1990
DOI: 10.1080/0260136900100203
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Managing for Improved School Effectiveness: an international survey

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Cited by 18 publications
(9 citation statements)
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“…The school effectiveness research of the last 20 years affirms the role of principals in school success (e.g., Austin and Reynolds 1990;Goddard 2001;Goddard et al 2004;Goldring and Pasternak 1994;Hallinger and Heck 1996;Heck and Marcoulides 1993;Heck 1992;Leithwood and Jantzi 1999;Leithwood and Montgomery 1986;Louis et al 1996;Marks and Louis 1997;Marks and Printy 2003;Sebring and Bryk 2000;Sergiovanni 1995;Shen 2005;Taylor and Valentine 1985) in general and in raising student achievement in particular (e.g., Leithwood et al 2004;Marzano et al 2005;Witziers et al 2003). In this study, we asked the following questions: Which streams of data do principals use?…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 95%
“…The school effectiveness research of the last 20 years affirms the role of principals in school success (e.g., Austin and Reynolds 1990;Goddard 2001;Goddard et al 2004;Goldring and Pasternak 1994;Hallinger and Heck 1996;Heck and Marcoulides 1993;Heck 1992;Leithwood and Jantzi 1999;Leithwood and Montgomery 1986;Louis et al 1996;Marks and Louis 1997;Marks and Printy 2003;Sebring and Bryk 2000;Sergiovanni 1995;Shen 2005;Taylor and Valentine 1985) in general and in raising student achievement in particular (e.g., Leithwood et al 2004;Marzano et al 2005;Witziers et al 2003). In this study, we asked the following questions: Which streams of data do principals use?…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 95%
“…As instructional leaders and change agents, principals are charged with developing a positive learner-centered culture; guiding instruction; hiring and supervising staff; managing institutional resources; and serving as primary conduits of communication among staff, students, parents, and members of the community. The school effectiveness studies of the past 20 years have continually affirmed the principal's central role in school success (Austin & Reynolds, 1990;Boyer, 1983;Leithwood & Montgomery, 1986), and recent research has confirmed a positive relationship between leadership and student achievement gains (Waters, Marzano, & McNulty, 2003).…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Schools and colleges are becoming accustomed to terms like 'senior management teams', 'total quality management' and 'line' or 'matrix management', all of which have been imported into educational thinking and practice from business. Little of this activity focuses on the personal beliefs of individual teachers -and, as is clear from overviews, even concepts like 'ownership', 'partnership' or 'shared ethos' can conceal attempts to mitigate imposed change, rather than a real sharing (White, 1986;Corbett and Rossman, 1989;Austin and Reynolds, 1990;Brown, 1991). Headteachers' descriptions of the participative structures of their schools often bear little similarity to the accounts given by their subordinates.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 95%