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A Promise for Indiana School Leaders

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Title: A Promise for Indiana School Leaders


1
A Promisefor Indiana School Leaders
  • Bradley V. Balch
  • Indiana State University
  • February, 2003

2
Indiana Promise
  • The State Action for Education Leadership Project
    (SAELP), a Wallace Funds state-level initiative,
    was launched in spring 2001 with 8.9 million in
    funding. The project is being led by a national
    consortium consisting of the Council of Chief
    State School Officers, the National Governors
    Association, the National Conference of State
    Legislatures, the National Association of State
    Boards of Education, and the Education Commission
    of the States.

3
Indiana Promise
  • The National Consortium solicited reform
    proposals from all 50 states and received 37. In
    June, 2001, fifteen states were awarded 300,000
    each for strengthening school and district
    leadership. They include Connecticut,
    Delaware, Georgia, Illinois, Indiana, Iowa,
    Kentucky, Massachusetts, Missouri, Montana, New
    Jersey, Oregon, Rhode Island, Vermont, and
    Virginia.

4
Indiana Promise
  • Indianas Consortium aspires to retain and
    recruit effective leaders, improve the conditions
    for practice for leaders and address professional
    development needs. To accomplish this, the
    Consortium must enact new legislative policy
    and/or administrative practices.

5
Celebrations!!!
  • Conditions of administrative practice are
    enhanced when the rights, roles and
    responsibilities of school boards and
    administrators are clearly defined (Malone, 1999
    Esparo Rader, 2001).
  • Indiana School Boards Association
  • Indiana Association of School Business Officials
  • Indiana Association of Public School
    Superintendents
  • Indiana Association of School Principals
  • Indiana Principal Leadership Academy

6
Celebrations!!!
  • Professional development should create support
    systems to network and engage in dialogue (Public
    Agenda, 2001).
  • Indiana Principal Leadership Academy
  • Indiana Association of School Principals
  • Indiana Association of Public School
    Superintendents
  • Indiana School Boards Association
  • Indiana Association of School Business Officials

7
Literature Theme 1
  • Consider a systemic statewide plan for
    recruitment.
  • Support it at all levels of decision making.
  • Grow-your-own programs rather than self-selection
    should be encouraged.
  • Potential leaders should be socialized into
    administration.
  • The recruitment roles of mentors, supporters,
    sponsors, and supervisors should be defined.

8
Literature Theme 2
  • National demand for administrators will increase
    over the next several years.
  • Indiana will have stable to slightly decreasing
    student enrollments overall.
  • Indianas potential and practicing administrators
    may look elsewhere for administrative
    opportunities.
  • In contrast, retirement projections for the next
    several years remain high in Indiana creating the
    potential to usher in a new era of leaders.

9
Literature Theme 3
  • Women and minority candidates for school
    leadership must be identified, supported, and
    socialized into administration earlier in their
    professional careers.
  • Search and placement stakeholders must engage in
    and support practices that facilitate
    non-traditional opportunities for women and
    minority leaders.

10
Literature Theme 4
  • Incentives might include pension portability
    across state lines, enhanced experience credit
    for retirement, and reciprocity of certification
    (licensure portability).
  • State-level incentives should be created to
    attract high quality administrators.

11
Literature Theme 5
  • School governance and leadership structures can
    create tension and conflict.
  • Clearly defining the rights, roles and
    responsibilities of district leaders and
    elected/appointed officials could minimize
    differences.

12
Literature Theme 6
  • A systemic statewide plan for professional
    development must be developed.
  • The plan should embrace governmental agencies,
    colleges/universities and school leader
    associations.
  • It should be standards based.
  • The plan should address loneliness and isolation,
    and be immersed in authentic issues of
    professional need.

13
Policy Theme 1Martha McCarthy, Indiana
University
  • School Principals have far more responsibilities
    specified in laws and regulations than they did
    fifteen years ago.
  • Policies that do not mention school leaders often
    impose school duties for which administrators are
    ultimately accountable.
  • These duties are continually expanding without
    any reduction in responsibilities.

14
Policy Theme 2Martha McCarthy, Indiana
University
  • District and building school leaders are being
    held more accountable for school improvement.
  • Academic standards and assessments of student
    achievement are driving the accountability
    system.

15
Policy Theme 3Martha McCarthy, Indiana
University
  • There is a shift in emphasis from inputs to
    outcomes in standards-based licensure for
    educators and in accreditation of schools and
    leadership preparation programs.

16
Policy Theme 4Martha McCarthy, Indiana
University
  • There is a shift in orientation pertaining to
    professional development in that these activities
    are viewed as an integral part of the schools
    ongoing efforts to satisfy academic standards and
    meet school improvement objectives.

17
Policy Theme 5Martha McCarthy, Indiana
University
  • There is very little in Indiana statutes or
    administrative regulations directly addressing
    administrative recruitment or retention.

18
Study Purpose
  • The purpose was to determine Indiana public
    school principal, superintendent, and school
    board president perceptions regarding
    recruitment, retention, and professional
    development.
  • Specifically, the Consortium asked the following
    questions
  • Is there a misrepresentation of women and
    minorities in Indiana school leadership
    positions?
  • Are districts having trouble recruiting qualified
    leaders (i.e. Is it a thin candidate pool?)?
  • Is there a problem retaining effective/quality
    school leaders in Indiana?
  • Is professional development sufficient to support
    and sustain Indiana leaders at building and
    district levels?

19
Demographics
20
Retention Findings
  • Principals indicate they expect to remain in the
    principalship for only 5 years on average. Most
    responding superintendents, whose average age was
    53, expect to remain in their current position
    until retirement. School board presidents hope
    to retain their superintendents until retirement
    or at least for four years on average.

21
Retention Findings
22
Retention Findings
23
Recruitment Findings
  • Board presidents, superintendents and principals
    often recruit principals from within their
    districts. Thirty-one percent of the board
    presidents report a principal recruitment program
    and 28 report a principal preparation program.
    With lesser frequency, 21 of responding
    superintendents indicate programs for principal
    recruitment and 12 indicate preparation
    programs. Of all responding principals, 19
    indicate recruitment programs and 16 report
    preparation programs.

24
Recruitment Findings
25
Professional Development Findings
26
Professional Development Findings
  • Overall, responding superintendents and
    principals believe to be achieving a great deal
    of success at Indianas district-level and
    building-level standards respectively. The
    greatest success attained by both groups focused
    on standards dealing with integrity, fairness and
    ethics.

27
Professional Development Findings
  • When asked about effectiveness, school board
    presidents are significantly more likely to rate
    the effectiveness of their superintendents higher
    than superintendents themselves. Further,
    principals were significantly more likely to rate
    their own effectiveness higher than
    superintendents self-rating of effectiveness.

28
Gender Findings
  • Responding female principals have less years of
    building-level administrative experience than do
    males, but have more years of teaching
    experience. Additionally, they administrate in
    smaller schools than do males and report their
    spouses working full time more than males.

29
Gender Findings
  • Female superintendents have less years of
    building-level administrative experience than
    males, but have held their current position
    longer than males. Interestingly, female
    respondents have found their experience as a
    superintendent to be more rewarding than males.

30
Gender Findings
  • Female school board presidents were found to have
    a greater percent of recommendations from the
    superintendent accepted by the board than male
    school board presidents and rate their
    effectiveness as the school board president
    higher than male school board presidents.

31
Locale Findings
  • In terms of recruitment efforts and
    groom-your-own-programs, urban and suburban
    schools have had significantly greater successes
    with initiating and implementing such programs.
  • The study clearly indicates that issues of
    recruitment, retention and professional
    development should not be viewed in terms of
    one-size-fits-all solutions, especially among
    differing locales.

32
Conclusion
  • The literature review compels us to consider
    recruitment, retention and professional
    development in terms of policy implications.
  • The policy review indicates that little policy
    exists in these critical areas.
  • The study confirms that differences among gender
    and locale are significant and supports the
    overall literature findings.
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