School Leadership for Learning
Insights from TALIS 2013
The OECD Teaching and Learning International Survey (TALIS) is the largest international survey of teachers and school leaders. Using the TALIS database, this report looks at different approaches to school leadership and the impact of school leadership on professional learning communities and on the learning climate in individual schools.
It looks at principals’ instructional and distributed leadership across different education systems and levels. Instructional leadership comprises leadership practices that involve the planning, evaluation, co-ordination and improvement of teaching and learning. Distributed leadership in schools explores the degree of involvement of staff, parents or guardians, and students in school decisions.
How are principals’ and schools’ characteristics related to instructional and distributed leadership? What types of leadership are favoured across countries? What impact do they have on the establishment of professional learning communities and positive learning environments? The report notes that teacher collaboration is more common in schools with strong instructional leadership. However, about one in three principals does not actively encourage collaboration among the teaching staff in his or her school. There is room for improvement; and both policy and practice can help achieve it. The report offers a series of policy recommendations to help strengthen school leadership.
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What determines school principals' leadership styles?
School leadership shapes the process at schools and indirectly affects student achievement. For that reason, knowing what characteristics influence educational leadership within schools can be used by principals and school boards to reflect on leadership in their schools and also by local, regional and national governments to create conditions for further enhancing school leadership. This chapter addresses these issues by examining to what extent characteristics of principals and the school context influence educational leadership across countries and economies. First, the chapter focuses on differences between systems with regard to instructional leadership of principals and characteristics that are related to instructional leadership. Then, countries and economies are compared regarding distributed leadership. The last section explores different types of leadership based on principals’ instructional leadership, distributed leadership and their action directed towards the instructional processes at schools.
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