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Ippolito, Jacy; Bean, Rita M. – Educational Leadership, 2019
To create a coaching culture, school leaders have to make it a priority and support coaching at every level, and continuously. This article offers five "dos" and four "don'ts" for school leaders on how to support coaching at their schools, highlighting topics such as professional development for coaches, scheduling time for…
Descriptors: Coaching (Performance), Faculty Development, Leadership Responsibility, Principals
Feirsen, Robert; Weitzman, Seth – Educational Leadership, 2021
Leaders have three classic responses to discord. Authors Robert Feirsen and Seth Weitzman call them the 3 "A's"--avoidance, attack, and addressing. They make the case that the third one--addressing conflict--is the healthiest way for leaders to solve problems and promote a positive school culture.
Descriptors: Conflict Resolution, Educational Improvement, Principals, Instructional Leadership
Toll, Cathy A. – Educational Leadership, 2023
Coach and ASCD author Cathy Toll knows that principals can face resistance and competing priorities when trying to make changes in schools. "Whole-staff coaching" is one tool to get all educators on the same page by putting teachers in control of planning, implementing, and evaluating change--and principals in charge of facilitating it.
Descriptors: Teacher Empowerment, Educational Change, Coaching (Performance), Faculty Development
Schmoker, Mike – Educational Leadership, 2019
School leaders could see all their students ascend to new heights of academic achievement and find their jobs de-stressed and joyful--if they focused on only the one or two most urgently needed instructional initiatives. Schmoker makes the "case for less" and notes that if school leaders applied strict criteria to select the initiative…
Descriptors: Instructional Leadership, Leadership Styles, Curriculum Development, Literacy
Mehta, Jal; Yurkofsky, Max; Frumin, Kim – Educational Leadership, 2023
The logic behind "continuous improvement" sounds simple--but it takes a skillful leader to make the process pay off. While the logic behind the popular "continuous improvement" process seems simple, the authors' study of schools using approaches based on continuous improvement revealed that skilled leadership is as important as…
Descriptors: Educational Improvement, Leadership Styles, Leadership Effectiveness, Fidelity
Aguilar, Elena – Educational Leadership, 2017
Leading a school can be a lonely, challenging job, Elena Aguilar has found in her years coaching principals. Aguilar describes how coaching approach she's developed--transformational coaching--helps principals get three things most of them need: a neutral person they can talk with confidentially, job-embedded professional development, and a safe…
Descriptors: Coaching (Performance), Transformative Learning, Principals, High Schools
Bambrick-Santoyo, Paul – Educational Leadership, 2019
Traditional PD sessions share information on new practices, but teachers often can't translate that information effectively to implement the new practice in their classrooms. A better way is to show a teacher a model of excellent practice by a colleague and help her reflect on the "gap" between her practice and the model, then plan…
Descriptors: Faculty Development, Theory Practice Relationship, Charter Schools, High Schools
Fiarman, Sarah E. – Educational Leadership, 2017
As a principal, Sarah E. Fiarman learned that developing teacher leadership requires more than merely soliciting teacher input. "School leaders," she writes, "need to create a culture in which each professional feels an urgent responsibility to influence the achievement of all students." To promote such a schoolwide leadership…
Descriptors: Principals, Teacher Leadership, School Culture, Teacher Responsibility
Zepeda, Sally J.; Lanoue, Philip D. – Educational Leadership, 2017
Principals are tasked with being the instructional leaders in their schools--developing teacher's abilities through formal and informal classroom observations and feedback. But how can school districts ensure that principals have the skills they need to fulfill this crucial role? In Clarke County School District in Georgia, central-office leaders…
Descriptors: Principals, Administrator Role, Leadership Responsibility, Administrator Qualifications
Hoerr, Thomas R. – Educational Leadership, 2015
A recent controversy over Amazon's culture has strong implications for the whole child approach, and it offers powerful lessons for principals. A significant difference between the culture of so many businesses today and the culture at good schools is that in good schools, the welfare of the employees is very important. Student success is the…
Descriptors: Work Environment, Principals, Students, Teachers
Hoerr, Thomas R. – Educational Leadership, 2016
Principals can easily observe when a class is engaged in learning. Engaged students are learning because the content or activity feels "relevant" and "interesting," and they're achieving "success" in whatever they're doing. These three factors of engagement don't happen by chance. It happens when talented teachers…
Descriptors: Principals, Learner Engagement, Teacher Motivation, Professional Autonomy
Scott, Patricia Gioffre – Educational Leadership, 2014
Educators know that students learn better when their teacher considers carefully how young people learn best. Yet, when administrators plan professional development for teachers, the author claims, they often forget to consider how teachers learn best. As principal of a private K-8 school, Scott arranges professional learning for her teachers in a…
Descriptors: Faculty Development, Principals, Elementary School Teachers, Private Schools
Cody, Anthony – Educational Leadership, 2013
One popular approach to teacher leadership is to identify certain teachers as particularly successful, then have others learn from them. Collaborative leadership, in contrast, looks at leadership as a quality that anyone can have. In this model, the goal is not to figure out who is best. Instead, teachers share their unique talents and interests…
Descriptors: Teacher Leadership, Cooperation, Faculty Development, Student Empowerment
Thiers, Naomi – Educational Leadership, 2016
Richard DuFour, a leading advocate for creating professional learning communities in schools, shares his insights on why teaching has become an "embattled profession" and the steps teachers and school leaders can take to enhance teachers' practice and their working lives. DuFour explains how recent reforms aimed at educators themselves…
Descriptors: Communities of Practice, Teacher Morale, Academic Achievement, Educational Change
Darling-Hammond, Linda – Educational Leadership, 2013
One of the failings of teacher evaluation systems in the United States has been their reliance on the school principal alone as the person expected to observe teachers, mentor those who struggle, document concerns and processes, and make the final call on whether to recommend dismissal. Given the enormous scope of their duties, it's simply…
Descriptors: Teacher Evaluation, Peer Evaluation, Mentors, Expertise