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Administrative support and teacher leadership in schools implementing reform

Purpose - This paper aims to explore how teacher leaders help teachers improve mathematics and science teaching.Design methodology approach - Research focused on a purposive sample of seven teacher leaders selected to vary in their time allocated to teacher leader work and their content knowledge. E...

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Published in:Journal of educational administration 2008-01, Vol.46 (3), p.302-331
Main Authors: Gigante, Nancy A., Firestone, William A.
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Language:English
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cited_by cdi_FETCH-LOGICAL-c472t-6e5ca2cfc86dde9c02dade0bb1b15c50ef238498f7659e9162629e38652ce49f3
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creator Gigante, Nancy A.
Firestone, William A.
description Purpose - This paper aims to explore how teacher leaders help teachers improve mathematics and science teaching.Design methodology approach - Research focused on a purposive sample of seven teacher leaders selected to vary in their time allocated to teacher leader work and their content knowledge. Each teacher leader was interviewed, as were two teachers and at least one administrator working with that teacher leader. Each interview was first subjected to a mix of deductive and inductive coding before a case study was written for each teacher leader. Ultimately, a cross-case analysis was written.Findings - Teacher leaders conducted two sets of leadership tasks. The paper finds that support tasks helped teachers do their work but did not contribute to teacher learning. Developmental tasks did facilitate learning. All teacher leaders engaged in support tasks, but only four did developmental tasks as well. Teacher leaders who engaged in developmental tasks had access to one material resource and three social resources not available to other teacher leaders: time to work with teachers, administrative support, more positive relations with teachers, and opportunities to work with teachers on professional developmentPractical implications - When teacher leadership is intended to facilitate teacher learning, the payoff comes from engaging in developmental tasks. A key to teacher leader success is administrative support. Schools and districts should not invest in teacher leaders unless they intend to support teacher leaders adequately through time, administrative follow through, and training to help teachers develop the positive social relations on which their work depends.Originality value - These findings have implications for how to integrate teacher leaders into larger school improvement efforts.
doi_str_mv 10.1108/09578230810869266
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Each teacher leader was interviewed, as were two teachers and at least one administrator working with that teacher leader. Each interview was first subjected to a mix of deductive and inductive coding before a case study was written for each teacher leader. Ultimately, a cross-case analysis was written.Findings - Teacher leaders conducted two sets of leadership tasks. The paper finds that support tasks helped teachers do their work but did not contribute to teacher learning. Developmental tasks did facilitate learning. All teacher leaders engaged in support tasks, but only four did developmental tasks as well. Teacher leaders who engaged in developmental tasks had access to one material resource and three social resources not available to other teacher leaders: time to work with teachers, administrative support, more positive relations with teachers, and opportunities to work with teachers on professional developmentPractical implications - When teacher leadership is intended to facilitate teacher learning, the payoff comes from engaging in developmental tasks. A key to teacher leader success is administrative support. 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source Social Science Premium Collection; ABI/INFORM Global; Emerald:Jisc Collections:Emerald Subject Collections HE and FE 2024-2026:Emerald Premier (reading list); ERIC; Education Collection
subjects Beginning Teachers
Collaboration
Control Groups
Critical thinking
Curricula
Developmental Tasks
Educational administration
Educational Change
Educational Facilities Improvement
Educational Improvement
Educational leadership
Educational Practices
Experimental Groups
Improvement Programs
Instructional Leadership
Interviews
Leadership
Master Teachers
Mathematics
Mathematics Achievement
New Jersey
Pedagogical Content Knowledge
Political leadership
Professional development
Professional relationships
Qualitative Research
Quality improvement
Role Conflict
Roles
Scaffolding (Teaching Technique)
School administration
Schools
State Programs
Students
Teacher Leadership
Teachers
Teaching
Teaching Methods
title Administrative support and teacher leadership in schools implementing reform
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