Heeding the CALL (Comprehensive Assessment of Leadership for Learning): An Inquiry into Instructional Collaboration among School Professionals

Purpose: The purpose of this paper is to examine what school leadership practices are associated with a school's level of instructional collaboration among school professionals and also investigates what school characteristics are linked to the level of instructional collaboration in a school....

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of educational administration 2016-01, Vol.54 (2), p.135-151
Hauptverfasser: Min, Sookweon, Modeste, Marsha E, Salisbury, Jason, Goff, Peter T
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container_end_page 151
container_issue 2
container_start_page 135
container_title Journal of educational administration
container_volume 54
creator Min, Sookweon
Modeste, Marsha E
Salisbury, Jason
Goff, Peter T
description Purpose: The purpose of this paper is to examine what school leadership practices are associated with a school's level of instructional collaboration among school professionals and also investigates what school characteristics are linked to the level of instructional collaboration in a school. Design/methodology/approach: This study drew data from the Comprehensive Assessment of Leadership for Learning (CALL) survey. CALL is a multi-source measure of distributed leadership, comprised of five domains of school leadership practices. Responses from 3,767 teachers and 167 administrators working at 129 schools were analyzed using ordinary least squares regression analysis. Findings: The findings show that there are significant relationships between school leadership practices and the extent of instructional collaboration taking place within schools, both in terms of quantity and quality. In particular, school leadership practices that are closely related to facilitating instruction and allocating resources are associated with a school's instructional collaboration, whereas a leadership practice related to environmental factors tends not to be significantly correlated with a school's collaborative culture. This study also found that leadership perspectives on instructional collaboration are an important predictor of both quantity and quality of collaboration among school professionals. Originality/value: This study clarifies the importance of school leadership in a collaborative culture and also provides empirical evidence of what specific practices of school leadership predict the frequencies of professional collaborative activities in school as well as their quality. In addition, this study demonstrates how schools' contextual factors are related to the level of instructional collaboration among professionals.
doi_str_mv 10.1108/JEA-07-2014-0075
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subjects Administrator Attitudes
Collegiality
Educational Administration
Educational Practices
Factor Analysis
Incidence
Institutional Characteristics
Instructional Leadership
Leadership Styles
Least Squares Statistics
Measures (Individuals)
Participative Decision Making
Teacher Attitudes
Teacher Collaboration
Teamwork
Transformational Leadership
title Heeding the CALL (Comprehensive Assessment of Leadership for Learning): An Inquiry into Instructional Collaboration among School Professionals
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