The Impact of Leadership on Student Outcomes
University of Nottingham · University of Oxford
Abstract
The research provides new empirical evidence of how successful principals directly and indirectly achieve and sustain improvement over time through combining both transformational and instructional leadership strategies. The findings show that schools’ abilities to improve and sustain effectiveness over the long term are not primarily the result of the principals’ leadership style but of their understanding and diagnosis of the school’s needs and their application of clearly articulated, organizationally shared educational values through multiple combinations and accumulations of time and context-sensitive strategies that are “layered” and progressively embedded in the school’s work, culture, and achievements.
Mixed-methods research designs are likely to provide finer grained, more nuanced evidence-based understandings of the leadership roles and behaviors of principals who achieve and sustain educational outcomes in schools than single lens quantitative analyses, meta-analyses, or purely qualitative approaches. The findings themselves provide support for more differentiated, context sensitive training and development for aspiring and serving principals.
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 231.44
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 70
Authors
3Topics & keywords
- Transformational leadership
- Educational leadership
- Context (archaeology)
- Psychology
- Effective schools
- Leadership style
- Instructional leadership
- Multimethodology