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DEMOCRACY AND EDUCATION IN A WHITE SUBURBAN HIGH SCHOOL: AN ETHNOGRAPHYStenson, Christine Marie 05 April 2007 (has links)
This ethnographic study begins by outlining two competing conceptions of democracy, the participatory and representative views. These conceptions frame an analysis of the practices for socialization for democratic citizenship at one majority white middle to upper-middle class suburban high school. The practices were abstracted from nonparticipant observations of an American government class, shadowing and interviewing six students through three school days apiece, and interviewing eight teachers and two school counselors. The school was found to be, on average, educating students in line with the representative view of democracy. The study concludes with discussion and encouragement of further research into practices to promote students acquisition of the knowledge, dispositions, and skills required to be effective citizens in a democracy.
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Global Leaders: Defining Relevant Leadership for the 21st CenturyGray, Bradley S. 11 December 2006 (has links)
LEADERSHIP AND POLICY STUDIES
GLOBAL LEADERS: DEFINING RELEVANT LEADERSHIP
FOR THE 21ST CENTURY
BRADLEY STEVEN GRAY
Dissertation under the direction of Professor Robert L. Crowson
After an age of leadership defined by the norms and demands of an industrial era, the forces of globalization at the beginning of the 21st century, primarily ushered in by logarithmic advances of technology, have created the demand for leadership, identified in this phenomenological study as global leadership. Based upon demand identifiers describing the realities of the current stage(s) of globalizationbypass, simultaneity, mobility, pluralism, change, and integrationsix leadership capacities were extrapolated to establish criteria upon which to analyze an effective leader in this context. Foundational is a distinction between competencies and capacities in global leadership. Where competencies are skill and task based with limited ability to fulfill adaptive work, capacities are skills and abilities that enable one to regenerate growth based on adaptive challenges, and thus innovation. The six global leader capacities forming the filter for analysis are the capacity for self-transformation, capacity of the contextual self, capacity for omnicompetence, capacity for reframing the gifts of leadership, capacity for ethnorelativism, and the capacity for transcendence. In the case of the global leader, these six capacities engage simultaneously to create the synergistic phenomenon. Two archetypal cases are considered. Findings identify that global leaders are found throughout societies although few of them are noticed because the infrastructure of leadership development, including the education systems, are geared to develop leaders for industrial model work. Global leaders are not necessarily international leaders, and it is not a contradiction for a global leader not to lead in an international context. A corollary relationship between pairs of the criteria capacities surfaces as three interacting systems: problem solving system, motivation leadership system, and transcendent leadership system, a sophisticated relationship of behaviors. Most useful are the six criteria and their systemic, integrated engagement in the global leader as these are viable as units of development. The study identifies a developmental process, and a developmental model that applies across sectors of work, ethnic, and national backgrounds. Global leadership is a human phenomenon, not confined to sector of work, geography, or other limiting boundaries, real or created.
Approved: Robert L. Crowson Date: November 6, 2006
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EXPLORING SCHOOL SEQUENCES AS A NEW UNIT OF ANALYSIS FOR INTRADISTRICT SCHOOL FINANCE EQUITY STUDIESHouck, Eric A. 19 December 2006 (has links)
This dissertation used student and school-level data to create school assignment sequences at the student level; evaluated the distribution of resources across those sequences; and compared findings from equity analysis conducted across schools within a school district to similar analysis conducted across school sequences.
Findings indicate that school sequences matter in the measurement of vertical equity, less so in measures of horizontal equity, and the impact of student racial and economic characteristics is generally less in models that include student sequence types. The general conclusion, then, is that models that do not account for school sequence both overstate and understate by small to moderate amounts the inequitable relationship between race, poverty and school-level resources.
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Developing Networks for Educational Collaboration: An Event History Analysis of the Spread of Statewide P-16 CouncilsMokher, Christine G. 31 March 2008 (has links)
This study uses event history analysis to examine the origins of collaborative efforts between K-12 and higher education systems through the formation of statewide P-16 councils. The development of these joint organizational structures represents an important reform innovation in the P-16 education arena, as P-16 councils seek to influence state policy in an effort to improve student achievement and transitions across all levels of education. Network theory is used to distill three sets of hypotheses to predict how different governance structures, leadership influences, and environmental characteristics may help to explain the spread of voluntary and mandatory P-16 councils in the American states from 1992 to 2007. Although there is little support for the effect of a states organizational structures, both leadership influences and environmental conditions may impact a states decision of both whether to form a P-16 council and the type of P-16 council that is formed. The condition of weak educational climates is associated with a significant increase in the likelihood of forming all types of P-16 councils. The presence of an education governor is particularly important for understanding the spread of mandatory statewide P-16 councils, while economic and demographic characteristics of states are better predictors of the adoption of voluntary P-16 councils. The findings from this study also have broader theoretical implications for understanding who governs in the formation of network organizations. Government networks represent a relatively new type of policy context; one in which leadership from the executives office may be particularly important for explaining the formation of these innovative organizational structures.
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Trust and Secondary School Performance in the Dominican RepublicPelczar, Marisa 05 May 2008 (has links)
Relational trust has proven to be an important predictor of school achievement in the United States and can lead to innovation, problem-solving, and collective action in school communities (Bryk and Schneider, 2002). This study investigates relational trust in the secondary education system of the Dominican Republic, where trust may prove beneficial in promoting achievement and efficiency rates in schools, as well as ensuring successful reform in periods of change. The study examines which school-level characteristics are associated with relational trust, and then asks whether relational trust is associated with school performance.
A random sample of Dominican secondary schools was drawn, and directors and teachers provided measurements of relational trust, school, director, and teacher characteristics. Results were mixed: only teacher-director trust and teacher-parent trust were positively linked with Pruebas Nacionales (PNnational exit exam) scores while no types of trust were associated with PN qualifying rates (the percentage of seniors matriculated at the beginning of the year who qualified for the exam). Policy recommendations resulting from an analysis of these data include isolating overage students from properly age synchronized students, investing in classroom resources, and promoting administrative continuity and designated staff space to encourage social relationships between directors, teachers, students, parents, and community.
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Zero Tolerance: A Policy Implementation StudyWood, Janell Lynn 07 May 2008 (has links)
The general purpose of this study was to understand how zero tolerance policies have been implemented in schools since the passage of the Gun Free and Safe Schools Acts of 1997 (Jones, 1997). There were two guiding research questions: How and to what extent has zero tolerance policies been implemented in schools? And what is the relationship between policy, school, and student factors and implementation variability? In order to investigate these questions, a case study of one suburban high schools approach to implementing zero tolerance policies was conducted. Semi-structured interviews were held with policy stakeholders including school administrators, school district personnel, and a school resource officer.
In the study, I found that although there were financial and technical resources deployed to implement zero tolerance policies, school administrators received no formalized training in enforcing the policy. Assistant Principals played a critical role in policy interpretation and enforcement and were in fact the least trained individuals. A lack of training required administrators to develop informal communication networks and mentoring relationships as a means of support. Students were also an important resource as they were frequently the individuals who reported violations to administrators.
In terms of policy clarity, there were a variety of interpretations of the unlawful possession of drugs and weapons. This lack of clarity encouraged school officials to use some discretion in enforcing the policy including not disciplining students according to the letter of the law.
During the course of this study on zero tolerance it became apparent that the role of the federal government in implementing such policies diminishes and gives way to greater state control. Although the mandates for safe and drug free schools were issued at the federal level, the responsibility of executing such lofty goals rested squarely on the states shoulders. School administrators carried much of the burden.
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The Cross-Cultural Fit of the Learning-Centered Leadership Framework and Assessment for Chinese PrincipalsCravens, Xiu Chen 14 July 2008 (has links)
This dissertation explores a framework for effective school leadership that is connected with research, standards and current practices in the United States, and investigates its cross-cultural generalizability both theoretically and empirically. First, it evaluates the alignment of the Learning-Centered Leadership Framework with the professional standards and practices of principals in Chinese schools. Second, it examines whether the Vanderbilt Assessment of Leadership in Education (the VAL-ED), an instrument that is developed based on the framework, has construct validity and reliability when administered to Chinese school principals. Third, it explores if and how the framework and the instrument may be modified to enhance its cross-cultural relevance and utility.
Employing both qualitative and quantitative methods, results are generated from three studies: (a) expert-panel review of the alignment of the framework, (b) cognitive interview about the instrument content and format, and (c) validity and reliability analyses of the VAL-ED addressing its factor structure, reliability estimates, and concurrent criterion measures using assessment scale scores from 1165 teachers, 18 principals, and their supervisors of 19 Chinese urban schools.
Findings from the studies give support to the claim that there is strong cross-cultural alignment on the overarching goal of improving student learning through setting high standards, providing rigorous curriculum and quality instruction, and enhancing the professional learning culture in schools. The VAL-ED instrument is proven to have strong internal reliability. Its cross-cultural validity can be partially confirmed through the examination of content and criterion validity evidence. The findings also indicate that the existing framework and assessment content may need to be modified with special attention to the role of external communities, systemic accountability, and advocating for at-risk students, reflecting the new Chinese educational reform priorities that emphasize the balance between academic and social learning.
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EXTERNALIZING EMPLOYMENT IN HIGHER EDUCATION: DETERMINANTS OF CONTINGENT ACADEMIC EMPLOYMENT IN INSTITUTIONS OF HIGHER EDUCATIONRumyantseva, Nataliya Leonidovna 26 July 2008 (has links)
The growth of part-time and off tenure track full time faculty employment since 1970s has been paralleled by the increasing literature on the subject. Many of the studies remained descriptive in nature and focused on the characteristics of the contingent employees. The present study contributes to a small body of literature that searches for the organizational and environmental driving factors that bring contingent employment to life. Specifically, it asks the question: which organizational and environmental factors explain the inter-organizational variation in the proportion of part-time and off tenure track full time faculty in the institutions of higher education? The findings suggest that employment of part-time faculty is driven by such financial factors as educational revenues and the savings on benefits. None of the hypothesized determinants of the off tenure track full time faculty employment have been empirically confirmed, suggesting that this type of employment is likely to follow the logic of the traditional tenure track faculty employment.
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Examining the Inclination of Students to Apply to a Postsecondary Institution in Their Senior Year of High SchoolSteele, Stephanie Lee 08 September 2008 (has links)
This study examines the tendency of twelfth grade students to apply to a postsecondary institution in light of their stated plans as tenth grade students. I have categorized students into three groups based on whether they had aspirations for college in the tenth grade and whether they applied to college in the twelfth grade. The three groups are the shifters (tenth grade aspirations but no twelfth grade application), the sponsored (no tenth grade application but twelfth grade application), and the focused (tenth grade aspirations and twelfth grade application). In this study, I attempt to determine the variables that are contributing most to the differences between these three groups. I also examine the variables that increase the odds of applying to college. While I hypothesized that each group would have a dominant area of influence, my hypotheses were only partially supported. For all students, what I have labeled personal agency-capital variables are contributing most to the variation between the groups. Likewise, the personal agency-capital variables also greatly increase the odds of a student applying to college before leaving high school. Therefore, for students to apply to college in the twelfth grade, they must have the personal achievement and commitment as well as the support and influence from other people.
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Knowing "How" Is More Than Knowing "That": A Study of Educational Leadership ExpertiseHuff, Jason Taylor 02 April 2009 (has links)
While there is ample criticism of principal certification and professional
development programs to equip individuals with the expertise they need, we as
a field possess few methodologies to measure leadership expertise. There is thus
little evidence to inform us of the effectiveness of these programs to train
participants. This study explored the content, construct, and criterion validity of
a series of open-ended scenarios to measure leadership expertise. I first review
recent efforts in the literature to define this construct before I present the findings
from three validation studies. Overall the descriptive analyses showed that the
scenarios tapped varying levels of expertise, and examinations of respondents
scenario scores revealed complex relationships between different areas of
expertise. Finally, analyses of the scenario scores relationships to principal and
teacher survey measures showed mixed yet promising results for their criterion
validity and suggested multiple directions for future improvements and uses of
these measures.
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