Resilience in the context of multiple adverse circumstances? Leadership capacity and teachers’ practice during COVID-19 at schools serving disadvantaged communities
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引用次数: 2
Abstract
ABSTRACT Building and sustaining capacity for organisational learning appears to be a prerequisite for organisational resilience. For schools, organisational learning in crisis situations, such as COVID-19, requires that they have certain learning capacities. Using quasi-longitudinal data, the paper analyses how schools’ leadership capacity (as perceived by educators) at schools serving disadvantaged communities (SSDC) at the beginning of the COVID-19 pandemic predicted the educators’ practice about a half year after returning to face-to-face-teaching (objectives and expectations regarding student performance and the staff’s willingness to innovate). We used data from two standardised surveys of the staff from 35 SSDC in North Rhine-Westphalia, Germany, conducted at the beginning of 2020, and at the end of 2021. The results of multilevel regression analyses showed that a higher leadership capacity at the start of the pandemic predicted a stronger orientation towards performance objectives during distance learning. No associations were found, however, between schools’ leadership capacity and the educators’ expectations regarding student performance as well as between schools’ leadership capacity and the staff’s willingness to innovate. Our findings help strengthen our knowledge about the antecedents of successful school improvement in challenging locations during times of crisis.
期刊介绍:
School Leadership & Management welcomes articles on all aspects of educational leadership and management. As a highly cited and internationally known SCOPUS journal, School Leadership and Management is fundamentally concerned with issues of leadership and management in classrooms, schools, and school systems. School Leadership & Management particularly welcomes articles that contribute to the field in the following ways: Scholarly articles that draw upon empirical evidence to provide new insights into leadership and management practices; Scholarly articles that explore alternative, critical, and re-conceptualised views of school leadership and management; Scholarly articles that provide state of the art reviews within an national or international context; Scholarly articles reporting new empirical findings that make an original contribution to the field; Scholarly articles that make a theoretical contribution which extends and deepens our understanding of the key issues associated with leadership, management, and the direct relationship with organisational change and improvement; Scholarly articles that focus primarily upon leadership and management issues but are aimed at academic, policymaking and practitioner audiences; Contributions from policymakers and practitioners, where there is a clear leadership and management focus. School Leadership & Management particularly welcomes: •articles that explore alternative, critical and re-conceptualised views of school leadership and management •articles that are written for academics but are aimed at both a practitioner and academic audience •contributions from practitioners, provided that the relationship between theory and practice is made explicit.