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Mette Marit Forsmo Jenssen; Jan Merok Paulsen – Educational Management Administration & Leadership, 2024
This study explores how Norwegian school leaders develop their capacity for instructional leadership, a leadership style that is strongly related to school effectiveness and school improvement across a range of national school systems. The concept captures important aspects of Norwegian school leaders' task preferences. To gain further insight…
Descriptors: Instructional Leadership, Foreign Countries, Elementary Secondary Education, Principals
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Elliott, Jack; Chidley, Lynne – Journal of Staff Development, 1985
An experimental peer-review program, implemented at Prospect High School in Mt. Prospect, Illinois, was very successful. Its primary goal was that teachers would help their colleagues improve instruction by sharing teaching methods. The peer review process was separate from evaluation. (MT)
Descriptors: Instructional Improvement, Peer Evaluation, Staff Development, Teacher Supervision
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Wood, Fred H.; Lease, Sharon A. – Journal of Staff Development, 1987
The processes of staff development, instructional supervision, and teacher evaluation complement and support each other. The connections between and among them are discussed. Recommendations for implementing an integrated system of instructional improvement are made. (Author/MT)
Descriptors: Holistic Approach, Instructional Improvement, Staff Development, Teacher Evaluation
Thomas, Gretchen – Thrust for Educational Leadership, 1980
An advisor can help teachers improve the quality of their work, select and adapt curriculum materials, and release and develop their potentials. (Author/JM)
Descriptors: Elementary Secondary Education, Inservice Teacher Education, Instructional Improvement, Staff Development
Rieck, William A. – American School Board Journal, 1989
The only valid reason for supervising and evaluating teachers is to improve instruction. Boards of education can improve teaching and learning in schools by setting up a teacher evaluation system, letting administrators do their jobs, and giving backup with funding. (MLF)
Descriptors: Board of Education Role, Elementary Secondary Education, Instructional Improvement, Principals
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Makibbin, Shirley S.; Sprague, Marsha M. – NASSP Bulletin, 1997
The role of instructional coach is being piloted in four schools within the Department of Defense Dependents Schools system. One teacher from each school is appointed as an instructional coach for teachers in the building to provide a range of services leading to improved instruction and student achievement. This collegial/instructional coaching…
Descriptors: Collegiality, Elementary Secondary Education, Feedback, Instructional Improvement
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Obilade, Sandra O. – School Organisation, 1992
Examines how teachers perceive behavior of supervisors or inspectors who visit Nigerian schools under the guise of instructional improvement. Some 300 secondary teachers were randomly sampled, and 250 teacher responses were analyzed. Results show modern supervisory practice is nonexistent in Nigeria and that the relationship between supervisors…
Descriptors: Communication Problems, Foreign Countries, Instructional Improvement, Secondary Education
Young, Betty S. – Thrust for Educational Leadership, 1980
Describes a program in the Vallejo City Unified School District (California) in which the principal, using classroom observation and teacher conferences, assumes the role of teacher of the staff. (Author/JM)
Descriptors: Administrator Role, Conferences, Elementary Secondary Education, Instructional Improvement
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Cawelti, Gordon; Reavis, Charles – Educational Leadership, 1980
Findings from a study of 16 school districts reveal that teachers are less satisfied than administrators with school districts' efforts to improve instruction in the areas of curriculum development, clinical supervision, staff development, and teacher evaluation. (Author/MLF)
Descriptors: Administrator Attitudes, Curriculum Development, Elementary Secondary Education, Inservice Teacher Education
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Gilley, Jerry W.; Callahan, Jamie – International Journal of Educational Reform, 2000
Faculty and staff desire challenges contributing to their continuous growth and development. School systems can better retain talented teachers by establishing performance goals, providing performance coaching, conducting developmental evaluations, building professional growth and development partnerships, creating supportive work environments,…
Descriptors: Beliefs, Elementary Secondary Education, Incentives, Instructional Improvement
Cook, Gillian E.; Skipper, Barbara L. – 1986
A clinical supervision training program has provided department level coordinators with support in their role as a bridge between administrators and teachers in six high schools and nine middle schools in a San Antonio, Texas, school district. This paper identifies major characteristics of the training program's model, describes the program, and…
Descriptors: Departments, Elementary Secondary Education, Instructional Improvement, Program Design
District of Columbia Public Schools, Washington, DC. Div. of Quality Assurance. – 1981
This report presents results of the evaluation of a project designed to provide a support system for teachers in District of Columbia Schools. Under the project, teachers and administrators received training and practice in the clinical supervision process, which allowed them to help other teachers at the local level. The report is based on a…
Descriptors: Administrator Attitudes, Course Evaluation, Elementary Secondary Education, Inservice Education
Glanz, Jeffrey, Ed.; Neville, Richard F., Ed. – 1997
Educational supervision has historically sought to improve the quality of teaching. This book is a text for undergraduate and graduate students who are engaged in the study of issues in educational supervision; it is a compendium of informed commentaries on current issues written by prominent scholars in the field. The first part (12 chapters)…
Descriptors: Collegiality, Curriculum Development, Educational Technology, Elementary Secondary Education
Georgia State Dept. of Education, Atlanta. Office of Instructional Services. – 1984
This handbook provides resources for curriculum directors and other instructional leaders in Georgia school systems to assist in reviewing, evaluating, and updating their instructional programs. The first section lists the various roles of the central office instructional leader, presents a model of the domains of instructional supervision, and…
Descriptors: Administrator Guides, Administrator Qualifications, Administrator Responsibility, Administrator Role
Caruso, Joseph J.; Fawcett, M. Temple – 1999
Written for practitioners who must supervise early childhood staff from a wide variety of educational and cultural backgrounds, this book provides guidelines and practical suggestions for staff training and development in early childhood settings. Part 1 challenges myths regarding supervision to ease the burden under which supervisors carry out…
Descriptors: Clinical Supervision (of Teachers), Day Care, Early Childhood Education, Evaluation Methods
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