Leadership in High Achieving, High Poverty Schools

<p> In recent years, much emphasis has been placed on student outcomes on high stakes summative assessments. This call for accountability has forced educators to look critically at themselves and their schools to determine what they can do to improve the outcomes (Suber, 2011). Generally, in t...

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Main Author: Mentzer, Brian
Language:EN
Published: Southern Illinois University at Edwardsville 2018
Subjects:
Online Access:http://pqdtopen.proquest.com/#viewpdf?dispub=10785179
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spelling ndltd-PROQUEST-oai-pqdtoai.proquest.com-107851792018-06-21T16:40:23Z Leadership in High Achieving, High Poverty Schools Mentzer, Brian Educational leadership|Educational administration <p> In recent years, much emphasis has been placed on student outcomes on high stakes summative assessments. This call for accountability has forced educators to look critically at themselves and their schools to determine what they can do to improve the outcomes (Suber, 2011). Generally, in the United States, schools with high percentages of poor students have low achievement relative to schools with wealthy student bodies (Suber, 2011). However, there are a select number of educational institutions that seem to be beating the odds. These schools have both high concentrations of poverty and exceptional outcomes on federal, state and local assessments (Edmonds, 1979). Teachers in those schools tend to report positive perceptions of school administrators, and school administrators tend to have a significant impact on outcomes (Edwards, 1979). </p><p> The purpose of the study is to better understand principal leadership policies, practices, behaviors that are present in high achieving, high poverty schools. Furthermore, building level data will be used to identify specific areas of strength/weakness within individual schools. In order to accomplish this goal, the research focus will be teacher perceptions of leadership qualities of the administrators in high achieving, high poverty schools in Russelburg (a pseudonym) Illinois District #1. By looking inside individual schools, the district can compare and contrast the perceptions to determine what specific leadership characteristics are present. As a result, professional development goals can be developed that focus on the areas of weakness found in the results.</p><p> Southern Illinois University at Edwardsville 2018-06-15 00:00:00.0 thesis http://pqdtopen.proquest.com/#viewpdf?dispub=10785179 EN
collection NDLTD
language EN
sources NDLTD
topic Educational leadership|Educational administration
spellingShingle Educational leadership|Educational administration
Mentzer, Brian
Leadership in High Achieving, High Poverty Schools
description <p> In recent years, much emphasis has been placed on student outcomes on high stakes summative assessments. This call for accountability has forced educators to look critically at themselves and their schools to determine what they can do to improve the outcomes (Suber, 2011). Generally, in the United States, schools with high percentages of poor students have low achievement relative to schools with wealthy student bodies (Suber, 2011). However, there are a select number of educational institutions that seem to be beating the odds. These schools have both high concentrations of poverty and exceptional outcomes on federal, state and local assessments (Edmonds, 1979). Teachers in those schools tend to report positive perceptions of school administrators, and school administrators tend to have a significant impact on outcomes (Edwards, 1979). </p><p> The purpose of the study is to better understand principal leadership policies, practices, behaviors that are present in high achieving, high poverty schools. Furthermore, building level data will be used to identify specific areas of strength/weakness within individual schools. In order to accomplish this goal, the research focus will be teacher perceptions of leadership qualities of the administrators in high achieving, high poverty schools in Russelburg (a pseudonym) Illinois District #1. By looking inside individual schools, the district can compare and contrast the perceptions to determine what specific leadership characteristics are present. As a result, professional development goals can be developed that focus on the areas of weakness found in the results.</p><p>
author Mentzer, Brian
author_facet Mentzer, Brian
author_sort Mentzer, Brian
title Leadership in High Achieving, High Poverty Schools
title_short Leadership in High Achieving, High Poverty Schools
title_full Leadership in High Achieving, High Poverty Schools
title_fullStr Leadership in High Achieving, High Poverty Schools
title_full_unstemmed Leadership in High Achieving, High Poverty Schools
title_sort leadership in high achieving, high poverty schools
publisher Southern Illinois University at Edwardsville
publishDate 2018
url http://pqdtopen.proquest.com/#viewpdf?dispub=10785179
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