Principal Leadership Practices Influence on Teacher Retention in Urban, Hard-to-Staff Schools

Teacher retention is a growing issue that plagues schools across America (Grissom, 2011). Consequently, urban high poverty, high minority schools face even greater challenges as they expect to lose approximately 50% of their teachers within their first five years on the job. According to Grissom (2...

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Main Author: Barnett, Felicia Foster
Other Authors: Educational Leadership and Policy Studies
Format: Others
Published: Virginia Tech 2018
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10919/85529
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spelling ndltd-VTETD-oai-vtechworks.lib.vt.edu-10919-855292020-09-29T05:37:55Z Principal Leadership Practices Influence on Teacher Retention in Urban, Hard-to-Staff Schools Barnett, Felicia Foster Educational Leadership and Policy Studies Price, Ted S. Blowe, Eleanor Hearst Cash, Carol S. Kelly, Michael D. teacher retention teacher job satisfaction teacher attrition urban schools principal leadership hard to staff schools and leadership characteristics Teacher retention is a growing issue that plagues schools across America (Grissom, 2011). Consequently, urban high poverty, high minority schools face even greater challenges as they expect to lose approximately 50% of their teachers within their first five years on the job. According to Grissom (2011), school working conditions explain both teacher turnover and teacher satisfaction, and principal effectiveness has a significant positive impact on teacher retention, especially in disadvantaged schools. The purpose of this study was to examine leadership practices teachers and principals perceive to influence teacher retention in urban, high- poverty, high- minority schools. A basic qualitative research design was employed to gain an in-depth understanding of teachers' and principals' perceptions of how school climate and culture, instructional leadership, school mission and vision, and teacher development impact teacher retention in urban, hard- to- staff schools. Data collection included individual and focus group interview data from five principals and 17 teachers with longevity in urban, high-poverty, high-minority schools in Southeastern Virginia. An analysis of the data indicated that administrative support, principal-teacher relationships, shared leadership, clear expectations and instructional leadership are essential to teacher retention in urban, hard-to-staff schools. The results of this study may impact the recruitment and development of school leaders by both districts and school leadership programs. Ed. D. 2018-10-26T06:01:03Z 2018-10-26T06:01:03Z 2017-05-03 Dissertation vt_gsexam:10669 http://hdl.handle.net/10919/85529 In Copyright http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/ ETD application/pdf Virginia Tech
collection NDLTD
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic teacher retention
teacher job satisfaction
teacher attrition
urban schools
principal leadership
hard to staff schools
and leadership characteristics
spellingShingle teacher retention
teacher job satisfaction
teacher attrition
urban schools
principal leadership
hard to staff schools
and leadership characteristics
Barnett, Felicia Foster
Principal Leadership Practices Influence on Teacher Retention in Urban, Hard-to-Staff Schools
description Teacher retention is a growing issue that plagues schools across America (Grissom, 2011). Consequently, urban high poverty, high minority schools face even greater challenges as they expect to lose approximately 50% of their teachers within their first five years on the job. According to Grissom (2011), school working conditions explain both teacher turnover and teacher satisfaction, and principal effectiveness has a significant positive impact on teacher retention, especially in disadvantaged schools. The purpose of this study was to examine leadership practices teachers and principals perceive to influence teacher retention in urban, high- poverty, high- minority schools. A basic qualitative research design was employed to gain an in-depth understanding of teachers' and principals' perceptions of how school climate and culture, instructional leadership, school mission and vision, and teacher development impact teacher retention in urban, hard- to- staff schools. Data collection included individual and focus group interview data from five principals and 17 teachers with longevity in urban, high-poverty, high-minority schools in Southeastern Virginia. An analysis of the data indicated that administrative support, principal-teacher relationships, shared leadership, clear expectations and instructional leadership are essential to teacher retention in urban, hard-to-staff schools. The results of this study may impact the recruitment and development of school leaders by both districts and school leadership programs. === Ed. D.
author2 Educational Leadership and Policy Studies
author_facet Educational Leadership and Policy Studies
Barnett, Felicia Foster
author Barnett, Felicia Foster
author_sort Barnett, Felicia Foster
title Principal Leadership Practices Influence on Teacher Retention in Urban, Hard-to-Staff Schools
title_short Principal Leadership Practices Influence on Teacher Retention in Urban, Hard-to-Staff Schools
title_full Principal Leadership Practices Influence on Teacher Retention in Urban, Hard-to-Staff Schools
title_fullStr Principal Leadership Practices Influence on Teacher Retention in Urban, Hard-to-Staff Schools
title_full_unstemmed Principal Leadership Practices Influence on Teacher Retention in Urban, Hard-to-Staff Schools
title_sort principal leadership practices influence on teacher retention in urban, hard-to-staff schools
publisher Virginia Tech
publishDate 2018
url http://hdl.handle.net/10919/85529
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