The structure of principal-teacher conversation: Why it matters for school leadership

IF 2.4 Q3 MANAGEMENT
Curt Adams, Olajumoke Beulah Adigun
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Abstract

Purpose

This study addressed a relatively understudied process of school leadership: the principal-teacher conversation about instructional change. Two distinct conversation structures were examined: controlling conversation and transformative leadership conversation (TLC). Self-determination theory (SDT) was used to make the case that TLC is a better fit for instructional change than controlling conversation. Hypotheses were developed on the relationship between principal-teacher conversation and teacher trust in the principal, teacher autonomy and teacher vitality. These mental states were identified for empirical testing because of their influence on change processes.

Design/methodology/approach

The empirical study used a correlational research design with survey data. The data came from a random sample of 2,500 teachers from the population of certified teachers in a southwestern state in the USA. Useable survey responses were obtained from 1,615 teachers, for a response rate of 65 percent. Teachers in the sample averaged 15 years of teaching experience, with 7 years in their current school. Around 81% of teachers identified as female and 18 percent as male and 79% of teachers listed a racial identification as white. Hypotheses were tested in a path model using AMOS 28.0 with robust maximum likelihood (MLR).

Findings

As hypothesized, TLC had moderate to strong positive relationships with teacher trust in the principal, teacher autonomy and teacher vitality. Controlling conversation had small, negative relationships with teacher trust in the principal and teacher autonomy. Controlling conversation was not related to teacher vitality in the path analysis. Compared with controlling conversation, TLC had stronger relationships with teacher mental states.

Originality/value

The results of this study begin to reveal useful evidence on the inherent social-psychological mechanisms active in principal-teacher conversations. With results indicating that conversation structure has consequences for positive teacher mental states, the study directs attention to a ubiquitous yet understudied leadership process.

校长与教师对话的结构:为什么这对学校领导力很重要
目的 本研究探讨了学校领导力中一个相对缺乏研究的过程:校长与教师关于教学改革的谈话。研究考察了两种不同的对话结构:控制性对话和变革性领导对话(TLC)。研究采用自我决定理论(SDT)来论证 TLC 比控制性谈话更适合教学改革。就校长-教师谈话与教师对校长的信任、教师的自主性和教师的活力之间的关系提出了假设。由于这些心理状态对变革过程的影响,因此确定了这些心理状态进行实证检验。数据来自美国西南部一个州的 2500 名教师的随机抽样。从 1615 名教师中获得了可用的调查回复,回复率为 65%。样本中的教师平均教龄为 15 年,其中 7 年在现学校任教。约 81% 的教师认为自己是女性,18% 的教师认为自己是男性,79% 的教师认为自己是白人。研究结果正如假设的那样,TLC 与教师对校长的信任、教师的自主性和教师的活力有中等至较强的正相关关系。控制性谈话与教师对校长的信任和教师的自主性之间存在较小的负相关。在路径分析中,控制性谈话与教师活力无关。与控制性谈话相比,TLC 与教师心理状态的关系更强。原创性/价值本研究的结果开始揭示活跃于校长与教师谈话中的内在社会心理机制的有用证据。研究结果表明,谈话结构会对教师的积极心理状态产生影响,这项研究将人们的注意力引向了一个无处不在但却未得到充分研究的领导过程。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
4.30
自引率
8.30%
发文量
72
期刊介绍: The International Journal of Educational Management (IJEM) provides those interested in the effective management of the educational process with a broad overview of developments and best practice in the field, with particular reference to how new ideas can be applied worldwide. As the whole structure and philosophy of education goes through a sea-change, and as budgets are cut, educational managers need to keep abreast of new developments in order to maximize their resources and determine the most appropriate management strategy for their institution. The journal explores research in the following areas: -Innovation in educational management across the spectrum -The development of educational delivery mechanisms -Creation of an environment in which the management of resources provides the most efficient outputs -Sharing of new initiatives, with an international application The International Journal of Educational Management addresses the increasingly complex role of the educational manager, offering international perspectives on common problems and providing a forum for the sharing of ideas, information and expertise.
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