Relational Trust, Social Connections, and Improving Principal Practice: One District’s Implementation of the Massachusetts Model System for Educator Evaluation to Support the Growth and Development of Principals

Thesis advisor: Joseph O'Keefe === Thesis advisor: James Marini === Using social capital theory as a conceptual framework, this qualitative study of one Massachusetts district analyzed how principals’ relational trust and interconnectedness with central office administrators (COAs) correlated w...

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Main Author: Carter, James Alden
Format: Others
Language:English
Published: Boston College 2016
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2345/bc-ir:106794
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spelling ndltd-BOSTON-oai-dlib.bc.edu-bc-ir_1067942019-05-10T07:33:46Z Relational Trust, Social Connections, and Improving Principal Practice: One District’s Implementation of the Massachusetts Model System for Educator Evaluation to Support the Growth and Development of Principals Carter, James Alden Thesis advisor: Joseph O'Keefe Thesis advisor: James Marini Text thesis 2016 Boston College English electronic application/pdf Using social capital theory as a conceptual framework, this qualitative study of one Massachusetts district analyzed how principals’ relational trust and interconnectedness with central office administrators (COAs) correlated with their perceptions of district efforts to support their growth and development. Data included interviews with principals and COAs and document analyses. Findings revealed a decided split among principals, with some reporting high trust levels and close connections with COAs and others reporting distrust and isolation. Of the district’s five major initiatives designed to support principals, two were perceived positively by most principals, two received mixed reactions with connected principals more favorable than isolated principals, and one received widespread negative perceptions. District initiatives widely perceived to be effective mirrored principal goals, provided opportunities for COA direct assistance, and were structured to facilitate the development of professional assistance relationships. Conversely, the initiatives with mixed or negative perceptions lacked such relationship-building opportunities. evaluation Massachusetts principal relational trust social capital Copyright is held by the author, with all rights reserved, unless otherwise noted. Thesis (EdD) — Boston College, 2016. Submitted to: Boston College. Lynch School of Education. Discipline: Educational Leadership and Higher Education. http://hdl.handle.net/2345/bc-ir:106794
collection NDLTD
language English
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic evaluation
Massachusetts
principal
relational trust
social capital
spellingShingle evaluation
Massachusetts
principal
relational trust
social capital
Carter, James Alden
Relational Trust, Social Connections, and Improving Principal Practice: One District’s Implementation of the Massachusetts Model System for Educator Evaluation to Support the Growth and Development of Principals
description Thesis advisor: Joseph O'Keefe === Thesis advisor: James Marini === Using social capital theory as a conceptual framework, this qualitative study of one Massachusetts district analyzed how principals’ relational trust and interconnectedness with central office administrators (COAs) correlated with their perceptions of district efforts to support their growth and development. Data included interviews with principals and COAs and document analyses. Findings revealed a decided split among principals, with some reporting high trust levels and close connections with COAs and others reporting distrust and isolation. Of the district’s five major initiatives designed to support principals, two were perceived positively by most principals, two received mixed reactions with connected principals more favorable than isolated principals, and one received widespread negative perceptions. District initiatives widely perceived to be effective mirrored principal goals, provided opportunities for COA direct assistance, and were structured to facilitate the development of professional assistance relationships. Conversely, the initiatives with mixed or negative perceptions lacked such relationship-building opportunities. === Thesis (EdD) — Boston College, 2016. === Submitted to: Boston College. Lynch School of Education. === Discipline: Educational Leadership and Higher Education.
author Carter, James Alden
author_facet Carter, James Alden
author_sort Carter, James Alden
title Relational Trust, Social Connections, and Improving Principal Practice: One District’s Implementation of the Massachusetts Model System for Educator Evaluation to Support the Growth and Development of Principals
title_short Relational Trust, Social Connections, and Improving Principal Practice: One District’s Implementation of the Massachusetts Model System for Educator Evaluation to Support the Growth and Development of Principals
title_full Relational Trust, Social Connections, and Improving Principal Practice: One District’s Implementation of the Massachusetts Model System for Educator Evaluation to Support the Growth and Development of Principals
title_fullStr Relational Trust, Social Connections, and Improving Principal Practice: One District’s Implementation of the Massachusetts Model System for Educator Evaluation to Support the Growth and Development of Principals
title_full_unstemmed Relational Trust, Social Connections, and Improving Principal Practice: One District’s Implementation of the Massachusetts Model System for Educator Evaluation to Support the Growth and Development of Principals
title_sort relational trust, social connections, and improving principal practice: one district’s implementation of the massachusetts model system for educator evaluation to support the growth and development of principals
publisher Boston College
publishDate 2016
url http://hdl.handle.net/2345/bc-ir:106794
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