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This new book recognizes the reality that all principals are
responsible for supervision, evaluation, and professional
development of their teachers-tasks that are neither simple nor
without conflict. The primary audience of this text is aspiring and
practicing principals. We hope to help them understand both the
theory and practice of supervision, evaluation, and professional
development. Observing instruction, collection data for reflection,
and having conversations about teaching however, are not sole
provinces of principals. Master teachers, teacher leaders, and
teacher colleagues can also benefit from the Supervisory sections
of the book, especially the chapters on high-quality instruction,
improving instruction, and the classroom data collecting tools.
A volume in Research and Theory in Educational Administration
Series Editors: Wayne K. Hoy, The Ohio State University and Michael
DiPaola, The College of William and Mary Studies in School
Improvement is the eighth volume in a series on research and theory
in school administration dedicated to advancing our understanding
of schools through empirical study and theoretical analysis. This
selection of readings highlights a number of important factors in
the stimulation and implementation of school improvement, including
transformational leadership; change perspectives of teachers,
principals, and the community; strategies for instructional change;
learning environments and school culture; dropout prevention;
professionalism; trust relations between the teachers and the board
as well as trust between students and teachers; and admission
decisions for educational leadership programs. In addition, a
number of new, reliable and valid measures are developed and
presented for the first time-instruments to assess: 1) change
perspectives of the faculty, 2) professionalism of teachers, and 3)
trust relations between students and teachers. These tools are
valuable aids for both researchers and practitioners in their quest
to understand and implement successful school improvement projects.
This book is different than its predecessors in that it identifies
and synthesizes twelve key constructs that have important
implications for both administrators and researchers; these
constructs guide administrators engaged in meaningful school
improvement efforts and provide researchers an agenda for future
study. The articles of the book capture decades of theoretical and
research work. Essential Ideas for the Reform of American Schools
identifies and synthesizes key constructs that have important
implications for the improvement of schools. The articles have been
written over a period of several decades and are grounded in
theoretical analysis and empirical research. Together they form a
coherent body of literature for both practitioners interested in
improving schools and researchers committed to the study of school
effectiveness. Twelve Key Concepts for School Improvement The
chapters are organized around constructs that have been identified
as critical aspects of schooling and schools in the United States;
all have been published in scholarly national and international
journals, and all are analyses we have done alone, together, or
with our colleagues and former students. The research and theory
demonstrates how a body of work by a group of researchers can build
and expand to new areas as old questions are answered and as new
ones shape future inquiry.
This book is the fifth in a series on research and theory dedicated
to advancing our understanding of schools through empirical study
and theoretical analysis. Scholars, both young and established, are
invited to publish original analyses, but we especially encourage
young scholars to contribute to this series. The current volume is
similar to its predecessors in that it provides a mix of beginning
and established scholars and a broad range of theoretical
perspectives; in all 14 authors contributed to 9 separate but
related analyses, which were selected for publication this year.
These chapters underscore the significance of educational policy in
contemporary public education and in particular the impact of
accountability policy on school outcomes. Public schools are
increasingly being held accountable for students achieving at
higher levels in both basic skills and higher-level learning
outcomes. Of course, all policy is enacted by teachers in classroom
and sometimes changed or distorted in the process. The challenge is
to improve student outcomes without permitting accountability
testing to extinguish innovation and creativity in schools. This
book series on Theory and Research in Educational Administration is
about understanding schools. We welcome articles and analyses that
explain school organizations and administration. We are interested
in the "why" questions about schools. To that end, case analyses,
surveys, large data base analyses, experimental studies, and
theoretical analyses are all welcome. We provide the space for
authors to do comprehensive analyses where that is appropriate and
useful. We believe that the Theory and Research in Educational
Administration Series has the potential to make an important
contribution to our field, but we will be successful only if our
colleagues continue to join us in this mission.
Leadership and School Quality is the twelfth in a series on
research and theory dedicated to advancing our understanding of
schools through empirical study and theoretical analysis. Hence,
the chapters include analyses that investigate relationships
between school organizations and leadership behaviours that have an
impact on teacher and school effectiveness.
About the Authors. Editors' Comments, Wayne K. Hoy and Cecil G.
Miskel. Reform Refractions: Organizational Perspectives On
Standards- Based Reform, Jane Coggshall. Local Anchors Versus State
Levers In State-Led School Reform: Identifying The Community Around
Public Schools, John Sipple.
A volume in Research and Theory in Educational Administration
Series Editors: Wayne K. Hoy, The Ohio State University and Michael
DiPaola, The College of William and Mary Improving Schools: Studies
in Leadership and Culture is the seventh in a series on research
and theory dedicated to advancing our understanding of schools
through empirical study and theoretical analysis. This book is
organized around two broad concepts-leadership and culture, which
have important implications for improving schools. The book begins
with an analysis of the saliency of trust in the culture of
schools. In the first chapter, Patrick Forsyth's review of the
consequences of school trust sets the tone for seeking and
developing school cultures that enhance high academic performance
of students. The investigation of school trust is traced over
several decades at four research universities as scholars at each
institution conceptualized, refined, and examined the consequences
of school trust. It seems fair to conclude that a school culture
that is anchored in values and norms of faculty trusting students
and parents facilitates high academic achievement and positive
outcomes.
The Mending Season is the story of a teenage girl who finds herself
facing the challenges of a new multi-racial school in the new South
Africa of 1990. Told mainly through the voice of the main
character, Tshidiso, the novel draws the reader into a story
This text covers such topics as: organizational learning in
high-stakes accountability environments; bridging and buffering
parent involvement in schools; alternative views of the task of
teaching; and collective efficacy and school organization.
This fieldbook provides comprehensive information for principals
and teachers in elementary and middle schools to administer, score
and interpret climate measures as they engage in organizational and
professional development.
The authors present instruments to measure the climate of
schools, a brief review of the conceptual underpinnings of each
tool, scoring procedures, contemporary norms for climate assessment
and strategies for change.
Leadership and School Quality is the twelfth in a series on
research and theory dedicated to advancing our understanding of
schools through empirical study and theoretical analysis. Hence,
the chapters include analyses that investigate relationships
between school organizations and leadership behaviours that have an
impact on teacher and school effectiveness.
This new book recognizes the reality that all principals are
responsible for supervision, evaluation, and professional
development of their teachers-tasks that are neither simple nor
without conflict. The primary audience of this text is aspiring and
practicing principals. We hope to help them understand both the
theory and practice of supervision, evaluation, and professional
development. Observing instruction, collection data for reflection,
and having conversations about teaching however, are not sole
provinces of principals. Master teachers, teacher leaders, and
teacher colleagues can also benefit from the Supervisory sections
of the book, especially the chapters on high-quality instruction,
improving instruction, and the classroom data collecting tools.
This work integrates the core instructional leadership tasks of all
principals: supervision, evaluation, and professional development.
The text demonstrates a hands-on approach grounded in sound theory
and rigorous research. It provides both a conceptual frame and
realistic exercises that today's principals and supervisors can use
to improve their practice. The book highlights observation tools
that focus on high-yield instructional strategies. Principals and
supervisors are encouraged to collect data in classrooms and
provide this instructional feedback so together with teachers they
can reflect and identify areas for growth. The models of
supervision, evaluation, and professional development are
research-based and are consistent with contemporary challenges that
confront principals and others committed to improving instruction.
This scarce antiquarian book is a selection from Kessinger
Publishing's Legacy Reprint Series. Due to its age, it may contain
imperfections such as marks, notations, marginalia and flawed
pages. Because we believe this work is culturally important, we
have made it available as part of our commitment to protecting,
preserving, and promoting the world's literature. Kessinger
Publishing is the place to find hundreds of thousands of rare and
hard-to-find books with something of interest for everyone
This scarce antiquarian book is a selection from Kessinger
Publishing's Legacy Reprint Series. Due to its age, it may contain
imperfections such as marks, notations, marginalia and flawed
pages. Because we believe this work is culturally important, we
have made it available as part of our commitment to protecting,
preserving, and promoting the world's literature. Kessinger
Publishing is the place to find hundreds of thousands of rare and
hard-to-find books with something of interest for everyone!
A volume in Research and Theory in Educational Administration
Series Editors: Wayne K. Hoy, The Ohio State University and Michael
DiPaola, The College of William and Mary Studies in School
Improvement is the eighth volume in a series on research and theory
in school administration dedicated to advancing our understanding
of schools through empirical study and theoretical analysis. This
selection of readings highlights a number of important factors in
the stimulation and implementation of school improvement, including
transformational leadership; change perspectives of teachers,
principals, and the community; strategies for instructional change;
learning environments and school culture; dropout prevention;
professionalism; trust relations between the teachers and the board
as well as trust between students and teachers; and admission
decisions for educational leadership programs. In addition, a
number of new, reliable and valid measures are developed and
presented for the first time-instruments to assess: 1) change
perspectives of the faculty, 2) professionalism of teachers, and 3)
trust relations between students and teachers. These tools are
valuable aids for both researchers and practitioners in their quest
to understand and implement successful school improvement projects.
A volume in Research and Theory in Educational Administration
Series Editors: Wayne K. Hoy, The Ohio State University and Michael
DiPaola, The College of William and Mary Improving Schools: Studies
in Leadership and Culture is the seventh in a series on research
and theory dedicated to advancing our understanding of schools
through empirical study and theoretical analysis. This book is
organized around two broad concepts-leadership and culture, which
have important implications for improving schools. The book begins
with an analysis of the saliency of trust in the culture of
schools. In the first chapter, Patrick Forsyth's review of the
consequences of school trust sets the tone for seeking and
developing school cultures that enhance high academic performance
of students. The investigation of school trust is traced over
several decades at four research universities as scholars at each
institution conceptualized, refined, and examined the consequences
of school trust. It seems fair to conclude that a school culture
that is anchored in values and norms of faculty trusting students
and parents facilitates high academic achievement and positive
outcomes.
This book is different than its predecessors in that it identifies
and synthesizes twelve key constructs that have important
implications for both administrators and researchers; these
constructs guide administrators engaged in meaningful school
improvement efforts and provide researchers an agenda for future
study. The articles of the book capture decades of theoretical and
research work. Essential Ideas for the Reform of American Schools
identifies and synthesizes key constructs that have important
implications for the improvement of schools. The articles have been
written over a period of several decades and are grounded in
theoretical analysis and empirical research. Together they form a
coherent body of literature for both practitioners interested in
improving schools and researchers committed to the study of school
effectiveness. Twelve Key Concepts for School Improvement The
chapters are organized around constructs that have been identified
as critical aspects of schooling and schools in the United States;
all have been published in scholarly national and international
journals, and all are analyses we have done alone, together, or
with our colleagues and former students. The research and theory
demonstrates how a body of work by a group of researchers can build
and expand to new areas as old questions are answered and as new
ones shape future inquiry.
This book is the fifth in a series on research and theory dedicated
to advancing our understanding of schools through empirical study
and theoretical analysis. Scholars, both young and established, are
invited to publish original analyses, but we especially encourage
young scholars to contribute to this series. The current volume is
similar to its predecessors in that it provides a mix of beginning
and established scholars and a broad range of theoretical
perspectives; in all 14 authors contributed to 9 separate but
related analyses, which were selected for publication this year.
These chapters underscore the significance of educational policy in
contemporary public education and in particular the impact of
accountability policy on school outcomes. Public schools are
increasingly being held accountable for students achieving at
higher levels in both basic skills and higher-level learning
outcomes. Of course, all policy is enacted by teachers in classroom
and sometimes changed or distorted in the process. The challenge is
to improve student outcomes without permitting accountability
testing to extinguish innovation and creativity in schools. This
book series on Theory and Research in Educational Administration is
about understanding schools. We welcome articles and analyses that
explain school organizations and administration. We are interested
in the ""why"" questions about schools. To that end, case analyses,
surveys, large data base analyses, experimental studies, and
theoretical analyses are all welcome. We provide the space for
authors to do comprehensive analyses where that is appropriate and
useful. We believe that the Theory and Research in Educational
Administration Series has the potential to make an important
contribution to our field, but we will be successful only if our
colleagues continue to join us in this mission.
Like its two predecessors, this volume offers a range of
theoretical perspectives and empirical analyses by novice and
established scholars to advance understanding of schools. Hoy (Ohio
State U.) and Miskel (U. of Michigan) introduce a dozen
contributions on school reform, improvement, and measurem
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