2014
DOI: 10.14738/assrj.17.668
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Sectorial Perceptions of Parental Involvement: Similarities and Dissimilarities

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Cited by 5 publications
(11 citation statements)
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“…In recent years, the question of the relationship between principals’ leadership styles and parental involvement is frequently raised in the research literature, and the strong relation between those variables is quite established (Leithwood and Levin, 2005; Zedan, 2012). It was found that the influence of the principal to increase PI is not dependent only on his or her views, but also on the way she/he influences teachers and encourages them to promote PI (Fisher et al , 2015). School principals’ transformational and transactional styles of leadership encourage staff collaboration, teacher development, and improved teaching.…”
Section: Theoretical Overviewmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…In recent years, the question of the relationship between principals’ leadership styles and parental involvement is frequently raised in the research literature, and the strong relation between those variables is quite established (Leithwood and Levin, 2005; Zedan, 2012). It was found that the influence of the principal to increase PI is not dependent only on his or her views, but also on the way she/he influences teachers and encourages them to promote PI (Fisher et al , 2015). School principals’ transformational and transactional styles of leadership encourage staff collaboration, teacher development, and improved teaching.…”
Section: Theoretical Overviewmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Literature indicated perceived language barriers, cultural understanding conflicts, financial and work-related restraints, and an atmosphere that is not always welcoming (Barge and Loges, 2003; Manz et al , 2014). Teachers also have an effect on parental involvement levels, which depends on their qualification, training, and school culture (Fisher et al , 2015). The racial composition of teachers and parents, and the patterns of teacher-parent communication also affect parental involvement (Wright, 2009).…”
Section: Theoretical Overviewmentioning
confidence: 99%
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