Authentic Leadership In Madrassas: Asserting Islamic Values in Teacher Performance

This study examines the authentic leadership practices in Islamic secondary schools in East Kalimantan, Indonesia and elaborates on leadership styles for teacher performance. A survey method using quantitative approach was applied in this study. Descriptive statistics and t-test were used to analyze...

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Main Author: Moh. Bahzar
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Journal of Social Studies Education Research 2019-03-01
Series:Journal of Social Studies Education Research
Subjects:
Online Access:http://jsser.org/index.php/jsser/article/view/432
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spelling doaj-3775be3134bc42ebbc84c71f319981192020-11-25T03:33:49ZengJournal of Social Studies Education Research Journal of Social Studies Education Research1309-91081309-91082019-03-01101259284364Authentic Leadership In Madrassas: Asserting Islamic Values in Teacher PerformanceMoh. Bahzar0Mulawarman University, SamarindaThis study examines the authentic leadership practices in Islamic secondary schools in East Kalimantan, Indonesia and elaborates on leadership styles for teacher performance. A survey method using quantitative approach was applied in this study. Descriptive statistics and t-test were used to analyze data. This study assigned 30 principals and 60 teachers as the respondents. In addition, 5 kinds of questionnaire were used to collect data.  The results show that the authentic leadership and its components —including self-awareness, an internalized moral perspective, relational transparency, and balanced processing—have been practiced by the principals and teachers in Islamic Secondary Schools. Authentic leadership applied in MA is better than those in MTs.  The authentic leadership has been internalized in the teaching of Prophet Muhammad in terms of sidiq (truthful), tabligh (advocacy), amanah (trustworthy), and fatonah (wisdom) as the core values in the daily school community practices. Teacher performance evidently improves with involvement in decision-making, communication processes, and the delegation of authority. Differences appear in practice, that MTs principals demonstrate less competency than senior counterparts because of their relative educational backgrounds and experiences.  This study is limited in that it used non-probability sampling implying that the results cannot generate any context. This study originates in Islamic schools in Indonesian context that school reform is now in the process of change.http://jsser.org/index.php/jsser/article/view/432authentic leadership, Islamic teaching, core values, internalization
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Moh. Bahzar
spellingShingle Moh. Bahzar
Authentic Leadership In Madrassas: Asserting Islamic Values in Teacher Performance
Journal of Social Studies Education Research
authentic leadership, Islamic teaching, core values, internalization
author_facet Moh. Bahzar
author_sort Moh. Bahzar
title Authentic Leadership In Madrassas: Asserting Islamic Values in Teacher Performance
title_short Authentic Leadership In Madrassas: Asserting Islamic Values in Teacher Performance
title_full Authentic Leadership In Madrassas: Asserting Islamic Values in Teacher Performance
title_fullStr Authentic Leadership In Madrassas: Asserting Islamic Values in Teacher Performance
title_full_unstemmed Authentic Leadership In Madrassas: Asserting Islamic Values in Teacher Performance
title_sort authentic leadership in madrassas: asserting islamic values in teacher performance
publisher Journal of Social Studies Education Research
series Journal of Social Studies Education Research
issn 1309-9108
1309-9108
publishDate 2019-03-01
description This study examines the authentic leadership practices in Islamic secondary schools in East Kalimantan, Indonesia and elaborates on leadership styles for teacher performance. A survey method using quantitative approach was applied in this study. Descriptive statistics and t-test were used to analyze data. This study assigned 30 principals and 60 teachers as the respondents. In addition, 5 kinds of questionnaire were used to collect data.  The results show that the authentic leadership and its components —including self-awareness, an internalized moral perspective, relational transparency, and balanced processing—have been practiced by the principals and teachers in Islamic Secondary Schools. Authentic leadership applied in MA is better than those in MTs.  The authentic leadership has been internalized in the teaching of Prophet Muhammad in terms of sidiq (truthful), tabligh (advocacy), amanah (trustworthy), and fatonah (wisdom) as the core values in the daily school community practices. Teacher performance evidently improves with involvement in decision-making, communication processes, and the delegation of authority. Differences appear in practice, that MTs principals demonstrate less competency than senior counterparts because of their relative educational backgrounds and experiences.  This study is limited in that it used non-probability sampling implying that the results cannot generate any context. This study originates in Islamic schools in Indonesian context that school reform is now in the process of change.
topic authentic leadership, Islamic teaching, core values, internalization
url http://jsser.org/index.php/jsser/article/view/432
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