How School and District Leaders Access, Perceive, and Use Research

This study examined how school and district leaders access, value, and use research. From a representative sample of school districts across the United States, we surveyed 733 school and district leaders as part of an effort to develop understanding of the prevalence of research use, the nature of l...

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Main Authors: William R. Penuel, Derek C. Briggs, Kristen L. Davidson, Corinne Herlihy, David Sherer, Heather C. Hill, Caitlin Farrell, Anna-Ruth Allen
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SAGE Publishing 2017-04-01
Series:AERA Open
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1177/2332858417705370
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spelling doaj-6c6cadbfb69a479a9cc94086fa226faf2020-11-25T02:54:29ZengSAGE PublishingAERA Open2332-85842017-04-01310.1177/233285841770537010.1177_2332858417705370How School and District Leaders Access, Perceive, and Use ResearchWilliam R. PenuelDerek C. BriggsKristen L. DavidsonCorinne HerlihyDavid ShererHeather C. HillCaitlin FarrellAnna-Ruth AllenThis study examined how school and district leaders access, value, and use research. From a representative sample of school districts across the United States, we surveyed 733 school and district leaders as part of an effort to develop understanding of the prevalence of research use, the nature of leaders’ attitudes toward research, and individual and organizational correlates of research use. School and district leaders alike reported frequent use of research use and generally positive attitudes toward research. Leaders reported accessing research primarily through their professional networks. Those in certain roles, those pursuing or holding an advanced degree, and those who reported a strong organizational culture of evidence use reported higher levels of research use. These findings suggest that policy efforts to promote evidence use among education leaders will be welcomed but that policy makers need to take into account the prevalence of various types of research use in designing supports for evidence use.https://doi.org/10.1177/2332858417705370
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author William R. Penuel
Derek C. Briggs
Kristen L. Davidson
Corinne Herlihy
David Sherer
Heather C. Hill
Caitlin Farrell
Anna-Ruth Allen
spellingShingle William R. Penuel
Derek C. Briggs
Kristen L. Davidson
Corinne Herlihy
David Sherer
Heather C. Hill
Caitlin Farrell
Anna-Ruth Allen
How School and District Leaders Access, Perceive, and Use Research
AERA Open
author_facet William R. Penuel
Derek C. Briggs
Kristen L. Davidson
Corinne Herlihy
David Sherer
Heather C. Hill
Caitlin Farrell
Anna-Ruth Allen
author_sort William R. Penuel
title How School and District Leaders Access, Perceive, and Use Research
title_short How School and District Leaders Access, Perceive, and Use Research
title_full How School and District Leaders Access, Perceive, and Use Research
title_fullStr How School and District Leaders Access, Perceive, and Use Research
title_full_unstemmed How School and District Leaders Access, Perceive, and Use Research
title_sort how school and district leaders access, perceive, and use research
publisher SAGE Publishing
series AERA Open
issn 2332-8584
publishDate 2017-04-01
description This study examined how school and district leaders access, value, and use research. From a representative sample of school districts across the United States, we surveyed 733 school and district leaders as part of an effort to develop understanding of the prevalence of research use, the nature of leaders’ attitudes toward research, and individual and organizational correlates of research use. School and district leaders alike reported frequent use of research use and generally positive attitudes toward research. Leaders reported accessing research primarily through their professional networks. Those in certain roles, those pursuing or holding an advanced degree, and those who reported a strong organizational culture of evidence use reported higher levels of research use. These findings suggest that policy efforts to promote evidence use among education leaders will be welcomed but that policy makers need to take into account the prevalence of various types of research use in designing supports for evidence use.
url https://doi.org/10.1177/2332858417705370
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