Brits Say School Leadership Doesn't Matter (Staff Selection Does)
by
deanmillot@mac.com
on Mon 16 Apr 2007 10:41 PM EDT |
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Cosmos
We
expect more of our school leaders than ever before. Gone is the view of
the headteacher as primus inter pares; they are now supposed to be
visionary leaders, curriculum specialists, disciplinarians, senior
managers, community representatives and, just occasionally, teachers
too. They are expected to transform the worst state schools and
maintain performance in the best. But is this emphasis on leadership
justified? Can headteachers make a difference?…
Our belief in
the power of leadership is based on the existing school effectiveness
literature, but it has a fatal flaw: by relying on stakeholders'
perceptions of influence rather than objective measures, this
qualitative research is able to establish a correlation between good
heads and good performance but not a causal link. Policy Exchange
therefore commissioned Jeff Searle and Peter Tymms at the Curriculum, Evaluation and Management (CEM) Centre at Durham
University to
quantify the impact of headteachers on school performance: the
"leadership effect". We believe this is the first time such an analysis
has been attempted. It works on the assumption that because it is very
unlikely that a new headteacher will be of exactly the same quality as
the old head, then his or her ability or inability to influence school
performance and pupil attitudes will show up in greater or no greater
variation of results compared to schools that have not changed their
headteacher….
Searle and Tymms
found no difference in performance, on average, between schools that
did and schools that did not change their headteacher. This led them to
conclude that headteachers have little impact on the quality of
learning and on the attitudes of pupils in their school, at least in
the first five years of their appointment.
The reason for
the lack of headteacher impact on pupil performance and attitudes is,
they believe, because schools are "loosely coupled" organizations where
the ability to influence performance diminishes rapidly the further one
is from the pupil. This means that individual teachers have much more
impact on learning than heads, whose influence can generally only be
wielded indirectly through the staff.
Probably the
most important thing headteachers can do for their pupils is to make
sure that there are good teachers in their classrooms. Headteachers are
important, they conclude, but not in the way that officialdom has
perceived them in England for the last ten years.
James O’Shaughnessy, The Leadership Effect, Policy Exchange, April 17.