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How do school managers view and use data to help improve student achievement at their school?Slater, Alan January 2014 (has links)
No description available.
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All-Hands-On-Deck: A Study Of Democratic Leadership and Its Impact on Teacher Turnover Rate, Job Satisfaction, and Building MoraleBarton, Steven Scott 20 December 2022 (has links)
No description available.
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The challenges of leading the attainment agenda : framing the role and practices of the new Secondary HeadteacherCook, Elaine D. January 2015 (has links)
Scottish institutions within the educational networks, including Government, local authorities, and schools, are entangled in performative activities dedicated to improvements in student attainment. Secondary school performance in Scotland is measured nationally predominantly by the number and level of national qualifications achieved. The thesis makes the case that this attainment agenda places enormous pressures on Headteachers to ensure student outcomes are maximised and that the culture of performativity is a major factor in shaping the roles and practices of Headteachers. The study is based on four new secondary school Headteachers in a single Scottish local authority. It is through an examination of their work practices that the formation of subjectivities within a range of power relations and discursive regimes are explored. Performativity and accountability influence the role and actions of the Headteacher in many ways which are unanticipated. There is an ongoing power struggle engendered by the pressures and controls imposed on new Headteachers which modify and discipline their behaviours. In this thesis, a case study methodology is employed and the concepts of Michel Foucault are applied to provide an alternative means of understanding the practices of Headteachers. A Foucauldian approach also provides a different perspective on the problematic conceptualisation of school leadership. The aim of this study is to make a research-based contribution to our understanding of the complexities and competing priorities negotiated by new Headteachers. The research evidences the dominance of the attainment agenda on the lived lives of the new Headteachers. This study should enable the development of additional ways to assist with Headteacher preparation and the provision of improved support in the early years of Headship.
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A gender study on leadership : the female and male principals of Hong Kong secondary schools as perceived by teachers and the principals themselves /Kingman Lo, Ip-shan, Alice. January 1996 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Hong Kong, 1997. / Includes bibliographical references (leaf 406-432).
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The Creation of a successful organisational culturein an independent schoolVan Renssen, Andries January 2013 (has links)
According to the available literature, schools with a positive organisational culture are more
effective and will probably achieve better results. This study investigates the way in which a
positive school culture is formed. It focuses on the role of the leadership of the principal in
developing an organisational culture of an independent school. This qualitative study scrutinises one specific school in a group of several independent
schools in South Africa and compares the school culture of the original school (between
1971 and 1974) to the current school culture as manifested in the last four years (2009-
2012). Data was gathered through interviews with the founder of the school, interviews
with current teachers and the current principal, document research of artefacts as well as
observations made by visitors to the school in a professional capacity.
The data recorded was analysed in terms of a "levels of culture" model proposed by Edgar Schein (1985) by looking at what “the school” said about itself, what “the school” and the
principal did, and what things look like. Furthermore, a study was made of what is seen as
acceptable behaviour and unacceptable behaviour followed by what is regarded as
important and not important in the school. The answers to these questions were used to
determine the assumptions that members of the school community hold about the nature
of the school.
The analysis of the school’s culture aimed to determine how this school’s past is living in the
present and what role the leadership of the principal played in shaping the school’s culture.
All of this was done to determine how school culture is formed, so that other schools can
also use the methods identified in this study to identify their own school’s culture and find
ways of changing it.
The researcher concludes that the formation of a school culture can be controlled and
manipulated towards a positive outcome and ways of doing this are identified. It is also
found that the culture of the specific school in this study seems to have been well-defined
and positive throughout its history and that the leadership of the principal plays a significant
role in the success of the school. / Dissertation (MEd)--University of Pretoria, 2013. / gm2014 / Education Management and Policy Studies / UPonly
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Measuring & Making Systems Change: Sensemaking of Teacher LeadersSchaefer, Katherine A. 23 March 2021 (has links)
No description available.
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