Leading and Learning: Leadership, Change, and Challenge in a Professional Development Initiative

Thesis advisor: Lauri Johnson === Schools seeking to increase student achievement often employ professional development strategies to institute instructional reforms, yet research offers little guidance on how leadership behaviors might support professional development aimed at district reform and i...

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Main Authors: Curtis, Todd, DiFabio, Mark, Fortuna, Jodi L., Lauzé, Kathleen M., McCoy, Tina H., Nikas, Kathryn M.
Format: Others
Language:English
Published: Boston College 2012
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2345/2590
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spelling ndltd-BOSTON-oai-dlib.bc.edu-bc-ir_1011862019-05-10T07:34:22Z Leading and Learning: Leadership, Change, and Challenge in a Professional Development Initiative Curtis, Todd DiFabio, Mark Fortuna, Jodi L. Lauzé, Kathleen M. McCoy, Tina H. Nikas, Kathryn M. Thesis advisor: Lauri Johnson Text thesis 2012 Boston College English electronic application/pdf Schools seeking to increase student achievement often employ professional development strategies to institute instructional reforms, yet research offers little guidance on how leadership behaviors might support professional development aimed at district reform and instructional change. This qualitative case study examined the following research questions in a suburban Massachusetts district: 1. What is the role of leadership in an initiative to change literacy instruction in a small, suburban district? (a) How is leadership distributed, if at all, in this initiative? (b) What leadership behaviors, if any, do teachers and administrators view as contributing to or limiting to positive instructional change in the literacy initiative? Who is exercising these leadership behaviors? (c) What leadership behaviors support or limit engagement in the initiative? 2. How, if at all, do the professional development strategies utilized in this literacy initiative build capacity for teacher and administrator growth and further change? Data were gathered through semi-structured interviews with six district leaders, including four elementary principals, the superintendent, and literacy coach; observations of Literacy Leadership Team meetings and study groups; a written teacher questionnaire; and a reflexive journal. Findings revealed that participants favorably viewed the reform- oriented professional development activities and reported that instructional changes had occurred in their schools. Discrepant perspectives on leadership affected its successful distribution. Time and communication concerns surfaced deeper, adaptive challenges related to the collective understanding of the initiative's vision and priorities, the enactment of instructional leadership by principals and teachers, and trust between stakeholders. Recommendations that arose from the findings provide guidance to the district about how to build professional capacity, shared meaning, distributed leadership, sustainability, and trust. change distributed leadership leadership literacy professional development trust Copyright is held by the author, with all rights reserved, unless otherwise noted. Thesis (EdD) — Boston College, 2012. Submitted to: Boston College. Lynch School of Education. Discipline: Educational Leadership and Higher Education. 313775 http://hdl.handle.net/2345/2590
collection NDLTD
language English
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic change
distributed leadership
leadership
literacy
professional development
trust
spellingShingle change
distributed leadership
leadership
literacy
professional development
trust
Curtis, Todd
DiFabio, Mark
Fortuna, Jodi L.
Lauzé, Kathleen M.
McCoy, Tina H.
Nikas, Kathryn M.
Leading and Learning: Leadership, Change, and Challenge in a Professional Development Initiative
description Thesis advisor: Lauri Johnson === Schools seeking to increase student achievement often employ professional development strategies to institute instructional reforms, yet research offers little guidance on how leadership behaviors might support professional development aimed at district reform and instructional change. This qualitative case study examined the following research questions in a suburban Massachusetts district: 1. What is the role of leadership in an initiative to change literacy instruction in a small, suburban district? (a) How is leadership distributed, if at all, in this initiative? (b) What leadership behaviors, if any, do teachers and administrators view as contributing to or limiting to positive instructional change in the literacy initiative? Who is exercising these leadership behaviors? (c) What leadership behaviors support or limit engagement in the initiative? 2. How, if at all, do the professional development strategies utilized in this literacy initiative build capacity for teacher and administrator growth and further change? Data were gathered through semi-structured interviews with six district leaders, including four elementary principals, the superintendent, and literacy coach; observations of Literacy Leadership Team meetings and study groups; a written teacher questionnaire; and a reflexive journal. Findings revealed that participants favorably viewed the reform- oriented professional development activities and reported that instructional changes had occurred in their schools. Discrepant perspectives on leadership affected its successful distribution. Time and communication concerns surfaced deeper, adaptive challenges related to the collective understanding of the initiative's vision and priorities, the enactment of instructional leadership by principals and teachers, and trust between stakeholders. Recommendations that arose from the findings provide guidance to the district about how to build professional capacity, shared meaning, distributed leadership, sustainability, and trust. === Thesis (EdD) — Boston College, 2012. === Submitted to: Boston College. Lynch School of Education. === Discipline: Educational Leadership and Higher Education.
author Curtis, Todd
DiFabio, Mark
Fortuna, Jodi L.
Lauzé, Kathleen M.
McCoy, Tina H.
Nikas, Kathryn M.
author_facet Curtis, Todd
DiFabio, Mark
Fortuna, Jodi L.
Lauzé, Kathleen M.
McCoy, Tina H.
Nikas, Kathryn M.
author_sort Curtis, Todd
title Leading and Learning: Leadership, Change, and Challenge in a Professional Development Initiative
title_short Leading and Learning: Leadership, Change, and Challenge in a Professional Development Initiative
title_full Leading and Learning: Leadership, Change, and Challenge in a Professional Development Initiative
title_fullStr Leading and Learning: Leadership, Change, and Challenge in a Professional Development Initiative
title_full_unstemmed Leading and Learning: Leadership, Change, and Challenge in a Professional Development Initiative
title_sort leading and learning: leadership, change, and challenge in a professional development initiative
publisher Boston College
publishDate 2012
url http://hdl.handle.net/2345/2590
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