.);
informal (sudden inspection, individual supervision)
and non-formal (day out to madrasah neighborhood,
website, leaflet). The object of vision dissemination:
teachers, class coordinators, workers, janitor, security
officer, and parents).
Madrasah principles can lead changes by setting
the direction of the madrasah, right after developing
future visions, and then unite the steps of madrasah
community by communicating their visions and
inspire others to tackle challenges. All those things
are done without acting authoritarian. Even though,
principals invite other staffs of the madrasah to share
some thoughts, but still, the leader’s role is in their
hands. The establishment of future visions and
having strategies to execute those visions, shows
their skill to implement of the dimensions of
successful leadership or visionary leadership and
strategic leadership.
Thus, the findings in this study strengthen the
other findings about madrasah leadership
(principalship) that the leaders of successful
madrasahs have the ability in setting and giving
direction to communities to contribute in madrasah
transformation. Leithwood, et al (2004) believe the
skills to set and give direction is one of the
dimension of transformational leadership. Madrasah
principals, in this case, have clear and great vision
for madrasah, build it with the strategies which are
tend to be democratic, and disseminate it to build
mutual visions in communities. Madrasah principals
also have high expectation regarding madrasah,
teachers, and students’ performance. That
expectation gives inspiration for the member of
madrasah community and motivate them to increase
their performance. The skills of madrasah principle
in setting direction looks much clearer in the
strategies or programs that they compile.
3.4 Strategies for Visions Achievement
Madrasah principal can perform the practice of
leadership by giving inspiration on good knowledge
about education and school through strategies of
vision achieving and creating an effective learning
organization.
Table1: Strategies for Achieving Visions.
Sub-Theme
Academic; the implementation and development of K-
13, IT-based learning, students learning through
Mathematics and Science Club (MSC), andthe
improvement of teachers’ qualification by requiring
them having a master degree
Non-Academic; Extracurricular activities and IMTAQ
activities
Other supportive elements; discipline members of
madrasah; motivating member of madrasah to gain
better and better achievement and quality; the
improvement of school facilities for students
Therefore, madrasah leaders have showed the
understanding towards the importance of that kind of
development to achieve better students’ outcome.
Students’ better outcome which can be measured, is
like national examination. National examination
itself is a main thing for every madrasah principal
and members of other madrasah community.
Therefore, some of academic strategies which can be
used, such as additional learning time, try out, and
preparation for national examination, are compiled
to meet the demand of society in improving the
result of national examination. These all are the
short-term strategies. Thus, madrasah principal has
such an important role in compiling and
communicating school goals, creating expectations
and standards, coordinating curriculum, evaluating
instructional activities, and broadening students’
opportunities to learn. Madrasah leaders should have
an adequate skill to control their madrasahs. The
better their skill and knowledge about educational
and learning matters, the stronger the impact is.
Allah swt has given an analogy in the Holy
Koran, or in details, in surah al-Mulk: 1 as follows:
        
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Blessed is He in whose hand is dominion, and
He is over all things competent.
In other words, those madrasah principals are the
real example of strategic leaders. They implemented
some strategies to realize the visions of madrasah
which they created. It is obvious that the
establishment of visions and strategies of madrasah
are based on their belief and affected by their
personal experience and understanding (Yukl 2013).
They go hand in hand with other members of
madrasah, under the new paradigm of participative
management, compile strategies which can be
implemented effectively. They are consistent with
their definition and other members as well about
madrasah success so they introduce some kinds of
academic and non-academic strategies to increase
students’ achievement. Some supportive strategies
are also compiled to do continuous analysis towards
the programs and performance of madrasah.
3.5 Broadening the Actions of Changes
through Empowerment
From those findings about the broadening of
changes through empowerment, madrasah principals
implement the practice of building madrasah
capacity, both personally and professionally to
broaden the development of madrasah.
Table5: Broadening the Actions of Changes Through
Empowerment.
Sub-Theme
Developing human resources; workshop; Seminar;
Updating knowledge on their own; Study tour; idea
sharing; religious approach; kinship approach;
Individual supervision
Therefore, building madrasah capacity, which
becomes the focus of most madrasah principals,
covers personal and professional, and even
organizational capacity. Personal and professional
capacity is related to madrasah principal, vice
principal, teachers and non-teacher staff. Those
aspects of madrasah capacity shows such an in-depth
concern towards the professionalism development of
teachers and staffs. Each madrasah principal shows
future professional development for teachers and
staffs, which called by in-service training. In-service
training for teachers and staffs covers workshop,
seminar, idea sharing, sister school, and so forth.
3.6 Creating Short Term Success
Madrasah principal also do other practice of
leadership, which is using rewards to improve
teachers’ commitment in developing madrasah
through the celebration of short term success.
Table6: Creating Short Term Success.
Sub-Theme
Celebrating success; verbal appreciation, social
appreciation, scholarship awarding, financial reward,
trophy, school trip, position promotion for teachers,
pursuing master degree
Madrasah principal uses rewards as a process of
transaction, where leaders give reward to workers.
Therefore, giving them motivation, including
individual rewards and support will be beneficial for
both parties. Teachers and staffs will feel that their
leaders pay attention to them and that makes them
feel more comfortable to work in the madrasahs.
Maslow’s theory about motivation supports
prosperity development from principal to teachers
and staffs. And, at the end of the day, madrasah
principals have implemented the main dimension of
transformational leadership by giving motivation to
teachers and students, and improving their
commitment towards the madrasah development
(Bass 1985).
3.7 Consolidating Actions for Changes
From the earlier findings about consolidating actions
for changes, then it can be concluded that practices
which can be done are redesigning the structure of
the organization; identifying, creating, maintaining,
and modifying the structure for mutual decision
making in consolidating the changes ofmadrasah.
Table7: Consolidating Changes
Sub-Theme
Utilizing madrasah culture for changes; teachers who
have master degree; commitment of all members of
madrasah; support from madrasah committee and
stakeholders; department of education can be
responsive
Changing support system; member mindset; changing
visions of madrasah; structure of organization;
creating and strengthening Standard of Procedure
(SOP)
Consolidation of changes can be in form of
utilization of madrasah culture for changes, and
Post Transformational Leadership on Leading Change for Successful Madrasah in Malang East Java Indonesia
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support system changes; member mindset; changing
visions of madrasah; structure of organization;
creating and strengthening Standard of Procedure
(SOP). Even though there is not vision changes in
MAN Embun Pagi, but at least they already perform
strengthening of madrasah culture; discipline,
religious, and equip madrasah with proper and
adequate facilities. Therefore, the changes of
behavior of madrasah members is something which
must be inside the social organization, such as
madrasah. In the future, a successful madrasah is a
madrasah where the behavior of its members is
always having commitment and capacity to learn
continuously and the madrasah principal itself also
successful in creating madrasah as an effective
learning organization.
Structure changes and people who have roles in
those changes are example of the effort of madrasah
principle in giving authorityto teachers and staffs
through authority distribution and mutual decision
making process. This fact strengthens the finding
about transformational leadership where principals
are successful in creating the structure and mutual
decision making process. The process of authority
distribution indicates the implementation of
contingency leadership, which can be helpful in
solving problems, such as motivation, decision
making, organizational transformation,
organizational culture, and conflict management.
3.8 Strengthening and Maintaining the
Result of Changes
From the previous explanation about strengthen and
maintaining the result of changes, it can be
concluded that the practice of the madrasah
principles is building collaborative culture which
involve schools’ stakeholders to gain more changes.
Table8: Strengthen and Maintaining the Result of
Changes.
Sub-Theme
1. Evaluation
2. Istiqamah
3. Earlier preparation
4. Emotional closeness
5. Strategies development
6. Collaboration with third-party
Madrasah principals show their skills in
developing and building collaboration, not only with
the member of madrasah community, but also with
the other parties outside madrasah. This skill is
going together with the madrasah-based
management in which principals are given a kind of
freedom to make decision about the madrasahs. The
successful madrasah leaders tend to be able to make
great connections with many different segments of
society. They are close to stakeholder alliances,
varied connections, etc. All these collaborative effort
is meant to gain higher achievement for the
madrasah itself (participative leadership).
Because the strategic leaders can evaluate their
programs and strategies while they were being
implemented, madrasah principals in this studies
also do the same. They show their ability in
analyzing and evaluating their own context of
madrasah. Each of them can read different kinds of
situation, the weakness, the strength of madrasah,
expectation of different segment of community
towards madrasahs, and so forth. They compile
appropriate strategies and evaluate it continuously.
4 DISCUSSION
Finally, based on this study which focus on
madrasah as an Islamic educational institution, it can
be concluded that the leadership of madrasah
principal in successfully managing madrasahs in
different countries result in the creation of post-
transformational leadership theory. It is because all
the findings show that they all beyond simply
transformational leadership in the version of Burn,
Bass and Yukl, and any other leadership models
(visionary, managerial, moralist, substantial,
educational, and instructional leadership) as
explained in the following diagram.
The early dimension of transformational
leadership in the version of Burn and Bass tends to
be Leader-Followers Oriented, in which the leader
takes his own actions to increase theawareness of
other colleagues about what matters. Also, he/she
did it to encourage them to go beyond their personal
intention for the sake of improving the organization.
Transformational leadership reflects the interest
transcendence of leaders and followers. While
transformative leadership is only related to how to
inspire and gain commitment from followers. In the
other hand, transformational leadership tends to
focus on the exchange of appreciation between
leaders and followers (transactional).
While the model of Yukl transformational
leadership put more attention on behavioral
approaches, which highlight three principles, they
are: first, setting the goals of organization together;
second, developing human resources, which covers
providing individual support, offering intellectual
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stimulation, and giving examples on great and
important values and practices; third; redesigning an
organization and building a collaborative culture.
Figure 1: Post Tranformational Leadership.
The model of post-transformational leadership
goes beyond the model limitation of that
transformational leadership, which is by analyzing
and identifying madrasah performance to response
the organizational situation in creating the need of
changes; distributing authorities and decision
making process by building and/or strengthening the
team of changes coalition; setting the direction of
madrasah which covers building and disseminating
mutual vision and mission, creating consensus about
aims and priorities, and building high expectation of
performance; inspiring great knowledge about
education and schooling through the strategies of
vision achievement; and ability to create an effective
learning organization; building madrasah capacity,
both personally and professionally and it can be
done through developing human resources in
madrasah; stimulating appreciation to increase
commitment towards madrasah development;
redesigning organization; identifying, creating,
maintaining, and modifying the structure of mutual
decision making process. So, it is not only about
setting the direction of the organization, developing
human resources, and redesigning organization (as
the theory from Yukl), and different from the
concept from Burn and Bass about the leader-
followers oriented concept.
This study also strengthens the theory about
successful leadership, which is value-led
contingency leadership, in which the practices of
school leadership in managing changes at successful
school, by based on personal, professional, and
humanity values and belief. Value-led
contingencyindicates that school leadership is
centered at human with all aspects entitled to them
such as humanity, religion, and so forth, rather than
management system and market demand.
Meanwhile, madrasah principals who were studied
have implemented the dimensions of leadership such
as values and visions, team work, cooperation and
suitability of values and visions owned by leaders
and followers, integrity, consistency and integrity
owned by principals, context, fast response towards
what happened inside and outside the context,
continuous professionalism development, authority
is shared between team and individual, reflection,
building a self-characteristic to act in a proper way,
both by leaders and their staffs.
5 CONCLUSIONS
Leadership in managing changes in madrasah have
some principles, they are: (a) analyzing and
identifying the performance of madrasah to respond
toward organizational situation in creating the need
of changes; (b) distributing authority and decision
making process by building and strengthening the
team of changes coalition; (c) setting direction of
madrasah which covers building and disseminating
vision and mission, creating consensus about goals
and priorities, and building high expectation of
madrasah performance; (d) inspiring good
understanding about education and schooling
through the implementation of strategies to
accomplish goals and creating an effective learning
organization; (e) building madrasah capacity, both
personal and professional to broaden changes and
madrasah development by developing human
resources; (f) stimulating appreciation to increase
commitment towards madrasah development
through short-term-achievement celebration; (g)
redesigning organization, identifying, creating,
maintaining, and modifying structure of decision
making process to consolidate changes; (h) building
the collaborative culture which encourages the
involvement of school stakeholders in order to
strengthen the result of changes.
Therefore, this study enriched and/or created a
theory of post-transformational leadership, because
the finding shows that the leadership in this study
goes beyond the dimension of transformative
leadership in the viewpoint of Burn, Bass, Yukl, and
other models of leadership (visionary, managerial,
participative, moralist, contingency, educational, and
instructional leadership). The early model of Burn
and Bass transformative leadership tend to be leader-
followers oriented. Transformational leadership
reflected the transcendence of leaders and followers.
Transformative leadership is much related to how to
Post Transformational Leadership on Leading Change for Successful Madrasah in Malang East Java Indonesia
2925
inspire and gain followers’ commitment.
Transformational leadership puts more focus on the
exchange of appreciation between leaders and
followers (transactional). While the Yukl model of
transformational leadership tends to use the
behavioral approach, which highlight three main
principles: first, setting goals together; second,
developing human resources, covering providing
individual support, offering intellectual stimulation,
and giving examples on important values and
practices; third, redesigning organization to build
collaborative culture.
While the post-transformational leadership in
this study goes beyond other models of
transformational models. The model of the post-
transformational leadership covers analyzing and
identifying the performance of madrasah to respond
toward organizational situation in creating the need
of changes; distributing authority and decision
making process by building and strengthening the
team of changes coalition; setting direction of
madrasah which covers building and disseminating
vision and mission, creating consensus about goals
and priorities, and building high expectation of
madrasah performance; inspiring good
understanding about education and schooling
through the implementation of strategies to
accomplish goals and creating an effective learning
organization; building madrasah capacity, both
personal and professional to broaden changes and
madrasah development by developing human
resources; stimulating appreciation to increase
commitment towards madrasah development
through short-term-achievement celebration;
redesigning organization, identifying, creating,
maintaining, and modifying structure of decision
making process to consolidate changes; building the
collaborative culture which encourages the
involvement of school stakeholders in order to
strengthen the result of changes.
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