History
CEAM was brought into existence as the Commonwealth Council of Educational Administration
(so
initially
CCEA) by a meeting in 1970 at the University of New England, Armidale, New South
Wales, Australia, which was convened at the conclusion of the second International
Intervisitation Programme (IIP) by Professor Bill Walker of that university.
His was the vision. It sprang from enthusiasm for a Commonwealth-wide professional
organisation, kindled by his participation four years before in the initial
1966 IIP which had been sponsored by the North American University Council of
Educational Administration (UCEA). That had been an international gathering
of educational administration scholars and practitioners, which in apparently
more leisurely times had itinerated and deliberated over several weeks in the
eastern United States and in neighbouring Canadian provinces.
Enthusiasm had been communicated in both directions. Consequently the second
IIP was hosted in the eastern states of Australia, small groups visiting universities,
schools and state departments of education, and congregating in the final week
at Armidale. The Commonwealth participants, drawn from nations of both the 'old'
and the rapidly expanding 'new' Commonwealth, resolved unanimously to establish
the CCEA, and seek the establishing of the Council's Secretariat at the University
of New England.
In the intervening four years Professor Walker had undertaken considerable preparatory
work. In particular he had generated support in London for the proposed venture
within the recently established Commonwealth Foundation. This body had as its
mission the promotion of professional bodies across the Commonwealth, assisting
them to increase communication particularly between younger professionals through
visits and conferences, helping them to set up national associations where none
existed, and the reducing of such bodies' centralisation on the United Kingdom.
Professor Walker was assisted in these approaches by Dr George Baron and Dr
Bill Taylor of the University of London Institute of Education. By 1969 he had
been able to advise John Chadwick, founding Director of the Commonwealth Foundation,
of a generous financial offer from the University of New England, and its preparedness
to house the Secretariat within Professor Walker's Education Department at the
university.
The 1970 meeting at Armidale proceeded to set up an interim Board for the new
professional association, and authorised a formal approach for funding to the
Commonwealth Foundation. After a visit to Armidale by John Chadwick, funding
was approved for the fledgling organisation and an Executive Director appointed,
John Ewing formerly Director of Primary Education in New Zealand being the successful
applicant. Like Professor Walker who had been elected founding President of
the new CCEA, John Ewing had shared in both IIP 1966 and IIP 1970.
The first CCEA Newsletter, published in 1971, announced that membership would
be 'open to all those interested in the administration of education. This prescription
enables educationists from all levels - pre-school to tertiary - to participate
in Council activities. Similarly it permits membership for practising administrators,
for scholars and professors involved in the study and teaching of educational
administration, for teachers aspiring to administrative status, for politicians
and civil servants.' Membership is available today on the same broad prescription.
Steps were quickly taken to establish the Australian Council of Educational
Administration and regional councils in various parts of Australia. Next followed
the British Educational Administration Society, later to be renamed BEMAS, (British
Educational Management & Administration Society). Councils followed in other
parts of the Commonwealth, the New Zealand body being established in 1975.
By 1974 the Foundation President and Executive Director were able to report
to a ministerial Commonwealth Education Conference in Jamaica of initial regional
conferences held in Malaysia and Fiji. Over the years these topic-specific regional
conferences drew on expertise from around the Commonwealth, and by 1992 in Hong
Kong these conferences had become Commonwealth conferences per se. They had
also come to be held routinely in the median year between the four-yearly IIP's,
which now gathered together educational administrators from the Americas, from
the new European Forum and from CCEA.
In the new century just begun, with the demise of the IIP model, the Commonwealth
conferences have become biennial and their inclusive note will be emphasised
by the location of the 2002 conference in northern Sweden. A CCEAM symposium
is now a regular part of the programme of the annual UCEA conferences in North
America.
Writing for the celebratory 1990 CCEA publication, Advancing Education: School
Leadership in Action, Professor Walker identified five characteristics of the
Council over its first twenty years. He suggested:
Professor
Bill Walker provided leadership as President for twelve years to 1982. In later
years his influence was extended even more broadly as Chief Executive and Principal
of the Australian Management College at Mt. Eliza on the shores of Port Phillip
Bay. He was succeeded as President of CCEA from 1982 to 1986 by Canadian Professor
Robin Farquhar, successively Dean of Education at the University of Saskatchewan,
President and Vice-Chancellor of the University of Winnipeg, and President and
Vice-Chancellor of Carleton University in Ottawa. Professor Farquhar had earlier
served as Deputy Director of the Ontario Institute of Studies in Education and
as Director of the University Council of Educational Administration in the United
States.
From 1986 to 1990 the presidency passed to Great Britain in the person of Professor
Meredydd Hughes, Head of the Department of Educational Studies and Dean of the
Faculty of Education at the University of Birmingham. He had earlier been Senior
Lecturer at University College Cardiff and national Chair of BEMAS, 1978-82.
In 1990 the Presidency returned to Australia, Professor Bill Mulford of the
University of Tasmania assuming the helm after periods of leadership at both
national and state levels in ACEA. He was succeeded in turn in 1994 by a second
president from the United Kingdom, Professor Angela Thody initially of the University
of Luton and more latterly at the International Educational Leadership Centre
at Lincoln University.
At the CCEAM millennium conference in Hobart in the year 2000 the presidency
passed to President Jo Howse of the Auckland University of Technology, New Zealand.
She had previously served for four years as President of the Council's New Zealand
affiliate NZEAS, and had earlier most successfully revivified the Society's
Auckland branch and presided over a 1994 national conference which restored
the health and vision of NZEAS, both severely under stress from the years of
system-wide education reforms which had commenced in 1988.
While based at the University of New England CCEAM was loyally served by four
Executive Directors - John Ewing to 1975; Professor Harry Harris of Australia
to 1983; Basil Kings, formerly Director of Teacher Education in the New Zealand
Department of Education, to 1988; and John Weeks to 1994, who brought to the
task the broad experience of supporting education in many parts of the world
over thirty five years in Commonwealth and international agencies.
By the mid-nineties the political and financial regimes under which universities
in Australia were operating made sustaining the Armidale base problematic, and
with the election of Professor Thody as CCEAM President, CCEAM administration
followed her to England. From 2000 and the election of Mrs Howse as President,
CCEAM administration has now been centred on Auckland New Zealand.
These transitions have been more easily accomplished by a range of delegations
of former Executive Director responsibilities. Members of the Board are charged
with leadership of committees on Qualifications, Membership and Marketing, Publications,
Conference liaison, Constitutional matters, CCEAM Fellowships recommendations,
and Strategic Planning. Council publications are now managed from Hong Kong
in the case of International Studies in Educational Administration, and Canada
in the case of Managing Education Matters.
Ken Rae
CCEAM FELLOW 1996
NZEAS FELLOW 1994
* Addendum:
The CCEAM Presidency for the next four years (2004-08) is enacted from Cyprus
and CCEAM`s office is now located in Cyprus. The publication of Managing Education
Matters is now managed from Cyprus.